Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0019628, Sun, 14 Mar 2010 23:38:38 +0100

Subject
Re: [NABOKOV-L] Boris Vian and Nabokovian wordplay
Date
Body
Jansy: I didn't mean 'a limp spectre' in the literal sense, but in a
metaphorical one. Like in Amis' 'a limp spectre of embarrassment and
remorse...'

I have to give up and apologize... I seem to have confused things.

There is this sentence in *Lolita*: *I had next great fun with all kind of
shorts and briefs - phantom little Lolitas dancing, falling, daisying all
over the counter. *(I:25)

And, of course, in the last paragraph: *...because otherwise my specter
shall come at him, like black smoke *&etc... (This one in the literary
sense.)

With *Despair's: ...and my will lay limp in an empty world...*
*
*
It's Amis' line and it just (just?!) reminded me of Nabokov's many uses of
the words 'limp' 'spectre/specter'.

Close reading has lead me into blind memory.

Best,

Hafid Bouazza
*
*




2010/3/14 Jansy <jansy@aetern.us>

> *Hafid Bouazza*: *Still searching for 'a limp spectre' in Nabokov's
> works, I stumbled upon a... green door! In fact, green doors. They are the
> doors of Elphinstone hospital (the poet Oliver Goldsmith was born near
> Elphin, Ireland) : "- and Aurora had hardly 'warmed her hands,' as the
> pickers of lavender say in the country of my birth, when I found myself
> trying to get into that dungeon again, knocking upon its green doors,
> breakfastless, stool-less, in despair*. "(Lolita, II:22)
>
> *JM*: This interesting example from "Lolita" offers, for the first time,
> the idea of "knocking upon a green door." In "ADA" there are phantom fists
> knocking against a green door (Ada, I ch.24: "Van was already unlocking
> the door — the green door against which they were to bang so often with
> boneless fists in their later separate dreams." ) The additional
> "knocking" is an important element and it had escaped my attention until
> now, inspite of Bob Dylan's "knockin' on heaven's door" and all the real
> green ones)
>
> My books are, unfortunately, heavily underlined with what I want to find
> again because this makes it almost impossible for me to find what is new or
> unprecedent. I created for myself a "prejudiced trap." Hafid, did you try to
> explore "The Eye"? That's a good place for posthumous apparitions.
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