Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0019625, Sun, 14 Mar 2010 17:29:33 -0300

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Re: SIGHTING: "a salad of racial genes"
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Andrea Pitzer: In Jeffrey Meyers' Edmund Wilson: A Biography, Meyers notes that Nabokov used the term "a salad of racial genes" (p. 286) to describe Wilson's fourth and last wife, Elena Mumm Thornton, who was German and Russian. The phrase, of course, is the same that HH uses to describe his father in Lolita. The quote is not sourced...

JM: Elena had a great insight into "Lolita" (contrary to Wilson's opinion) and well worth quoting it here. I'll find her letter to VN, with his words describing her, in "Dear Bynny/dear Volodya," and post it then.

Hafid Bouazza: ... the doors of Elphinstone hospital (the poet Oliver Goldsmith was born near Elphin, Ireland)
Fran Assa: Excerpt from "The Deserted Village" of Oliver Goldsmith, apropos Lolita: "And thou, sweet poetry thou loveliest maid,/.../Dear charming nymph, neglected and decried,/.../ Thou nurse of every virtue, fare thee well!/../ Teach erring man to spurn the rage of gain;/.../While self-dependent power can time defy,/ As rocks resist the billows and the sky."

JM: A possible direct reference to Golsmith, in "Lolita," which was once brought up in relation to Joyce's rivers,washerwomen and the "Tigris eye", with the mystery about tigers roaming Appalachia as described by Humbert.
Writes HH: "I remember as a child in Europe gloating over a map of North America that had "Appalachian Mountains" ...so that the whole region they spanned...appeared to my imagination as a gigantic Switzerland or even Tibet, all mountain, glorious diamond peak upon peak, giant conifers, le montagnard émigré in his bear skin glory, and Felis tigris goldsmithi, and Red Indians under the catalpas. That it all boiled down to a measly suburban lawn and a smoking garbage incinerator, was appalling. Farewell, Appalachia!"

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