-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Ada: indestructible Gamaliel
Date: Sun, 29 Jul 2012 11:34:02 -0700
From: Mike Marcus <mmkcm@COMCAST.NET>
To: <NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU>
CC: Mike Marcus <mmkcm@COMCAST.NET>


Mike M writes:

Gamaliel appears five times, I believe, in Ada. Known in the New Testament for his wait-and-see approach, he ought to epitomize the prudent politician, but such expectations are confounded if Gamaliel does represent one real-life individual only.

First of all, Demon Veen wants to duel with Baron d'Onsky in Europe: "(decrepit but indestructible Gamaliel was said to be doing his best to forbid duels in the Western Hemisphere - a canard or an idealistic President's instant-coffee caprice, for nothing was to come of it at all)". Is Nabokov getting at something neurological? Gamaliel suggests Harding at first blush, but nothing else fits, so he's a red herring, a proxy for poxy politicians. "Idealistic President": Wilsonian idealism springs to mind, but so does Theodore Roosevelt, as both were advised by Herbert Croly, devotee of German idealism. The instant-coffee caprice certainly applies to Roosevelt, since the Maxwell House slogan -- "Good to the last drop" -- was attributed to Roosevelt when he complimented the beverage when visiting the Maxwell House Hotel. Can Roosevelt be brought into alignment with a duel? I do believe that on one occasion he was challenged to a duel by a French emigre to the wild west (perhaps t!
hat's the meaning of western hemisphere), something to do with cattle rustling; the belligerent Frenchman said or wrote something like "you know where to find me", and Roosevelt replied that "you know where to find me too, any time" or something like that. I'm afraid I'm fuzzy on the details, but it fizzled out, and in this, Ada is consistent: "nothing was to come of it at all''. Perhaps the use of a word of French origin - canard - is not irrelevant, though the canard may apply to the Maxwell House attribution, which has been challenged as apocryphal.

Second, "(old Gamaliel was by now pretty gaga)". Roosevelt was never gaga.

Third: "Gamaliel (then a stout young senator)". That will do nicely.

Fourth: "Gamaliel, on his (no longer frequent, alas) trip to Paris". Anyone?

Fifth: "(recently abdicated upon Gamaliel's suggestion in favor of a republican regime..)". Roosevelt was a Republican, and one imagines a republican.

Gamaliel is usually parenthetical. On the other hand, he is indestructible.


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