Hello, Jerry
I had forgotten about the other Arguses, thank you.
Still, I think that the last reference that brings up Greek yachts,
fidelity and "seeing off/coming back" must refer to Ulysses and
his dog ( and to the car).
I tried to see if there was anything else with
yachts or Yaks and had another thrilling surprise. There were two references in
"Ada" that mentioned Greeks and Yaks and described a kind of
barometer ( The cartesian diver, usually floating in a glass tube and a
wooden-barometer in the other that informs about rainy or sunny weather).
A
third barometer appeared ( it registered the hours!) but not as close to
the Yaks as the other ones but VN brought again the expression "saw
off"...
Google offered me an address refering to
"YAK" but it can only be a coincidental find! There is a
British company named "Yak" that offers yachting equipment, including "boyancy
aids". For the fun of it, I´ll copy their address:
YAK: Producers of marine safety equipment,
lifejackets and buoyancy aids, and immersion suits in Great Britain. www.crewsaver.co.uk/
The elements linked to separation/reunion,
water flow, Yachts and Yaks, and paraphernalia for diving/
flotation/measurement in VN are :
"God save America,
embarrassed sons, vulgar fathers, titled Britisher and Greek grandee
matching yachts, and yacs, and yoickfests in the Bahamudas (...)
God save their poor little American
tastebuds.
‘Your new car sounds wonderful,’ said
Van.
‘Doesn’t it? Yes.’(...) ‘And how is everything, my dear
boy? I saw you last the day you returned from Chose. We waste life in
separations! We are the fools of fate!
There comes a reference to a
strange "barometer" at the end of the meeting, when Demon departs, but
it doesn´t appear as close to car/yacht as the others. But the expression
"saw him off" appears next, once again:
"Demon tapped the barometer next to the
door. It had been tapped too often to react in any intelligible way and remained
standing at a quarter past three.
Van and
Ada
saw him off. The night was very warm and dripping with what Ladore
farmers called green rain. Demon’s black sedan glinted
elegantly among the varnished laurels in the moth-flaked porchlight". All that
Marina "could see was the
sheen of the car’s bonnet and the rain slanting in the light of its
lamps".
......................................................
Ada’s
Argus had not yet been delivered. The gloomy black gloss of the
hackney Yak (...) reminded him of her departure in 1905.
He saw her
off — and ascended, like a Cartesian glassman, like
spectral Time standing at attention, back to his desolate fifth floor.
................................................................
Even more patly the
sudden onset of her flow had curtailed yesterday’s caresses. It
was raining when he slammed the door of his car, hitched up his
velveteen slacks, and, stepping across puddles, passed between an ambulance and
a large black Yak, waiting one behind the other before the
hotel. All the wings of the Yak were spread open, two bellboys
had started to pile in luggage under the chauffeur’s supervision, and various
parts of the old hackney car were responding with discreet creaks to the grunts
of the loaders.(...) he was about to enter
the glass revolvo, when it produced
Ada,
somewhat in the manner of those carved-wood barometers whose doors yield
either a male puppet or a female one (...) there she attempted
to embrace him but he evaded her lips. She was leaving in a few
minutes.
(Purpur?) /Dark-blue is a color associated with
Van´s ancestors. Dark-blue is also a dream train that goes from London to
the Cape.
Jansy
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 03, 2005 10:41 PM
Subject: Re: Fwd: Greece, Argus and Ulysses J-3
May
According to Wikipedia, there were five Arguses in Greek
mythology.
There are two, possibly three here. "Argus-eyed" refers to
the
giant with 100 eyes who Hermes lulled to sleep. Jansy points
out
that the reference to Argus at Van and Ada's reunion connects
with
Odysseus's dog Argus, which recognized him when he returned
to
Ithaca. That seems to refer to a car, but we can imagine the
car
is named for the builder of the _Argo_, Jason's ship. (And
it's
dark blue--is that anything like wine-dark?)
I was hoping that
made a clean sweep, since those are the three
Arguses mentioned in Arthur C.
Clarke's sf novel _Imperial Earth_
(I'm afraid I don't get my information on
mythology from the
original sources), but apparently there are two more: the
son of
Zeus and Niobe who became king of Phoronea (named after
Niobe's
father) and renamed it Argos after himself, and someone who
the
Argonauts rescued and who helped them on their quest. If
anyone
wants to look for more Arguses.
Speaking of Wikipedia, I wrote
a good part of the article on
_Pale Fire_. If that makes any of the
experts here think it
could use critical attention, I think it would be great
if you
revised that or any other Nabokov articles.
Jerry
Friedman
--- "Donald B. Johnson" <chtodel@gss.ucsb.edu>
wrote:
> EDNOTE. This one was a surprise for me too.
>
---------------------------------------------------
>
> -----
Forwarded message from jansy@aetern.us
-----
> Date: Mon, 2 May 2005 13:31:58
-0300
> From: Jansy Berndt de Souza Mello
<jansy@aetern.us>
> Reply-To:
Jansy Berndt de Souza Mello <jansy@aetern.us>
> Subject: Greece, Argus and Ulysses J-3
May
> To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum Dear
List,
>
>
>
> There is always a surprise in store when
re-reading Ada. Today I
> realized the
> reference to
Argus/Penelope/Faithfulness and our Greek homecoming
>
Ulysses.
> When Van and Ada prepare for their last encounter ( the
"balcony scene
> at the
> Three Swans"), after which they will no
longer separete, they almost
> don´t make
> it because " Ada´s Argus
had not yet been delivered" ( Ada was not
> ready?) and
> she
invited to depart to Greece instead. And added emphasis about
>
faithful/unfaithful comes with the repeated reference to "saw off" ( C.
>
husband´s antlers and a good-bye )
>
>
>
> I promise to
get in touch with you in a day or two, and then we'll go on
> a
>
cruise to Greece with the Baynards - they have a yacht and three
>
adorable
> daughters who still swim in the tan, okay?'(...) veterinaries
had had to
> saw
> off her husband's antlers (...) Ada's Argus had
not yet been delivered.
> The
> gloomy black gloss of the hackney
Yak (...) He saw her off - and
> ascended, like
> a Cartesian
glassman, like spectral Time standing at attention, back to
> his
>
desolate fifth floor.
>
>
>
> other references to
Argus:
>
> 1. "Neither of them could imagine the partings that her
professional
> existence
> 'on location' might necessitate, and
neither could imagine their
> traveling
> together to Argus-eyed
destinations and living together in Hollywood,
> U.S.A.,
> or
Ivydell, England(...)
>
> 2. Today is Monday, July 14, 1922,
five-thirteen p.m. by my wrist watch,
> eleven
> fifty-two by my
car's built-in clock, four-ten by all the timepieces in
> town
>
(...)He started working his way west in a dark-blue Argus, dearer to him
>
than
> sapphires and morphos because she happened to have ordered an
exactly
> similar
> one to be ready for her in
Geneva.
>
> Jansy Mello
>
> ----- End forwarded message
-----
>
---------------------------------
Dear
List,
There is always a surprise in store when re-reading Ada.
Today I realized
the reference to Argus/Penelope/Faithfulness and our
Greek homecoming
Ulysses. When Van and Ada prepare for their last encounter (
the "balcony
scene at the Three Swans"), after which they will no longer
separete, they
almost don´t make it because " Ada´s Argus had not yet been
delivered" (
Ada was not ready?) and she invited to depart to Greece instead.
And added
emphasis about faithful/unfaithful comes with the repeated
reference to
"saw off" ( C. husband´s antlers and a good-bye
)
I promise to get in touch with you in a day or two, and then
we'll go on a
cruise to Greece with the Baynards - they have a yacht and
three adorable
daughters who still swim in the tan, okay?'(...) veterinaries
had had to
saw off her husband's antlers (...) Ada's Argus had not yet
been
delivered. The gloomy black gloss of the hackney Yak (...) He saw her
off
- and ascended, like a Cartesian glassman, like spectral Time standing
at
attention, back to his desolate fifth floor.
other
references to Argus:
1. "Neither of them could imagine the partings that
her professional
existence 'on location' might necessitate, and neither could
imagine their
traveling together to Argus-eyed destinations and living
together in
Hollywood, U.S.A., or Ivydell, England(...)
2. Today is
Monday, July 14, 1922, five-thirteen p.m. by my wrist watch,
eleven fifty-two
by my car's built-in clock, four-ten by all the
timepieces in town (...)He
started working his way west in a dark-blue
Argus, dearer to him than
sapphires and morphos because she happened to
have ordered an exactly similar
one to be ready for her in Geneva.
Jansy
Mello
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----- End
forwarded message -----