Dear Carolyn,
You're right. We
know that in "Pnin" there was Dr. Bodo von Falternfel's obese dog
that used to lie on Pnin's three-dollar rug, completing the scenery of Pnin's
sudden displacement and that Pnin himself used to feed left-overs
to "a
mangy little white dog, with pink patches on its back, that visited him
sometimes in the afternoon".
The dog may have grown
healthier and fatter! It was probably the same dog that reappeared in the end
when "a great truck carrying beer rumbled up the street, immediately
followed by a small pale blue sedan with the white head of a dog looking
out..." So, according to Kinbote, not only Pnin but his dog were both
dominating a circular room and the Russian Department at Wordsmith's: a
mighty change.
But why should I trust Kinbote's description of a
fat sleeping dog lying across the room more than I can believe in his other
assessments about Prof. Pnin?
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, August 04, 2006 10:23
PM
Subject: [NABOKV-L] [Fwd: Our
Pnin?]
-------- Original Message --------
Dear Jansy,
Of course it is "our" Pnin (the little white dog is the "proof") - - as seen
by that distortionist, Kinbote.
Carolyn
Search the Nabokv-L archive at
UCSB
Contact the
Editors
All private editorial communications, without exception,
are read by both co-editors.
Visit Zembla
View Nabokv-L Policies