----- Original Message -----
From: Fet, Victor
To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2004 9:46 AM
Subject: RE: Lolita and Schiller

If so, why can't we also recall Gogol's hero from Nevsky prospekt, “not the Schiller who wrote William Tell and the History of the Thirty Years’ War, but the well-known Schiller, the ironmonger and tinsmith of Meshchansky Street" -- at least socially, this one would be closer to Dolly's husband than Friedrich.
 
 

Victor Fet
Department of Biological Sciences
Marshall University,
Huntington, WV 25755-2510 USA 
 
 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Vladimir Nabokov Forum [mailto:NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU] On Behalf Of D. Barton Johnson
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2004 11:19 AM
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
Subject: Fw: Lolita and Schiller

 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Mvoscol@aol.com
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2004 2:55 AM
Subject: Lolita and Schiller

Times Literary Supplement, April 9 2004, Letters to the Editor (p. 17):

Lolitas

Sir, - Another thought on Vladimir Nabokov's "name-games" alluded to in Michael Maar's fascinating article on the cloudy, forgotten origins of Lolita (April 2).

       Dolores "Lolita" Haze becomes Mrs Schiller at the novel's end.  Nabokov must have wanted to set the literary allusions running and it's also a nod to his (and the book's?) German past.  Friedrich Schiller wrote a play in 1800-01 called Die Jungfrau von Orleans, about Joan of Arc, also a nymphet, also a gamine fatale, but a virginal one this time.

WILLIAM BOYD
4 Redburn Street, London SW3.
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EDNOTE. I wonder if the tongue-in-cheek TLS letter-writer is the novelist?