Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0021189, Mon, 17 Jan 2011 10:40:19 -0200

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Re: The Ballad of Longwood Glen
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Alexey Sklyarenko spotted the theme I had asked about (Nabokov's The Ballad of Longwood Glen ) and sent the lines obtained from the NY site.
He remarked on a curious word, perhaps a misspelling, and inquired about "And the rrkoon* dripped gold) was felled and searched." :
*crown?

After being reminded of Nabokov's poem, I remembered that it's been printed by Page Stegner in "The Portable Nabokov", so I checked. The word is "moon"
"And the sky-bound oak (where owls had perched
And the moon dripped gold) was felled and searched." (July 6, 1957)

My desktop-search was equally informative.Abraham P. Socher, in "Shades of Frost" observed that: "In the spring of 1958, Nabokov was still in the midst of his seemingly endless commentary on Pushkin's great verse novel Eugene Onegin, which also included a foreword and an index. Nabokov had already observed misguided waxwings crashing against his window, and even composed a narrative in heroic couplets, "The Ballad of Longwood Glen", which he had recently revised and published in the New Yorker, though it was a much lighter poem than his eventual "Pale Fire". He was also contemplating a novel which involved an exiled king (though he was neither a homosexual nor a literary commentator) and the question of immortality. When Nabokov read "Of a Winter Evening", after almost two decades of American exile in which he seemed to be always shadowing Frost, it combined with these and other elements in his imagination."


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