----- Original Message -----From: Donald B. JohnsonTo: jansy@aetern.usSent: Wednesday, August 10, 2005 12:59 AMSubject: Fwd: Speak MemoryDear Jansy-in-Rio,
Thanks for cc-ing me Could you send me the Pascal reference? -for personal
use only? Did I send you The Last Tango essay? The passing reference to Rio is
in one version that I'm revising for publication. Best, Don
----- Forwarded message from jansy@aetern.us -----
Date: Tue, 9 Aug 2005 21:18:03 +0100
From: Jansy Berndt de Souza Mello
Reply-To: Jansy Berndt de Souza Mello <jansy@aetern.us>
Subject: Speak Memory
To: pennyparkerpark@hotmail.com
Dear Dane Gill,
I found your query at the list, concerning Montaigne and Nabokov´s opening
chapter in Speak Memory.
I have been researching about the image of the cradle and the abyss and found
several other names linked to it. Boyd connects it with the first lines of
Pale Fire in his book on the novel. Also Priscilla Meyer studies it in her own
book on Pale Fire and refers to The Honorable Bede ( the image of a sparrow
crossing a lighted room while entering it from a dark winter night and
returning to it again ). I found interesting links also with Pascal.
I wrote a short note on this subject and I submitted it to The Nabokovian.
Although I am not allowed to divulge the text of note ( and I still don´t know
if it has been accepted for publication ) I think that I can offer you more
bibliographic indications if you should be interested in pursuing this matte
further, specially the references to Pascal. In that case, please ask me off
list in a mail and I´ll be glad to forward them to you.
Best,
Jansy
----- End forwarded message -----
Dear Dane Gill,I found your query at the list, concerning Montaigne and Nabokov´s opening chapter in Speak Memory.
I have been researching about the image of the cradle and the abyss and found several other names linked to it. Boyd connects it with the first lines of Pale Fire in his book on the novel. Also Priscilla Meyer studies it in her own book on Pale Fire and refers to The Honorable Bede ( the image of a sparrow crossing a lighted room while entering it from a dark winter night and returning to it again ). I found interesting links also with Pascal.
I wrote a short note on this subject and I submitted it to The Nabokovian. Although I am not allowed to divulge the text of note ( and I still don´t know if it has been accepted for publication ) I think that I can offer you more bibliographic indications if you should be interested in pursuing this matte further, specially the references to Pascal. In that case, please ask me off list in a mail and I´ll be glad to forward them to you.Best,Jansy