On February 20, Jerry Friedman wrote: As Jim notes, Karshan says Shade didn't believe his own theory at the end of Canto 3, but Karshan doesn't give the evidence for that. I'm not sure what it could be. Shade was an atheist from childhood on, but his story in Canto 3 suggests a change of mind.
JT: Unlike Jerry, I believe Karshan does present arguments--two of them, one each on pp. 206 and 207--about Shade’s reasoning, arguments which, to me at least, carry a good deal of weight.
I was about to comment on these arguments when I read Thomas Karshan’s post this morning. At this point, I’ll wait to see what he might have to say on the matter.
One thing I’m especially curious about is how TK, and also JF and anyone else who cares to comment, might connect Shade’s “text not texture” insight with his stated belief at the end of the poem that Hazel “somewhere is alive.” In most of the examples given of the game players in action (ll. 820-829), these “gods” don’t seem much different from the wanton boys in King Lear. And anyhow, what started off as thoughts about “life everlasting” has turned into thoughts about design (and the possibility of poetry). Unless I’ve missed or forgotten something, it’s not till the end of the poem that immortality re-enters the picture. Once again, what’s the connection?
JF: On the subject of reputable philosophers, I'm not going to add to my "onslaught" about what Nabokov believed, but I will say that I don't see why Shade should be closer to them than to Mme. Blavatsky. Yeats really did follow Blavatsky among others, and that did not keep him from being a far better poet than Shade.
JT: I agree that there’s no reason why Shade, as opposed to VN, should be closer to reputable philosophers than to Blavatsky and her ilk. He (Shade) would be an interesting character in either case. As for Yeats and VN, the question of VN’s own beliefs is of some importance because Brian Boyd has made it so:
[D. Barton Johnson] asks if it would make any difference whether Nabokov’s otherworldly philosophy were shopworn. To me it certainly would. Eliot’s craving for the authority of tradition, Yeats’s refuge in the irrational, to me seriously diminish their art. Nabokov is of such interest partly because he is such a clear and independent thinker, and his style is the way it is because he has such clarity and independence of thought. --Johnson and Boyd, “Prologue: The Otherworld,” in Nabokov’s World, Vol. 1: The Shape of Nabokov’s World (Palgrave-Macmillan, 2002), p. 23.
Jim Twiggs
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