Vladimir Nabokov

Balthasar, Prince of Loam in Pale Fire

By Alexey Sklyarenko, 22 October, 2023

One of the three main characters in VN's novel Pale Fire (1962), Kinbote (Shade's mad commentator who imagines that he is Charles the Beloved, the last self-exiled king of Zembla) nicknamed his black gardener “Balthasar, Prince of Loam:”

 

I am happy to report that soon after Easter my fears disappeared never to return. Into Alphina's or Betty's room another lodger moved, Balthasar, Prince of Loam, as I dubbed him, who with elemental regularity fell asleep at nine and by six in the morning was planting heliotropes (Heliotropium turgenevi). This is the flower whose odor evokes with timeless intensity the dusk, and the garden bench, and a house of painted wood in a distant northern land. (note to Line 62)

 

In Hieronymus Bosch's Adoration of the Magi or The Epiphany (c. 1485-1500), a triptych oil painting on wood panel, Balthazar (one of the three Magi) is depicted as a dark-skinned man wearing white garments:

 

 

(detail of the central panel with the Magi)

 

Symbols of heresy, several toads in Bosch's painting bring to mind the Toad, the dictator Paduk's nickname in VN's novel Bend Sinister (1947). A Dutch painter from Brabant, Hieronymus Bosch (c. 1450-1516) is the author of The Garden of Earthly Delights (1490-1510), a triptych oil painting on oak panel. Its right panel depicts the Hell. In Canto Two of his poem Shade mentions Flemish hells with porcupines and things:

 

So why join in the vulgar laughter? Why

Scorn a hereafter none can verify:

The Turk's delight, the future lyres, the talks

With Socrates and Proust in cypress walks,

The seraph with his six flamingo wings,

And Flemish hells with porcupines and things?

It isn't that we dream too wild a dream:

The trouble is we do not make it seem

Sufficiently unlikely; for the most

We can think up is a domestic ghost. (ll. 221-230)

 

Kinbote would certainly have his gardener attired according to the old romanticist notion of a Moorish prince:

 

He had worked for two years as a male nurse in a hospital for Negroes in Maryland. He was hard up. He wanted to study landscaping, botany and French ("to read in the original Baudelaire and Dumas"). I promised him some financial assistance. He started to work at my place the very next day. He was awfully nice and pathetic, and all that, but a little too talkative and completely impotent which I found discouraging. Otherwise he was a strong strapping fellow, and I hugely enjoyed the aesthetic pleasure of watching him buoyantly struggle with earth and turf or delicately manipulate bulbs, or lay out the flagged path which may or may not be a nice surprise for my landlord, when he safely returns from England (where I hope no bloodthirsty maniacs are stalking him!). How I longed to have him (my gardener, not my landlord) wear a great big turban, and shalwars, and an ankle bracelet. I would certainly have him attired according to the old romanticist notion of a Moorish prince, had I been a northern king – or rather had I still been a king (exile becomes a bad habit). You will chide me, my modest man, for writing so much about you in this note, but I feel I must pay you this tribute. After all, you saved my life. You and I were the last people who saw John Shade alive, and you admitted afterwards to a strange premonition which made you interrupt your work as you noticed us from the shrubbery walking toward the porch where stood – (Superstitiously I cannot write out the odd dark word you employed.) (note to Line 998)

 

A Moorish Prince makes one think of Eduard Charlemont's painting The Moorish Chief (1878):

 

The Moorish Chief