Jancy,

 

>A new query to Lines: 992-994  Where is Shade writing and looking from?

 

Shade is sitting in veranda of his house. We should take Kinbote’s word on that in commentary to line 991. That is same spot where Shade composed “The Nature of Electricity” and which he described in that little poem. The poem talks about streetlamp number 999 beaming through shagbark tree. Apparently streetlamps in New Wye were numbered. Note that in the poem Shade describes 999 as his favorite number. That is why we should believe that ‘Pale Fire’ has 999 lines by author’s (Shade’s) design. See below earlier post where I brought this up.

 

- George

 

 

“The Nature of Electricity” was send by John Shade to a New York magazine some time in 1958 which is before Pale Fire was written and before Kinbote rented Goldsworth’s house. It was published after Shade’s death. Its third stanza refers to number 999 as an old friend:

 

Streetlamps are numbered, and maybe

Number nine-hundred-ninety-nine

(So brightly beaming through a tree

So green) is an old friend of mine.

 

Does it mean that nine-hundred-ninety-nine is the number of a streetlamp opposite Shade’s house? Based on last stanza of PF poem the tree is shagbark tree in the front lawn garden, viewed from the veranda. Kinbote called that place the Nest for a reason. That is where Shade spent much of his time and wrote most of his poems. Could it be then that the poem has 999 lines by design since that number is an author’s old friend? Then search of 1000th line becomes obsolete. Also is there a link between lights of “gentle dead” in “The Nature of Electricity” and the title of “Pale Fire” which comes from Hamlet’s fire bugs (I don’t have exact quote)? I think that is in line with final Boyd’s theory of Pale Fire.

 

I did not find reference to “The Nature of Electricity” in Nabokov-L archive but may be somebody else wrote about its use of the magic number.

 

- George Shimanovich

 

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