Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0022584, Mon, 12 Mar 2012 14:34:09 +0000

Subject
Re: The "56 days" conundrum in "Lolita"
Date
Body

AS: If Humbert died on the day he finished writing Lolita, and if his "56 days" is correct, then he started writing on 21 September, the day before 22 September.... If you include both the start and end dates of this interval, you should get 56 days: 9/22 - 9/30 (9 days), 10/1 - 10/31 (31 days), 11/1 - 11/16 (16 days).
Date: Sat, 10 Mar 2012 18:01:21 -0500
From: STADLEN@AOL.COM
Subject: [NABOKV-L] The "56 days" conundrum in "Lolita"
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU








I have not, until this week, paid much attention to
the incompatibility that has been remarked between the 56 days Humbert says
he has been writing Lolita and the date 25 September 1952 he
implies for his murder of Quilty and the date 16 November 1952 John Ray
gives for his death. But I am struck by the fact that those who write about it
seem invariably to refer to a discrepancy of "three days". Presumably this is a
matter of one person's miscounting and the rest's not bothering to count, but
merely copying. For the discrepancy is, in fact, four
days, as I shall show.

If Humbert died on the day he finished writing Lolita, and if his
"56 days" is correct, then he started writing on 21 September, the day before 22
September, which, according to him, was the day he received Lolita's letter
dated 18 September. But the earliest he could be placed in the "psychopathic
ward" after his murder of Quilty is 25 September. Thus the discrepancy is
four days. QED.

If the other data are correct, and Humbert has miscalculated, then he has
miscalculated by four, not three, days. He has calculated 56 when he should
have calculated 52.

Appel's notes (The Annotated Lolita, Penguin Classics 2000, notes
251/14 and 251/15) to Humbert's record of the presumably fake registration
numbers of his car left by Quilty -- Q 32888 and CU 88322 -- make a great deal
of the fact that the two car numbers add up to 52. This is so specific and
bizarre (why does it occur to Appel to add the numbers and insist that this
is significant?) that this hint must surely have come from Nabokov himself.
Appel (presumably prompted by Nabokov) points out that H.H., Lolita and Quilty
all die in 1952, and that 52 is: the number of weeks (a year's)
that Humbert is on the road with Lolita; the number of lines (13 x 4) in the
poem he writes ("Wanted, wanted. Dolores Haze.") a few pages after recording the
car numbers; and the number of cards in a pack of cards.

In note 251/14, Appel says: "There are fifty-two cards in a deck, and the
author of King, Queen, Knave still has a few up his sleeve, as he
demonstrates here."


In note 251/15, Appel says: "...it is quite impossible that either H.H. or
Quilty could realize the full significance of the number fifty-two; only
one person can, and the 'common denominator' points to the author."


But some packs of cards have 56, not 52, cards.
The 56 pack augments the 52 pack with a Knight. Is Humbert's
slip indicative of a confusion between different games, or an attempt to
transcend the game? His certainly seems to be deluding himself that he is a
knight rather than a mere knave.
I know next to nothing about card symbolism (some
would say this is a failing in a psychotherapist), but perhaps some expert
would like to take this up. Perhaps someone like Alexander Dolinin already
has?

Anthony Stadlen




Anthony
Stadlen
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Founder (in 1996) and
convenor of the Inner Circle Seminars: an ethical, existential,
phenomenological search for truth in psychotherapy
See "Existential
Psychotherapy & Inner Circle Seminars" at http://anthonystadlen.blogspot.com/
for programme of future Inner Circle Seminars and complete archive of past
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