The fifth section of Brian Boyd's paper "Lolita: What We Know and What We Don't" will be of interest regarding "Humbert, the Hound". Spiders, of course, are also potential hunters of butterflies. Especially given what you've already mentioned about knights, you should find of interest a couple of references in Lolita: A Screenplay (I would find the page numbers and exact quotes for you but my room is a tangle of thorns right now and I can't find my copy) to Humbert being a "dark knight" which I suspect may have something to do with "Humbert, the Hoarse".

Lucia "First-Post-On-The-Nabokov-Listserv" Guatney

On Sun, Mar 17, 2013 at 7:01 AM, A. Bouazza <mushtary@yahoo.com> wrote:

Hello,

 

To the question about his choice, VN replied in the 1964 Playboy interview, reprinted in Strong Opinions (p. 26, 1st US edition):

 

“The double rumble is, I think, very nasty, very suggestive. It is a hateful name for a hateful person. It is also a kingly name, but I did need a royal vibration for Humbert the Fierce and Humbert the Humble. Lends itself also to a number of puns.”

 

In his Keys to Lolita (pp. 8-9), Proffer discusses briefly these names, and I remember an extensive note in Appel’s The Annotated Lolita regarding the name.

 

A. Bouazza

 

From: Vladimir Nabokov Forum [mailto:NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU] On Behalf Of Jansy
Sent: vrijdag 15 maart 2013 18:03
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
Subject: [NABOKV-L] Desultory query: Humbert Humbert's appositives

 

     While I was going through "Lolita" ( searching for references to ombre, hombre, umber) my attention was called to the list of appositives used to qualify Humbert Humbert, like those adjectives that are appended to the names of heroes, knights, royalty (one third begin with the letter H). Their appearance in the text is not regular (it's to be found mainly in the first chapters and I didn't check to see if related to the diary he kept) 

 

Does anyone know about any article related to this subject that could send us a reference or link? 

 

     Humbert, the Terrible and Humbert, the Small

Humbert, le Bel

Humbert, the Hoarse

Humbert, the Wounded Spider

Humbert, the Humble

Humbert, the Hummer

Humbert, the Hound

Humbert, the Cubus

Humbert, the popular butcher

 

PS: I hope I got the correct word for "appositive"

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