Today I was reading a short note about the
life of Lavoisier and discovered that Marat was his sworn enemy and
probably he was indirectly responsible for his death at the guillotine.
Nabokov wrote about the French Revolution, the guillotine, Maratīs murder by
Cora Day and I donīt remember his ever mentioning Lavoisier.
This scientist showed that the ancient belief in the four elements (
water, air, earth and fire ) was unfounded, adding at least
sixteen elements to the original four, then discredited as
such. Lavoisier also opposed Maratīs attempt at writing scientific
papers on the subject of fire, and he rejected the formerīs
theories about combustion and his re-introduction of the concept
of the "phlogiston".
Nabokov made an issue about these four elements in various
different moments in ADA:
1. Air: Demon died in an airplane accident;
2. Fire: Marina was cremated;
3. Water: the drowning of Lucette ( no
reference to Aqua, though ) .
For the fourth element VN added: "Earth
awaits..."
Could anyone clarify the importance that these
"four elements" have for Nabokov in relation to the special role that fire
plays in almost all his novels? Is Lavoisier ever mentioned in
Ada?
I have another question to add.
Lucette
was often described as "red haired" like her father, whereas
Demonīs children had "raven black hair".
I was reminded again of
VNīs chess-board and began to wonder about the opposition reds and
blacks.
The "honor code" that demanded of Van that
he should never try to make love to Lucette has always
perplexed me, since in almost all other matters concerning sex and
love Van didnīt show any special kind of moral
restriction. Could a special rule of chess for Reds &
Blacks serve as an equivalent for this forbidding "honor
code" ?
Jansy