EDNOTE. The "Yolande Kickshaw" mystery
thickens--thanks to the efforts of the assiduous. The Anglo-French
choses in Cambridge (UK) and Harvard-in-Cambridge, Mass shoes
(Zapater) and "kickshaws/kickshoes" parallels are intriguing. Also note
"old Paar of CHose" now becomes "old pair of shoes." Maybe Peter Lubin's
essay "Kickshaws and Motley" which was written at Harvard has some
clues. And the tribade angle is certainly relevant. I doubt the
Sargent portrait of Violet leads anywhere BUT I find that Gauguin's "Are
You Jealous" pictures of two Tahitian women is indexed under "Lesbian" Aha oe Feii? (Are You Jealous?), 1892 (oil on canvas). I suggest someone
run down the "backstory" on this Gauguin painting. A library job. Nothing on the
web except the picture. VN does seem to attach significance to the name "Violet"
from early on in his work.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, November 16, 2003 9:17 AM
Subject: more inconclusive kickshaws
Dear Mrs Etsy,
The theme in relation to Yolande/
Violet Knox ( Nox?) is, of course, Ada´s bisexuality and there are
often references not only to Cinderella´s lost slipper ( it is usually
the "ashette" maid, Blanche, that leaves her slippers all over the novel while
carrying candles... ) but her " Glass" shoes.
In
Brazil lesbians are referred to as " sapatão" ( big shoe ) . Do you know any
English, or French expression linking shoes, big feet and lesbianism?
Those might give suport to your "kickshoe" idea. Or,
perhaps, lead us to investigate that omnipresent Blanche shadow
?
Dmitri's knowledge of French slang
surpasses mine, so maybe he can tell us if " sapatão"
has a French equivalent.
I haven't been following the
Blanche theme, but I did notice that she seemed at one point to be Ada's double.
I also didn't follow the Lesbianism theme closely enough to comment. If
Yolande/Landoy does refer to Colette that would also have bisexual
implications
Dear Mr Gill,
Kickshaw/ Kickshoes seem to link up
with the pun of chose and shoes at Chose University where Paar
("of Chose") practices whatever it is he practices, as Zapater of Aardvark does
apparently in Boston -- Cambridge, actually come to think of it.
So if
pair of shoes is a philosopher in Cambridge (England) the shoemaker of Harvard
is a philosopher in Cambridge (Mass.) Kickshaw/kickshoe then combine those
two strange ideas of shoes and universities in two towns called
Cambridge.
This Yolande Kickshaw comes in the following context: Van and
Ada are worrying about what to do if one should die before the other.
One solution would be for you to marry
Violet.
ŒThank you. J¹ai tâté de deux tribades dans ma vie, ça
suffit. Dear Emile says "terme qu¹on évite d¹employer." How right
he is!¹
ŒIf not Violet, then a local Gauguin girl. Or Yolande
Kickshaw.¹
As in other places in Ada, there is
some confusion between two siblings and two sexes. Which is speaking? Is Van
proposing that Ada "marry" Violet or is she proposing that he marry
Violet? As Alexey Sklyarenko has suggested, it is probably "Vaniada's musings to
itself."
The only other interesting contributions I can make is that
Yolande is a variant of the Greek name Iolanthe which means violet. Also that
Emile here (also thanks to Alexey) refers, not as I thought to Zola (who appears
elsewhere as the art expert Mr. Aix) but to Emile Littre, the French
lexicographer (not having access to his dictionary I will assume that "tribade
... terme qu'on evite d'employer" is a quote from it). "Dear Emile" probably
lives in the same neighborhood as "Darling Dahlia."
Dear
Don,
"Yolande Kickshaw" yields a few anagrams that actually "make sense"
-- but aren't particularly enlightening:
1) KICK
WAKES LANDOY
2) K, COY SHE, AND I WALK.
3) A
LOCK-AND-KEY WISH (my favorite -- what I wish to put Ada
under)
Carolyn
p.s. I couldn't locate any Gauguin "Girl with
Violets" but I did find that Sargent did a portrait of Violet Sargent (wife?
sister?) which I will try to send (if I don't succeed try
http://www.the-athenaeum.org/artworks/art_detail.php?ID=13559)