Gary Lipon: Thanks for the Duchamp citation as possible
allusion. It is, I think, in itself, worth knowing. But the point I was making
is that, for a variety reasons, it seems that Shade believes himself to be
immortal. In fact he says so explicitly in the lines beginning: Other men
die... The issue is: does he mean them; or is there an alternative, ironic
interpretation. I don't see that the Duchamp quote provides such an
alternative.Perhaps I'm overlooking something.
Jansy Mello: It's not a matter of overlooking things
because whenever we make an interpretation we must choose one way of perceiving
the world over the others. Freud said something that many others took up,
about our inability to experience death while we are still living (Shade
seems to be an exception), meaning that death can gain no mental
representation outside the verbal tag. Duchamps lapidary dictum
exposes this "alienation."
A palefiresque irony may be present in a couple of
lines verses before Shade wrote what he recognizes as the
syllogism. (lines 209-214): "What moment in the gradual decay/ Does resurrection choose? What year?
What day?...A
syllogism: other men die; but
I am not another; therefore I’ll not
die. "
Let's say (I know nothing about formal logic)
that Shade's employ of syllogism had already started
when he took for granted that resurrection is a real fact and deduced
that something or someone exists and who chooses to determine it for
humankind on a specified date. Mentioning later on
another syllogism to guarantee his wishful
thinking must be a chuckling authorial intervention (it is he, Nabokov, who
has the power to resurrect him and even, as in your mythological reasoning,
grant Shade a personal immortality). I didn't compare this reasoning with
the familiar syllogism "All men are mortal, Socrates is a man,
Socrates is mortal." but Nabokov could have been playing with that one,
too?