On May 4, 2012, at 6:49 PM, Jansy wrote:  Your alliterative games are great fun. 
 
Dear Jansy,

But my "games" are not alliterative at all!  Fulmerford = Dr Lemuroff is an anagramatic play (n.b. to our anagrams master, this is a "krugliy" anagram, if I may put it that way). The rest of the path down Lemur Lane, to make an alliterative detour,  is - I don't exactly know what it is - a series of associations of submarine and other lemurian associations. The association of occult ideas, leading betweem Lemuria and Thule, have not been explored yet so far as I know in the Nabokovian context. The submarine associations aren't necessarily particular to our VN - but perhaps they are, now that I think of Marina and sub-Marine motifs in Ada ...

Well, Ada's not my girl, as you may recall! But what, I wonder, can the internal parasite resembling the written word 'deified' refer to? You also bring up Sebastian Knight. I haven't read him since high school - let me count the decades! so I can't comment. But the Lehmann's apparently belongs in the Lemurian-Lemansian mix. And Priscilla Meyer's link between Lehmann's and occultism is surely an important key. Throw in her "pale kings, princes and pale warriors" and you have another lane to travel - a fire road perhaps?

But to return to Kalmakov, there is only one person curled up in the painting. If he is Sadko, a merchant, he is perhaps wearing some kind of musulman costume - or could he have wandered in from the Arabian Nights? - although Sadko was from Novgorod (I've googled a bit). I plan to take some time to visit Sadko in Novgorod soon, but for now I'll just close with a quote I found on the net:


    «The three songs about Sadko are remarkable because they represent the only Russian epic in which the main character makes a journey to the otherworld. They also combine elements of everyday life, customs, and institutions in Novgorod from the twelfth through the fifteenth centuries with folk beliefs and with motifs from magic tales. ...» 

 James Bailey

Thanks for a pleasant journey with a pleasant "sputnitsa" (fellow traveler of the feminine persuasion),
Carolyn

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* Priscilla Meyer in "Life as Annotation: Sebastian Knight, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Vladimir Nabokov" explains that "Sebastian becomes particularly susceptible to faery charms, as well as to Keats’ pale kings, Princes and pale warriors, once he is diagnosed with Lehmann’s disease. This medically non-existent heart disease appears to be named for Alfred Georg Ludvig Lehmann (1858-1921), a Danish psychologist at Copenhagen University who wrote a treatise on the occult, entitled Aberglaube und Zauberei (Superstition and Magic, 1908), in which he discusses magic, witchcraft, dreams, spiritualism and colored hearing. "
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