-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: Percy de Prey
Date: Mon, 18 Mar 2013 09:25:27 -0700
From: Mike Marcus <mmkcm@COMCAST.NET>
To: <NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU>
CC: Mike Marcus <mmkcm@COMCAST.NET>


Mike M writes, concerning Humbert: I pointed out last year that in Pale Fire, Shalksbore Baron Harfar, known as Curdy Buff is a lampoon on Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, supposed by some to be Shakespeare. Since Percy de Prey is also "coeur de boeuf", by parity of reasoning I assumed that he too was derived, to put it too strongly, from that same Vere. He is also present in the notorious Chapter 7 of Bend Sinister, which I mentioned some time later. Not having read Lolita I can't say whether or not he is there in some incarnation(s), though I would not bet against it. Vere is, in the minds of those engaged with the issue of the authorship of Shakespeare (and I count Nabokov amongst that tally) strongly associated with Hamlet. I'm sure it must have been pointed out that the name HUMBERT could be a conflation of Hamlet and Humber. The latter is a character in 'Locrine', a play written in the early 1590s with a rather murky history of authorship and attribution. It was first published in 1595 as by "W.S.", although nobody believes that it was by Shakespeare, and no plausible alternative WS has come to light (unless you believe that Shaxper from Stratford was a plagiaristic dramatist who would be guilty of a feeble gallimaufry such as Locrine). In the play Humber is king of the Scythians, engaged in warfare against the Trojans under king Albanact, who commits suicide when seemingly defeated; his ghost demands revenge (hence the connection to Hamlet). He did away with himself prematurely because ultimately the Trojans were victorious, Humber lives in exile and squalor, and Albanact's ghost is elated when Humber too kills himself. So much for that. When I saw the name Elphinstone I assumed that it was wordplay on Elsinore; I googled them together, and the first result was a 19th century cyclopedia where they showed up as adjacent entries. Maybe VN had that book. That Nabokov locates Elphinstone in the Rocky Mountains isn't inconsistent with Hamlet I, iv, when Hamlet is beckoned high on Elsinore castle by the ghost:

"What if it tempt you toward the flood, my lord,
 Or to the dreadful summit of the cliff
 That beetles o'er his base into the sea..."
 [rocky mountain?]

Authorship, especially authorship of Shakespeare, haunted Nabokov. I would be very surprised if the idea of contested authorship weren't present in Lolita, probably veiled somehow, and definitely if the Hamlet/Humbert/ghost/revenge association is genuine. In Ada, Percy (coeur de boeuf) and Van are rivals, and Nabokov draws attention to Percy's "everlasting stream". This, superficially, is meant to be seen as a stream of urine, but is intended by Nabokov to allude to the "ever-living poet" of the dedication to "Shake-speares Sonnets"; the "stream" is the 16th century equivalent of our 'streaming video'; back then it was streaming audio, i.e. drama.


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