Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0022372, Mon, 6 Feb 2012 21:40:12 -0200

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Re: [NABOKOV-Ll] Online Pale Fire Notes,Brian Boyd and
Sucessions...
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A correction to my description of Brian Boyd's reference to "Alphina (9), Betty (10), Candida (12), and Dee (14),* to the comic countdown of their names and...its translation into the Zemblan royal family's.and Queen Disa's place as "D" (Dee) being out of place unless she counted as a blood-relative of Charles II.
Not only Dee/Disa, but also Betty/Blenda suggest an alphabetical correspondence that is only a product of Zemblan royal marriages instead of direct blood-relationships.
I was too distracted by the image conjured up by the word-play with the descending ascendants, the reversions (the first Alfin and the last Alphina) or the elegant mirroring ABC-sucessions ( are these a foil?) : .

After traveling from Pale Fire's Wordsmith to Pnin's Waindell, trying in vain to understand the relations between their German and Russian Departments, I felt a renewed shock when I read Dr. Hagen's words (the Head of the German Department and Pnin's "staunch protector"), about Buchenwald and Weimar. As the narrator points out, Dr Hagen is "the gentlest of souls alive." and how good Dr. Hagen is the reader can judge for himself.**
Not only the Germans fell under the narrator's scrutiny but the President of Waindell College, too, with his not very amusing alienation. Anyway, it's clear that, at the time Pnin and Pale Fire were written, both Germany and Russia were "torture houses."

Excerpts: "Only in the detachment of an incurable complaint, in the sanity of near death, could one cope with this for a moment. In order to exist rationally, Pnin had taught himself, during the last ten years, never to remember Mira Belochkin [...]because, if one were quite sincere with oneself, no conscience, and hence no consciousness, could be expected to subsist in a world where such things as Mira's death were possible. One had to forget - because one could not live with the thought that this graceful, fragile, tender young woman with those eyes, that smile, those gardens and snows in the background, had been brought in a cattle car to an extermination camp and [...] being too weak to work[ .]she was selected to die and was cremated only a few days after her arrival in Buchenwald, in the beautifully wooded Grosser Ettersberg, as the region is resoundingly called. It is an hour's stroll from Weimar, where walked Goethe, Herder, Schiller, Wieland, the inimitable Kotzebue and others. 'Aber warum - but why - ' Dr Hagen, the gentlest of souls alive, would wail, 'why had one to put that horrid camp so near!' for indeed, it was near - only five miles from the cultural heart of Germany - 'that nation of universities,' as the President of Waindell College, renowned for his use of the mot juste, had so elegantly phrased it when reviewing the European situation in a recent Commencement speech, along with the compliment he paid another torture house, 'Russia - the country of Tolstoy, Stanislavski, Raskolnikov, and other great and good men'."


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* ...Boyd writes: "'Alphina' and 'Betty' all but embody the first two letters of the Greek alphabet, and the reversed order of daughters and letters implies a deliberate countdown...But the girls' names also oddly prefigure the names of the four principals of the Zemblan royal family, in descending order of age, King Alfin, Queen Blenda, their son Charles and his queen Disa. The unique 'Alphina' especially seems to have inspired the equally unprecedented 'Alfin,' to serve as a starting point...

** I was reminded of C.P. Taylor's play "Good" (produced in London in 1981 and made into a movie in 2008) and of H.Arendt's description about the "banality of evil."


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