Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0003685, Tue, 9 Feb 1999 10:41:23 -0800

Subject
"Gregor von Rezzori & the Nabokovs" CORRECTED VERSION
Date
Body
AUTHOR'S APOLOGIA: Below is a corrected and slightly augmented version of
my note of Feb. 8th. Lynx-eyed Earl Sampson (whom I thank) noticed I had
muddled the names of VN's father and grandfather. In the unlikely event
that anyone filed the Feb. 8 note away for future reference, please
destroy and replace it with the version below.


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EDITOR/Author's NOTE. The causal note below is offered in the hope that
someone out there can add to or subtract from it. Or comment.

D. Barton Johnson
Department of Germanic, Slavic and Semitic Studies
Phelps Hall
University of California at Santa Barbara
Santa Barbara, CA 93106
Phone and Fax: (805) 687-1825
Home Phone: (805) 682-4618
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Gregor von Rezzori & the Nabokovs
by
D. Barton Johnson



The Austrian writer, Gregor von Rezzori (1914-1998), is best known for his
novels, Memoirs of an Anti-Semite (Ger. 1979 / Eng. 1981), and The Death
of My Brother Abel (Ger. 1976 / Eng. 1985). A portion (reportedly written
in English) of the former appeared in The New Yorker. Rezzori'’s father
was a minor aristocrat, a provincial administrator in the Bukovina, then a
part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. After 1919, it was part of Rumania,
and then, in 1940, the Ukraine (Moldavia). Rezzori'’s own early years are
recounted in a memoir, The Snows of Yesteryear: Portraits for an
Autobiography, which describes his family life in what is now Chernovtsy –
a colorful provincial capital of unparalleled ethnic diversity. Chernovtsy
(or Czernowitz) is also the hometown of poet Paul Celan (1920-1970) and of
Israeli novelist Aharon Appelfeld, whose newest novel The Conversion is
set in this town.

The longest section of Rezzori'’s memoir is devoted to his father, an
avid, nay obsessive, gentleman-hunter. After the Soviet take-over in 1940,
Rezzori'’s father wrote to him in Vienna that he would remain there. The
memoirist continues; "He still hunted occasionally and cultivated a
special friendship with a Princess Sayn-Wittgenstein, born a
Nabokova---member of a family with whom I was linked by many independently
formed friendships" (189). Princess Elizaveta Dmitrievna (Nabokova)
Sayn-Wittgenstein (1877-1944) was seven years younger than her brother
Vladimir Dmitrievich Nabokov, father of the writer. In 1900 she married
Prince Henri (Heinrich) Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg whose family owned the
large estate of Druzhnosel'’e not far from the Nabokov estates on the
Orodezh’ Rive They also owned a second estate, Kamenka, near, Nabokov
says, Popelyukha in Podolsk province, S.W. Russia. In August 1911
Nabokov'’s mother took he children on a visit to her sister-in-law at
Kamenka. It was Vladimir'’s only visit to a (then) part of Russia
(excepting, of course, the Petersburg area) until his hasty journey to the
Crimea in 1917. A photograph of the Rumanian Sayn-Wittgenstein residence,
"Kamenka," may be seen in the pictures following page 76 of Nabokovskii
vestnik (#2) "Nabokov v rodstvennom okruzhenii" (Petersburg: Dorn, 1998).
Nabokov'’s aunt, Elizaveta Dmitrievna, and Prince Sayn-Wittgenstein are
also portrayed. The Sayn-Wittgenstein branch of the family is the subject
of an article by A.V.Krasko in the same volume.

Following WW I and the revolution, the surviving Sayn-Wittgensteins fled
from Kiev to their estate in the new nation of Rumania, settling first in
Chernovtsy (Czernowitz, Cernauti) (The Prince had been arrested and shot
when the Bolsheviks took the Kiev, but Nabokov'’s aunt and the children
were subquently able to reclaim their estate in the newly independent
Rumania.) It is not clear when Rezzori senior first became friendly with
the widowed Princess (who eventually married Roman Leikman, an engineer,
who had formerly been tutor to her children), but they were still friendly
in the late 1930s. At least one other Nabokov settled in his sister’s
adopted country. Nabokov'’s uncle Sergei owned a car dealership in
Bucharest.


Gregor von Rezzori'’s life did indeed have later intersections with
Nabokov’s. These are recounted in his long essay, "A Stranger in
Lolitaland" which initially appeared in _Vanity Fair_. Rezzori gives an
account of his role in the first German translation of Lolita which was
more or less of a committee project. By the time it came to Von Rezzori
and his colleague, the first draft had already been through the hands of
"a crew of venerable literati so numerous that in a group photograph they
would have resembled the Don Cossack Choir." Rezzori'’s work inevitably
entailed discussions of interpretations of the Lolita. There were the
usual proposals: old Europe debauching a young America, and its
counterpart, young America debauching old Europe; Lolita "as a
delightfully frivolous story on the verge of pornography"; Lolita as "a
literary masterpiece, the only convincing love story of the century," or,
Lolita as "one of the great stories of passion in literature, a deeply
touching story of unfulfillable longing." Rezzori volunteers a variant of
this last. Since "every passionate love can find its image in Humbert'’s
boundless love for Lolita" … "why should it not also reflect the longing
of us Europeans for the fulfillment of our childhood dreams about
America?" The latter half of the novel with Lolita and Humbert'’s
crisscrossing of the United States leads Rezzori to vow that "humble,
humble me would follow in their tracks." He reviews his childhood images
of America: the colors on his playroom globe, the vast open spaces;
buffalo and skyscrapers, redskins on mustangs, gangsters and molls, black
men playing jazz on saxophones. For post-WW I Europeans, America was the
prospect of a bright future.


"A Stranger in Lolitaland" recounts Rezorri'’s partial duplication of the
travels of Humbert and Lo. Some thirty years after his fictive
predecessors, Rezzori, accompanied by different aquaintances at different
times (ranging from a phlegmatic, male grad student to a 29-year-old
virgin female, and finally Beatrice, his wife), the Austrian writer
covered some 13,400 miles by car in about three months. The trip starts
auspiciously with an overnight stay at Climax in the Catskills, an area
boasting such toponyms as Sodom Road,Surprise Road, and Coxsackie. After
Ithaca, things go downhill, although occasionally brightened by sightings
of a potential Lolita (2 only) and the sign in the men'’s room "We aim to
please. You aim too, please?" Te obligatory tourist sights are taken in,
although "Graceland" happens to be closed on their day in Memphis. (Were
Elvis not "post-Lolita," it would certainly been a must-see for Lo & Hum.)
Rezorri admires only nature and the vast open spaces, but is mostly struck
by the tacky, neon-lit strips with their fast-food places ("vomitive
victuals") and car dealerships that mark each transition from country to
town and town to country. His journey finds its apotheosis in Las Vegas:
"Here I had in its essence, the new world of the terrible poetic children;
Lolitaland in Disneylandish perfection. The Promised Land’s New Jerusalem.
Finally I had caught it,'m‘y'’ butterfly."

Rezorri'’s sense of identification with Nabokov is strong. He has been
told that he and Nabokov have "certain similarities as writers, though I
am not so conceited as not to see all our differences in genus as well as
in quantity, yet every now and then my vanity seduces me into thinking
there may be some truth in the remark." And some truth there is --– in
background, attitude, and style. Both were cultured Europeaaristocrats
torn from their roots by war and revolution. Rezzori, like Nabokov, had a
procession of governesses (including one who had worked for Mark Twain'’s
family). Like Nabokov, Rezzori wrote in three languages; German, English,
and Italian. Both men wrote a dense, ornate prose reflecting centuries of
European culture. Both had a keen eye for descriptive detail. While the
Austrian did not have Nabokov'’s comman of English, he too wrote with a
somewhat eccentric flair. After first appearing in Vanity Fair, his "A
Stranger in Lolitaland" was selected for the Best American Essays volume
of 1986 which also contained pieces by John Barth, John Gregory Dunne, Tom
Wolfe, Robert Stone, and Calvin Trillin.

In_Lolita_ and "A Stranger in Lolitaland " Nabokov and Rezzori seek to
match their childhood images of America with a far different "reality."
Nabokov wrote of America in a spirit of generosity, although not without a
keen eye for poshlost. Rezzori, neither in his Lolitaland nor his novels,
could move beyond a vision of the past. Nabokov'’s elegant style serve
Rezzori as a reminder of a former, more gracious world, when his father
was a frequent guest of Princess Sayn-Wittgenstein at the Kamenka estate
where the twelve-year-old Nabokov visited his aunt three years before the
birth of Rezzori.


I close with two very vagrant thoughts. Might it not be that the Kamenka
(=stone) estate served as the prototype for the "Marevo" (= mirage) of
Nabokov'’s LATH!; and his aunt Elizaveta Dmitrievna – for the fictive aunt
(Baroness Bredow) who first instructs LATH’'s narrator to "look at the
harlequins"? And as an even more far-fetched thought, – perhaps Von
Rezzori caught a glimpse of himself in _Transparent Thing’_ "Baron R."?