From: jansymello
To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2008 7:03 PM
Subject: [NABOKOV-L] Le Jeu de Robin et Marion, PS

Dear List, 
 
A  new information about Adam de la Halle disclosed one more coincidence. The thirteenth-century poet and musician from the city of Arras, born at a time when "the knightly  ritual was dead", was not not only called Adan d'Arras, but also Adan, le Bossus (  bosse:a hump, ie, hunchback), the son of Henri le Bossus..
 
Here is the serendipitous sentence in TRLSK:
"The Funny Mountain was completed, then Albinos in Black and then his third and last short story, The Back of the Moon. You remember that delightful character in it — the meek little man waiting for a train who helped three miserable travellers in three different ways? This Mr Siller is perhaps the most alive of Sebastian's creatures and is incidentally the final representative of the 'research theme', which I have discussed in conjunction with The Prismatic Bezel and Success. It is as though a certain idea steadily growing through two books has now burst into real physical existence, and so Mr Siller makes his bow, with every detail of habit and manner, palpable and unique — the bushy eyebrows and the modest moustache, the soft collar and the Adam's apple 'moving like the bulging shape of an arrased eavesdropper', the brown eyes, the wine-red veins on the big strong nose, 'whose form made one wonder whether he had not lost his hump somewhere'; the little black tie and the old umbrella ('a duck in deep mourning); the dark thickets in the nostrils; the beautiful surprise of shiny perfection when he removes his hat [...]
 
There are false clues  all over TRLSK: Nabokov was careful to inform English-readers about SK's deceiving Mr.Goodman in relation to Chekhov, whereas he didn't bother to clarify his references to Hamlet, which arise all over V's novel.
Nosebag (Abeson) is a character in SK's first novel ( "Cock Robin Hits Back" or "Prismatic Bezel"). Big-nosed and "bagless" Mr. Siller is a character in "The Back of the Moon". He merely shares with Mr.Silberman ( the stranger in a train of the "robisonada" lucky strike), a pair of "bushy eyebrows" and a restless Adam's apple.
 
As Priscilla Meyer pointed out:
 "To take Silberman's echoing Mr. Siller as V.'s attempt to write a novel by 'plundering' Sebastian's work collapses the complexity of Nabokov's careful construction of themes of magic and the transcendent..." (Black and Violet Words, Nabokov Studies 4, 1997,p.47).
These two gentlemen belong to distinct universes  (SK's and V's). Adam de la Halle doesn't belong to any transcendetal theme, either. He wrote comic operas, musical comedies and the names he chose might have later inspired Robin Hood's nursery-rhymes. Probably not... Marion and Robin are unheroic peasants. A knight hits Robin ("me donna telle colée") but Robin never manages to hit him back...
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