His reversed body gracefully curved, his
brown legs hoisted like a Tarentine sail, his joined ankles tacking, Van gripped
with splayed hands the brow of gravity, and moved to and fro, veering and
sidestepping, opening his mouth the wrong way, and blinking in the odd bilboquet
fashion peculiar to eyelids in his abnormal
position. (1.13)
La Jeune Tarentine ("The Young Tarantine")
is an elegy by André Chénier (1762-94). It is mentioned by VN in his EO
Commentary (vol. III, p. 341):
Another candidate [for the
post of vozvyshennyi Gall*] is André Chénier, who
died, aged not quite thirty-two, on the guillotine 7
Thermidor, Year Two (July 25, 1894). Before his arrest in 1894, he had published
only two "courageous hymnes" (one of which is Le Jeu de paumme, à David, peintre,
1791). His most famous piece, the elegy known
as La Jeune Captive, appeared in the Décade philosophique in
1795 and later in several magazines (as did La Jeune Tarentine).
Chateaubriand quoted a Chénier fragment from memory in the
Génie (1802), in eulogizing the poet.
In a footnote to his elegy Andrey Shen'e (André
Chénier, 1825) Pushkin quotes Chénier's last words: pourtant
j'avais quelque chose là. Chose is Van's University. It is up at
Chose that Van begins to perform as Mascodagama dancing on his
hands. (1.30)
Chénier is the author of Ode à Marie-Anne-Charlotte Corday (Marat's
murderer known on Antiterra as Cora Day, 1.28).
*Vozvyshennyi Gall ("the exalted Gaul") mentioned by
Pushkin in Vol'nost' (Ode to Liberty, 1817)
brings to mind Milord Goal, Governor of Lute (as on Antiterra Paris is also
known). For the first time Chose and Lute are mentioned in the same paragraph of
Ada:
In 1885, having completed his prep-school
education, he went up to Chose University in England, where his fathers had
gone, and traveled from time to time to London or Lute (as prosperous but not
overrefined British colonials called that lovely pearl-gray sad city on the
other side of the Channel). (1.28)
P. S. to my previous post:
Задека + пьяница + сентябрь...
Задека - Zadeck
Pushkin's Note 33 to EO: Divinatory
books in our country come out under the imprint of Martin Zadeck - a worthy
person who never wrote divinatory books, as B. M. Fyodorov
observes. See also VN's EO Commentary, vol. II, pp. 514-15.
Alexey Sklyarenko