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I will start by saying that Nabokov talking about the detail of the tunnels he used to make by the divan brought back memories of my childhood where we used to do that on the balcony.Fun memories.
I am only about 50 pages in and I have to say the details are amazing but I had a hard time understanding about the letters and the colors part,so anyone that wants to explain go right ahead.
I am only about 50 pages in and I have to say the details are amazing but I had a hard time understanding about the letters and the colors part,so anyone that wants to explain go right ahead.
I was struck by Nabokov's comment on the second page that time is a prison. I'm not sure I agree. Although one cannot escape time; time moves on. In a way, time may be more like a journey on open road without any ability to turn back or turn to the side. While we cannot remove ourselves from time, we have been given the ability to explore the time we are in. There is little to explore in a prison - but there is a world to explore in time.
It has been said that time cannot be purchased, marked or saved. It can only be spent. Spend it wisely!
The Apostle Paul in his letter to the Ephesians said "Be careful then how you walk ... making the best use of the time, because the days are evil."
I am reminded of the question "Why did God invent time?" The answer: "So that everything doesn't happen at once." A corollary question is "Why did God invent space?" The answer: "So that everything doesn't happen to me."
It's a recognized phenomenon and not easily explainable. Nabokov made it seem real to me, with his details about the different colors. One letter was a different shade of green from another.
What struck me about that passage was how he used his experience to show his bond with his mother. She was calm about it. Yes, letters had colors for her also. Then he builds on this with other warm memories of his mother, quite detailed. In the background, with occasional glancing references, is the sense of loss. They lost their life in Russia just as he now fears losing these memories of his parents and his childhood.
I have only finished the first two chapters, so I want to see how he develops this.
There are photos of Vyra and Rozhdestveno at Vyra / Nabokov Museum Official Site. Click on "Visit the Gallery".
I think the time as a prison fits the point that he's trying to make, and that is of course that there is no way for him to go back and explore the pre Vladimir Nabokov darkness.
A somewhat similar idea is expressed by Lin Yutang, who said "Life ... is really a dream, and we human beings are like travelers floating down the eternal river of life, embarking at a certain point and disembarking again at another point in order to make room for others waiting below the river to come aboard."
It may have elements of that, but I think he intends something deeper. He is taking about his first realizing the sense of time as a child.
I commented in my earlier post that time may be like a journey on open road without any ability to turn back or turn to the side. I realize on re-reading that Nabokov's analogy is more like a river than a road. This comes out when he "felt [him]self plunged abruptly into a radiant and mobile medium that was none other than the pure element of time. One shared it--just as excited bathers share shining seawater--with creatures that were not oneself but that were joined to one by time's common flow."
Nabokov comes back to these ideas in Chapter 3, Part 4, when he is talking about the "fair Oredezh" where, downstream from Vyra, "the endless tumultuous flow of a water mill gave the spectator (his elbows on the handrail) the sensation of receding endlessly, as if this were the stern of time itself."
A somewhat similar idea is expressed by Lin Yutang, who said "Life ... is really a dream, and we human beings are like travelers floating down the eternal river of life, embarking at a certain point and disembarking again at another point in order to make room for others waiting below the river to come aboard."