----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, September 14, 2003 6:36 PM
Subject: Re: Linguistic showoffs
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, September 14, 2003 2:51
PM
Subject: Fw: Linguistic showoffs
----- Original Message -----
Although I quite often enjoy reading what
DN has to say and his help is invaluable when we are looking for certain
factual or historical clarifications, also when we read wonderful personal
tidbits, I still think it gauche when he comes in as a white knight
in defense of his father while apparently taking
himself as the highest authority on Vladimir Nabokov. The Nabokv-L is a
"forum", is it not?
Those that
intensely dislike VN should keep away, of course, but there must exist
lots of people who admire VN without having to describe his entire oeuvre as
so wonderful "that it is impossible to point out his worst book, only the
one that seems to be less good" ( as has already happened in one of
the discussions of Nabokv-L ). In my opinion, participants
that are less than a hundred percent pro VN are a source of new discoveries
and enrichment.
Jansy
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, September 14, 2003 2:10
PM
Subject: Linguistic showoffs
----- Original Message -----
From Dmitri
Nabokov
Sent: Sunday, September 14, 2003 9:33 AM
I know we shall all be grateful to David Morris for finally unmasking VN
as a liguistic [sic] showoff. I, personally, would be grateful if he would illustrate his vision with a few specific
instances.
That would help me read my father with a new perspective, and finally give
me insight into locutions whose meaning, it
seems, has escaped me ever since, when I was
fourteen, he first gave me a novel of his to read. It was Bend
Sinister and, naïvely, I thought I understood most of it, partly
because I was then studying Shakespeare. When I was stumped, he was always ready to expain, but, since Mr.
Morris has at last established that Father was little more
than a nacissistic nobody, I see now why he never once
owned up to having said something for the sake of showing off.
Live and learn. While he's at it, Mr. Morris might clarify his
assessment of "so many quotes" from
VN.
With utmost respect for
such perspicacity,
Dmitri
Nabokov