While I was checking M.S.Merian in "speak,memory"
( Vintage International,1989 ) after this short reference that had
been skipped over in the past, I could now recover it as it lies,
exactly, on page 122, following Zimmer ( whose book I haven't yet in my
collection).
VN simply wrote:"lovely plates of
Surinam insects" and made no reference to a theme so dear to his heart,
namely, Merian's pioneer work with insect metamorphosis ( defying the
"spontaneous generation" predominant conception) and her effort to work
from life specimens, not dry or bottled ones, linking flora and
fauna apparently for the first time.
The Vintage edition does not carry titles for each chapter, only numbers.
Their original names are to be found in Nabokov's Foreword, where he also
explains "Although I had been composing these chapters in
the erratic sequence reflected by the dates of first publication given above,
they had been neatly filling numbered gaps in my mind which followed the present
order of chapters. That order had been estanlished in 1936... I had no trouble
therefore in assembling a volume which Harper & Bros. of New York brought
out in 1951, under the title Conclusive Evidence..."
Query:
(i) Is there any other edition in which one
may find chapters indicated by the titles of their original
publication? Did they carry titles in the Harper & Bros. 1951
edition (such as 1:Perfect Past; 2.
Portrait of My Mother; 3. Portrait of My Uncle; 4. My English
Education; 5.Mademoiselle O; 6. Butterflies;
7. Colette; 8. Lantern Slides; 9. My Russian Education;
10. Curtain Raiser; 11. First Poem; 12. Tamara;
13. Lodgings in Trinity Lane; 14. Exile; 15.Gardens and Parks)? (Cf.
V. Nabokov, "A Pessoa em Questão: uma
autobiografia revisitada", Companhia das Letras,1994).
(ii) Why was VN's reference to
Merian sooooooooo succint?