Didier Machu (off-list to JM) I had second thoughts about the Elephant. Scholars
more versed in chess and its history than I am would tell you that in Chinese xiangqi (still practiced and from
which modern chess derives*), the Elephant is a leaper that moves a distance of
two diagonally (i.e. in four possible directions), cannot jump over another
piece and is restricted to one half of the board. In
(Persian and Arabic) shatranj, the elephant is Fil or Alfil** (known as
Tamerlane Elephant in Tamerlane chess, a Persian game derived from shatranj).
I hope this is all correct. Somehow I seem
to have succeeded in making things a little bit more obscure?
* India: chaturanga
('four forces') -> China and Persia: shatranj -> Arabian world: ash-shatranj -> Spain: acedrex -> axedreç -> ajedrez [and xadrez in Portuguese?]
** alfil (Spanish) = bishop
(English) = fou (French) = bispo (I think, in Portuguese): al
fil (Arabic) = el elefante. Somehow delfim (in
Portuguese) seems to have a hand in the matter too but I'm not quite clear
about this.
JM: In
RLSK a link to chess is made through the name of a city where Knight lies dying
[in Brazil the checkered board, and a specific game, is named “Damas”
(damas,ie: ladies, queens?)].
IN PF there is a poem on “The Nature of Electricity”, quoted by
Kinbote to follow the story of Hazel’s will-of the-wisp and other obscure
matters, which mentions Tamerlane (until now I’d only associated this
name to the historical figure, Timur, or to Poe’s Tamerlane). Its lines
(p.193): “The
torments of a Tamerlane/ The roars of tyrants torn in hell.”
For me, that’s the end of the “lane,” unless fate intervenes
again.