----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, November 25, 2002 6:39 PM
Subject: Re: Andrew Brown on nun & chronology
Ms. Kunin,
Here's how I read this. It's the professor of
physics, " a so-called Pink," who says claims "That sorry ruler is known to have
escaped disguised as a nun."
Shade then states that he has it from Kinbote
(pointing) that the nun story was a vulgar invention of the Extremists and their
friends" to conceal their (the Extremist's) discomfiture. The
truth according to Shade, who got it from Kinbote, is that the King escaped not
as a "pale spinster" but as an athlete in scarlet.
So, a complete opposite: not pale spinster but
red satyr considering the King's apparently insatiable antics in Zembla and
Kinbote's multiple ping pong partners at Wordsmith. I think that
Nabokov's intention in both the reference to a future nun "roommate" (whose I
don't know, but you know my thoughts on this word choice) sitting with
Hazel, and the second reference, in the commentary, to a fake nun, are both
separate statements of about a certain tupe of marginal person
-- non-sexual persons.
In the first case, with Hazel, her companion would
naturally, to Shade, be a fellow non-participant in life's amatory games, and in
the second case, the least probable disguise for a randy king (and a choice of
disguise that would presumably be the most annoying to the exiled king who
has to suffer the imputation of having resorted to it) would be that of a woman
and a non-sexual woman at that.
What I think is most interesting in this couple of
pages of commentary is 1. Shade admitting to having been said to resemble the
"slapdash disheveled hag" in the cafeteria, and 2. the strange unease of "Good
Netochka" who is singularly uncomfortable during this exchange, and who
"hastily" interrupts talk about the king to say, irrelevantly, that the
Goldsworths are having a wonderful time.
I think "Netochka" Natochdag is one of the
most significant characters in the book. Note that he is not mentioned in the
index.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, November 25, 2002 1:46
PM
Subject: Fw: Andrew Brown on nun &
chronology
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, November 23, 2002 10:16 PM
Subject: Re: Andrew Brown on nun & chronology
A challenge to those who believe that the
roommate is Hazel's:
Do you see any significance in the nun who turns up in
Kinbote's commentary to line 894 ("the widely circulated stuff about the nun")
or any relationship between this nun and the roommate who has become
one?
Andrew Brown's response:
As for the nun
disguise rumor mentioned in the commentary and the future nun in the poem, the
time frame doesn't lend itself to their being the same person. If an actual
King Charles had escaped from Zembla disguised as a nun, he could not have
arrived at Wordsmith in the form of a "future nun" while Hazel attended
school.
Dear Mr Brown,
I did not mean to suggest that
Charles had become Hazel's roommate (bizarre idea and as you say,
chronologically impossible since Hazel's death precedes the revolution in
Zembla), rather that the nun who turns up in the commentary is Kinbote/Shade's
memory of the roommate/nun. To me it was interesting that Shade associates the
nun with a feeling of discomfiture.
How do you interpret the second
appearance of the nun in the commentary is what I am asking.
Carolyn
Kunin