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Authors: Brian Boyd

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Nabokov also displayed throughout his American and final European years a strong desire to keep alive the memory of the Russian liberal tradition, before the revolution in Russia and after the revolution
outside
it, and to oppose Soviet propaganda that downplayed both. He did this both as a teacher of literature, in pieces like “The Triumphs and Trials of Russian Literature,”
31
and as a writer, in the forewords to his own books in translation.
32
He wanted to stress the development toward freedom during (and despite) Tsarism, the regression toward intensified oppression under the Soviets, and the emigration as the preserver of the Russian liberal tradition and of the tradition of freedom in Russian literature.

Nabokov’s sense of the free growth of literature and culture—of their evolution to date, of their need to keep evolving, of the best of the past as a basis for still further evolution—lies behind his strong opinions, his commitment to the freedom that allows creation and criticism, and his distaste for what he sees as cliché, conformity, complacency, or the control of art by extra-artistic forces. But it does not apply only to the Russian literary tradition. During his Russian years Nabokov was also engaged with the Western tradition: with Theodore Dreiser in
King, Queen, Knave
, despite his later disclaimer;
33
with Spengler and other prophets of the decline of civilization in
Glory
(
VNRY
353); with Joyce and Proust in
The Gift
(
VNRY
466–67).
34

And during his American years he did not cease challenging current literature as well as past traditions: T. S. Eliot and Pound; Sartre, Camus, and existentialism; Mann, Faulkner, Pasternak, Steinbeck, Borges; or, further in the past, Lawrence, Galsworthy, George Eliot, Dostoevsky, eighteenth-century conventionalism; and so on. If in his Russian works he had exalted the Russian literary tradition from within his fiction and verse, in his English years he continued to exalt the Russian tradition in his roles as scholar and translator and, when he could, as storyteller; paid tribute in his English fiction and verse to Shakespeare, Donne, Marvell, Pope, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Shelley, Keats, Browning, Hardy, and Housman within the English verse tradition; celebrated Shakespeare as example and inspiration to English literature as he had celebrated Pushkin as inspiration for Russian literature (see
chapter 15
); and invoked Austen, Pushkin, Dickens, Flaubert, Tolstoy, Proust, and Joyce as sources of the traditions of the novel in
Ada
.

Because of his high standards, his sense of the need and duty of art to evolve, Nabokov weighed carefully even the work of writers he esteemed as much as Shakespeare, Pushkin, and Tolstoy and readily dismissed whole swathes of art: the primitive, the Oriental, the
hochmodern
, the
poshliy
. He criticized his own Russian work in the same spirit, not because he was trying to diminish Sirin or distance himself from him but because he thought that art needed to keep rising to the highest standards possible, by making the best of past art an inspiration and a challenge and a basis for critique and new discovery.

Nabokov’s post-1940 critiques of aspects of his Russian work and his changing treatment of Russian matters were not inexplicable denigrations of his earlier work or denials of its deep Russianness. Rather, they reflected his high expectations of literary and cultural traditions in Russia and else where and of his own contribution to those traditions over the years. If we see this we can see the
range
of his behavior—beyond his concern for only the Russian literary tradition—and its reasons: his consistent attitudes to cultural and individual development.

NABOKOV AND OTHERS

15. Nabokov, Pushkin, Shakespeare

Genius, Generosity, and Gratitude in
The Gift
and
Pale Fire

Nabokov may have rejected attributions of the influence of other writers on him, yet he also paid generous homage to the way writers of genius animate their traditions and extend the possibilities of literary art. I had written (but not published) much of a book on Shakespeare in the early 1990s, and in the late 1990s wrote a book on
Pale Fire
, a novel whose title comes from two Shakespeare plays at once. When invited by the Institute of Russian Literature (Pushkinskiy Dom) to speak in St Petersburg in April 1999 at their conference celebrating the centenary of Nabokov’s birth and the bicentenary of Pushkin’s, I chose to speak on Nabokov’s sense of the life-giving and almost eerie reverberations of Shakespeare within English and Pushkin with Russian literature.

I did not originally note in this essay but think it worth adding here, in light of the relation between parent and child that Nabokov mingles with the influence of Pushkin and Shakespeare in
The Gift
and
Pale Fire—
so as to link the personal and the impersonal or the familial and the social handing-on of tradition—that Nabokov prompted his son to write his Harvard B.A. honors thesis on Pushkin and Shakespeare, a prompt for which Dmitri always remained grateful.

Shakespeare strews his plays with portents; Pushkin probes his life for fatidic dates; but no writer can have been more fascinated by patterns in time than Nabokov. How appropriate, then, that he should share a birth year with Pushkin, ’99, and a birthday that, only after he left Russia, aligned with Shakespeare’s, April 23, as if to mark the unique role that Pushkin would play in his Russian works and Shakespeare in his English.

Shakespeare and Pushkin are special for Nabokov in terms of quality—he calls Pushkin “the greatest poet of his time (and perhaps of all time, excepting Shakespeare)” (
NG
29)—and in terms of influence: as he said in an interview, “Pushkin’s blood runs through the veins of modern Russian literature as inevitably as Shakespeare’s through those of English literature” (
SO
63). Indeed, his sense of the unique creative legacy Pushkin leaves in Russian literature and Shakespeare leaves in English results in a series of extraordinary parallels running through what many think are his two greatest novels in his two main languages:
Dar
(
The Gift
) and
Pale Fire
.

Although Nabokov often invents failed or twisted artists or near-artists, Luzhin, Hermann, Humbert, Van Veen, on two occasions he invents as a central character an artist who is
not
a failure or a freak, Fyodor Godunov-Cherdynstev and John Shade, and has each of them draw his own artistic self-portrait, write his own artistic autobiography, within the work we are reading. Both artist-heroes are almost exactly Nabokov’s age, Fyodor a year younger, Shade a year older; Fyodor is an émigré writer when Nabokov is one, Shade an American literature professor when Nabokov had just been one. In both cases, this artist-hero tries to comes to terms with the loss of someone he has loved—a parent or a child—and to discern the design in a life that he finds astonishingly rewarding despite all that he has lost.

Both novels mingle poetry and prose to an unusual degree,
Dar
through the gliding into and out of the verse that Fyodor often composes in the midst of a scene,
Pale Fire
through the breach and bond between poem and line-by-line commentary. Both contain a radically detached inset work, Fyodor’s
Life of Chernyshevsky
, a trial run before he handles the role fate plays in his
own
life, and Shade’s “Pale Fire,” his verse autobiography, a foil to Kinbote’s commentary. Both of these insets have a ricorso structure, circling around on itself: the concluding sestet of the sonnet that begins the
Life of Chernyshevsky
, the opening octet that ends it; the unended couplet that closes or at least breaks off “Pale Fire” at line 999 and invites us to complete the couplet, and fill in the apparently intended line 1,000 by returning to line 1.

Both novels juxtapose a closely observed real world (an émigré’s alien capital, a stay-at-home American academic’s cozy campus town) and an imagined, romantic elsewhere (Central Asia, Zembla) that has persistent overtones of the beyond. In both novels, an unbalanced figure who has also suffered devastating loss urges upon the central artist figure a subject for his work that is absurd from the artist’s point of view—and yet ends up as part of the whole work. In
The Gift
Alexandra Yakovlevna Chernyshevsky all but commissions Fyodor to record the story of her son’s death in an uncompleted suicide pact while her increasingly deranged husband prompts him to undertake a life of Nikolay Chernyshevsky. Both proposals Fyodor can only reject, yet he nevertheless ends up writing both, the second in his inset
Life of Chernyshevsky
, the first in
The Gift
itself. In
Pale Fire
, Kinbote urgently and insistently implores Shade to immortalize in verse the story of Charles the Beloved’s escape from Zembla, which again Shade cannot but which becomes part of the first edition of “Pale Fire.”

Each of the novels also engages with an entire literary tradition:
Dar
, with the whole of modern Russian literature, from Pushkin to Fyodor’s émigré present;
Pale Fire
, with literature in English, from Shakespeare through Pope and Swift to Frost and T. S. Eliot. And in each case, one individual talent stands out within that tradition: Pushkin in
Dar
and Shakespeare in
Pale Fire
.

In both cases, although in different ways, the source of the artist’s work becomes problematic—more deeply so, the more we reread. Why does Fyodor write what he does? Why does he feel that “divine stab” prompting him to record his father’s life and travels? Why does someone of his esthetic inclinations experience such an irresistible impulse—after his initial bemused distaste—to write a
Life of Chernyshevsky
? Why does he suddenly feel a powerful urge to preserve the story of Yasha Chernyshevsky and his parents and then conclude, “There was a way—the only way” (
Gift
349), in a manner that somehow seems to help release
The Gift
itself? In
Pale Fire
, the problem of identifying immediate and ultimate sources is rather different. Where does the title of the poem “Pale Fire” come from? Kinbote, of course, has no clue. But is there anything to his apparently absurd claim to being the “only begetter” of Shade’s “Pale Fire” (
PF
17), to his sense that his pressing on Shade the claims of the Zembla story “acted as a catalytic agent upon the very process of the sustained creative effervescence that enabled Shade to produce a 1000-line poem in three weeks” (
PF
81)? And once we have enjoyed the comedy of the discords between Shade’s Appalachian poem and Kinbote’s Zemblan commentary, why do we keep detecting more and more concords between part and part, as if one owes something to the other?

In the lives of both invented writers we can discern a similar pattern, although the details and the rhythm could not be more different: a fate superficially seems to mock and frustrate but discloses a deep underlying generosity. In Fyodor’s case the frustrations begin when he cannot accompany his father on his next expedition into Central Asia and are compounded when he and family flee Petrograd and the October Revolution and when his father fails to return from his last expedition. They continue through the novel as exile settles into a round of petty tedium and dislocation, and Fyodor has to abandon the projected life of his father that seemed to offer an imaginative consolation for his losses. Offsetting these frustrations are two great compensations, the flowering of his literary gift and the gift of his love for Zina. Yet even his love is frustrated in the final sweep of the novel, which moves not to the consummation that Fyodor anticipates with such longing, but to their both being locked out of their apartment penniless, as he had been locked out of new lodgings alone on the first night of the novel.

In Shade’s case the frustrations are fewer but more absolute: the lifelong frustration of his search for something beyond death; the birth of a daughter whose life is made such a misery by her physical unattractiveness that she commits suicide; a heart attack that at last seems to offer him a vision of a beyond but then appears only to turn into a cosmic joke, when the fountain that he glimpsed seems confirmed by another woman’s near-death experience until he finds her “fountain” was a misprint for “mountain”; his senseless murder, just before he can put the last line to his poetic testament; and even after that, the theft and appropriation of his poem by the megalomaniac next door, who imposes his own irrelevant designs on the greatest achievement of Shade’s life.

In both novels we are invited to recognize the ultimate kindliness of the fate in which the writer within the story trusts, despite all his disappointments. We are even invited to discover eventually that the person whose death obsesses the writer plays some part from beyond death in the protective pattern of his fate.

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