Yes, I agree that the reading in which H begins writing on 9/21 is certainly possible. I thought that I said as much in my last post.
 
As I see it, the specificity of the utterance itself might be an argument in favor of the inclusive dating--the tally suggests an unusual precision (why not just say 8 weeks, or 2 months, ago?). Days do seem to be less round figures than months or years, and Humbert has apparently done a good bit of work on 11/16, which might justify his packing it in. (And if he's arrested on 9/22, would 11/16 be his fifty-fifth or fifty-sixth day in jail, if one is counting?) But it's not my intention to reach around the text to massage the figure: quite the opposite. As you say, in the book we have two specific dates referenced, and Humbert's seemingly casual revelation coincides exactly with those dates if we use the inclusive calculation. This feels like design to me--even if it runs a little roughshod over common usage. I don't agree that this is "perverse" insistence. But yes, it's in the eye of the beholder. The problem might not have received a full airing yet, but I don't think it follows that anyone has necessarily "copied" anyone else. This sounds needlessly dismissive to me. 
 
If Humbert has begun writing on 9/21, then this line of inquiry ends in a leap off the board of the text. I'm certainly eager to hear what the implications are of this reading. But unless I'm mistaken, it sounds as you're suggesting not that Humbert has begun writing on this date, but rather that the error points to a discrepancy of 4 days, which is important for other reasons. I'm not sure that I'm convinced about the "extraordinarily insistent hints on the significance of the number 52" in the text, but I would enjoy reading the paper that tries to convince me.  
 
Best,
 
Bruce
 

Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2012 06:21:19 -0400
From: STADLEN@AOL.COM
Subject: Re: [NABOKV-L] The "56 days" conundrum in "Lolita"
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU

In a message dated 14/03/2012 02:22:16 GMT Standard Time, bstone41@HOTMAIL.COM writes:
I'm not sure that "56 days ago" has a "normal" meaning. I suppose it's true that we wouldn't say "two days ago" if we mean "yesterday," but I don't think this rule necessarily applies for longer increments of time. And of course, we have to remember that Humbert is, in Ray's word, "abnormal." In his poem, he refers to Lo's age as 5,300 days. He writes the line "about as many years before Lolita was born as my age was that summer."
If in the year 1950 a newspaper had an archive column "25 years ago", "50 years ago", "100 years ago", these columns would contain excerpts from 1925, 1900, 1850 respectively. There would not be any dispute about what was the normal meaning of these terms. Nobody would be saying that perhaps the excerpts should be from 1926, 1901, 1851 respectively.
 
Humbert is, normally, quite precise about time, as exemplified by the "5300 days". His calculation that "about as many years before Lolita was born as my age was that summer" is accurate, too. (In the shortest chapter in the book he gives an approximate date, 15 August, but he is clear that he is confused and that this date is only approximate.) Hence, as others have argued, it is striking that there is a discrepancy between his precise "56 days ago" and the other dates given, by him and by John Ray, Jr.
 
Clearly, as Brian Boyd has demonstrated, Nabokov was himself capable of miscalculation. But it is also possible that this is a deliberate error of Nabokov's, intended to show what Freud called a motivated slip of Humbert's. (That Nabokov accepted at least this part of Freud's thinking is clear from elsewhere in Lolita.) We will not make sense of this if we cling to what I insist is an abnormal, indeed simply wrong, interpretation of what "56 days ago" means, just because Nabokov scholars have copied each other in speaking of "3 days discrepancy". They are simply compounding the original mistake, and making it more difficult to decide whether the original mistake was Nabokov's or Humbert's.
 
The correct calculation of the discrepancy means that, if the other dates are correct, then Humbert could have started writing his book at most 52 days ago when he claims to have started 56 days ago. And I have drawn attention to the extraordinarily insistent hints on the significance of the number 52 (which we are told neither Humbert nor Quilty, but only the author, can understand) from Appel-Nabokov. Here, surely, is where the search for the solution of the riddle should begin.
 
Even if you want to insist (perversely, as I see it) that "56 days ago" might mean what I, and newspapers, and (I think) most English speakers would call "55 days ago", you must surely acknowledge that what we mean by "56 days ago" is one possible meaning. But this at least possible (and in my view unique and correct) meaning has been neglected by Nabokov scholars, as far as I know, until now.   
 
Anthony Stadlen
     
 
Anthony Stadlen
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