JM:"the Devil in Skazka is not as malignant
as W.W. Jacob's in "The Monkey's Paw", or as G.Lipon's seems to
be....
PS (OST): When I read again Frau Monde's words and watched
her gestures, I realized that she was, in fact, quite malignant.
Quote: "I said 'hit by
a tram,' not 'run over,' which I might also have said," remarked Frau Monde
coolly, as she worked a thick cigarette into an enameled holder. "In any case,
this is an example."
A thick cigarette worked into a slim
holder is (wow!) quite a threat...
In V.Nabokov's Pnin,
his occasional landlord, Prof. Laurence Clements, is a specialist
on the philosophy of gesture. Once he recorded on film Pnin's
demonstrations of Russian "carpalistics" to illustrate his brand
of Behaviorism. Nevertheless, gestures in Nabokov have an
indestructible link with the verbal domain. They are not only coded signals.
Although their shape and motion is verbally rendered, or echoed
by stylistic devices, they demand an additional "trifle" together
with the diagrams and maps.
As it happens in his lecture on Charles Dickens (Lectures
on Literature, Bowers, p.124), after quoting the author's description
of a London cab-driver ("The person, who is one of those extraordinary
specimens of human fungus that spring up spontenously in the western streets of
London...receives his twopence with anything but transport, tosses the money
into the air, catches over-handed, and retires"), Nabokov adds: "This gesture, this one gesture, with its epithet
'over-handed' - a trifle- but the man is alive forever in a good reader's
mind...A great writer's world is indeed a magic democracy where even some very
minor character, even the most incidental character like the person who tosses
the twopence, has the right to live and breed."
Still hoping to read more about Nabokov's kinaesthetic imaging
from S.E.Sweeney's article, recently presented at the "Nabokov Upside Down"
conference, I found out more about one of our EDs's publications on a related
theme. Namely "Nabokov's Amphiphorical Gestures" [ S.E. Sweeney www.librarything.com/work/1775022Em
], but I couldn't ascertain when it was released.