Vladimir Nabokov

woman-sized strawberry & Mr Brod or Bred in Ada

By Alexey Sklyarenko, 23 September, 2024

Telling his son about Uncle Dan's odd Boschean death, Demon Veen (in VN's novel Ada, 1969, Van's and Ada's father) mentions a woman-sized strawberry in Bosch's painting The Garden of Earthly Delights:

 

‘If I could write,’ mused Demon, ‘I would describe, in too many words no doubt, how passionately, how incandescently, how incestuously — c’est le mot — art and science meet in an insect, in a thrush, in a thistle of that ducal bosquet. Ada is marrying an outdoor man, but her mind is a closed museum, and she, and dear Lucette, once drew my attention, by a creepy coincidence, to certain details of that other triptych, that tremendous garden of tongue-in-cheek delights, circa 1500, and, namely, to the butterflies in it — a Meadow Brown, female, in the center of the right panel, and a Tortoiseshell in the middle panel, placed there as if settled on a flower — mark the "as if," for here we have an example of exact knowledge on the part of those two admirable little girls, because they say that actually the wrong side of the bug is shown, it should have been the underside, if seen, as it is, in profile, but Bosch evidently found a wing or two in the corner cobweb of his casement and showed the prettier upper surface in depicting his incorrectly folded insect. I mean I don’t give a hoot for the esoteric meaning, for the myth behind the moth, for the masterpiece-baiter who makes Bosch express some bosh of his time, I’m allergic to allegory and am quite sure he was just enjoying himself by crossbreeding casual fancies just for the fun of the contour and color, and what we have to study, as I was telling your cousins, is the joy of the eye, the feel and taste of the woman-sized strawberry that you embrace with him, or the exquisite surprise of an unusual orifice — but you are not following me, you want me to go, so that you may interrupt her beauty sleep, lucky beast! A propos, I have not been able to alert Lucette, who is somewhere in Italy, but I’ve managed to trace Marina to Tsitsikar — flirting there with the Bishop of Belokonsk — she will arrive in the late afternoon, wearing, no doubt, pleureuses, very becoming, and we shall then travel à trois to Ladore, because I don’t think —’

Was he perhaps under the influence of some bright Chilean drug? That torrent was simply unstoppable, a crazy spectrum, a talking palette —

‘— no really, I don’t think we should bother Ada in her Agavia. He is — I mean, Vinelander is — the scion, s,c,i,o,n, of one of those great Varangians who had conquered the Copper Tartars or Red Mongols — or whoever they were — who had conquered some earlier Bronze Riders — before we introduced our Russian roulette and Irish loo at a lucky moment in the history of Western casinos.’

‘I am extremely, I am hideously sorry,’ said Van, ‘what with Uncle Dan’s death and your state of excitement, sir, but my girl friend’s coffee is getting cold, and I can’t very well stumble into our bedroom with all that infernal paraphernalia.’

‘I’m leaving, I’m leaving. After all we haven’t seen each other — since when, August? At any rate, I hope she’s prettier than the Cordula you had here before, volatile boy!’

Volatina, perhaps? Or dragonara? He definitely smelled of ether. Please, please, please go.

‘My gloves! Cloak! Thank you. Can I use your W.C.? No? All right. I’ll find one elsewhere. Come over as soon as you can, and we’ll meet Marina at the airport around four and then whizz to the wake, and —’

And here Ada entered. Not naked — oh no; in a pink peignoir so as not to shock Valerio — comfortably combing her hair, sweet and sleepy. She made the mistake of crying out ‘Bozhe moy!’ and darting back into the dusk of the bedroom. All was lost in that one chink of a second.

‘Or better — come at once, both of you, because I’ll cancel my appointment and go home right now.’ He spoke, or thought he spoke, with the self-control and the clarity of enunciation which so frightened and mesmerized blunderers, blusterers, a voluble broker, a guilty schoolboy. Especially so now — when everything had gone to the hell curs, k chertyam sobach’im, of Jeroen Anthniszoon van Äken and the molti aspetti affascinati of his enigmatica arte, as Dan explained with a last sigh to Dr Nikulin and to nurse Bellabestia (‘Bess’) to whom he bequeathed a trunkful of museum catalogues and his second-best catheter. (2.10)

 

Darkbloom (‘Notes to Ada’): c’est le mot: that’s the right word.

pleureuses: widow’s weeds.

Bozhe moy: Russ., good Heavens.

 

A woman-sized strawberry brings to mind a cucumber as huge as a mountain in Krylov's fable Lzhets ("The Liar," 1811):

 

Из дальних странствий возвратясь,
Какой-то дворянин (а может быть, и князь),
С приятелем своим пешком гуляя в поле,
Расхвастался о том, где он бывал,
И к былям небылиц без счету прилагал.
"Нет, — говорит, — что я видал,
Того уж не увижу боле.
Что здесь у вас за край?
То холодно, то очень жарко,
То солнце спрячется, то светит слишком ярко.
Вот там-то прямо рай!
И вспомнишь, так душе отрада!
Ни шуб, ни свеч совсем не надо:
Не знаешь век, что есть ночная тень,
И круглый божий год все видишь майский день.
Никто там ни садит, ни сеет:
А если б посмотрел, что там растет и зреет!
Вот в Риме, например, я видел огурец:
Ах, мой творец!
И по сию не вспомнюсь пору!
Поверишь ли? Ну, право, был он с гору". -
"Что за диковина! — приятель отвечал, -
На свете чудеса рассеяны повсюду;
Да не везде их всякий примечал.
Мы сами вот теперь подходим к чуду,
Какого ты нигде, конечно, не встречал,
И я в том спорить буду.
Вон, видишь ли через реку тот мост,
Куда нам путь лежит? Он с виду хоть и прост,
А свойство чудное имеет:
Лжец ни один у нас по нем пройти не смеет;
До половины не дойдет -
Провалится и в воду упадет;
Но кто не лжет,
Ступай по нем, пожалуй, хоть в карете". -
"А какова у вас река?" -
"Да не мелка.
Так видишь ли, мой друг, чего-то нет на свете!
Хоть римский огурец велик, нет спору в том,
Ведь с гору, кажется, ты так сказал о нем?" -
"Гора хоть не гора, но, право, будет с дом". -
"Поверить трудно!
Однакож как ни чудно,
А все чуден и мост, по коем мы пойдем,
Что он Лжеца никак не подымает;
И нынешней еще весной
С него обрушились (весь город это знает)
Два журналиста да портной.
Бесспорно, огурец и с дом величиной
Диковинка, коль это справедливо". -
"Ну, не такое еще диво;
Ведь надо знать, как вещи есть:
Не думай, что везде по-нашему хоромы;
Что там за домы:
В один двоим за нужду влезть,
И то ни стать, ни сесть!" -
"Пусть так, но все признаться должно,
Что огурец не грех за диво счесть,
В котором двум усесться можно.
Однакож мост-ат наш каков,
Что Лгун не сделает на нем пяти шагов,
Как тотчас в воду!
Хоть римский твой и чуден огурец..." -
"Послушай-ка, — тут перервал мой Лжец, -
Чем на мост нам идти, поищем лучше броду".

 

From distant travelling on his return to home,
One nobleman (perhaps, he was a Prince) ,
While walking through the field, was bragging over
The places, where he had been,
and alternated truth with lie.
'Wow! - he said, - What I had seen there,
I'll never see again. Look at your land!
It has the cold winter and hot summer,
Your sun always hides, or shines so bright to dazzle.
But if you take the place,
where I was feeling a delight,
That was the real Paradise!
You have no any need to wear fur-coat,
And it is so bright, you need not any candle in the night,
The whole year you are fond of weather,
Which here is only in spring.
And no one is sowing a seed - but everywhere
You'll see the fields with crops and greens.
For example, I had seen in Rome such great a cucumber,
That was like a huge mountain! '
His freind said: 'Oh, this miracle
Is not peculiar, surprises are scattered everywhere,

It's only a work of noticing, rather.
Look, we are getting closer to one of them,
Which, I dare say, you haven't seen before. I shan't
Discuss the matter,
But do you see the bridge in front?
It looks so simple in the view,
But has a miraculous quality: no any
Of liars could cross a river,
At middle he is falling through or down the bridge into the water.
But if you're not a liar - you are free
To step on it whether by feet, or a coach'.
'But is it deep? ' 'Of course. You see
That miracles are not so mere in the sight!
Though the roman cocumber is large,
Is as a mountain, as you
have said, ain't so? '
'Yes! But not so large as a mountain, perhaps, as a house.'
'It's hard to believe in that.
But here is the magic bridge, which we shall cross.
It is not worth for liars, in this spring
Two journalists and the tailor had fallen from it,
All the town was talking all about this.
So, cucumber with size as a house may be strange,
But bridge is also.' 'Oh, no.
Don't think that houses there are giant so.
If you try getting there inside, it only two like me will hold,
And it is hard here even to stand or seat! '
'Oh, let it be so. But taking matter this,
The cucumber, which two of men contains, is not so strange,
But if you take this bridge...
Where you even coudn't make five steps forward,
Then suddenly - you'll fall in water!
Oh, may be cucumber so queer, but...'
'Oh, please, stop', - thus the liar said, -
'Instead of going on bridge,
It's better looking for a ford!'

(tr. L. Purgina)

 

The fable's last line, "Chem nam na most itti, poishchem luchshe brodu" ('Instead of going on bridge, it's better looking for a ford!'), makes one think of a Mr Brod or Bred whom Dorothy Vinelander (Ada's sister-in-law) eventually marries:

 

After helping her to nurse Andrey at Agavia Ranch through a couple of acrimonious years (she begrudged Ada every poor little hour devoted to collecting, mounting, and rearing!), and then taking exception to Ada's choosing the famous and excellent Grotonovich Clinic (for her husband's endless periods of treatment) instead of Princess Alashin's select sanatorium, Dorothy Vinelander retired to a subarctic monastery town (Ilemna, now Novostabia) where eventually she married a Mr Brod or Bred, tender and passionate, dark and handsome, who traveled in eucharistials and other sacramental objects throughout the Severnïya Territorii and who subsequently was to direct, and still may be directing half a century later, archeological reconstructions at Goreloe (the 'Lyaskan Herculanum'); what treasures he dug up in matrimony is another question. (3.8)

 

While brod is Russian for "ford," bred means "delirium; nonsense." In Krylov's fable Vodolazy ("The Pearl Divers," 1813) bred rhymes with vred (harm):

 

Какой-то древний царь впал в страшное сомненье:
Не более ль вреда, чем пользы, от наук?
Не расслабляет ли сердец и рук
Ученье?
И не разумнее ль поступит он,
Когда ученых всех из царства вышлет вон?
Но так как этот царь, свой украшая трон,
Душою всей радел своих народов счастью
И для того
Не делал ничего
По прихоти, иль по пристрастью,—
То приказал собрать совет,
В котором всякий бы, хоть слогом не кудрявым,
Но с толком лишь согласно здравым
Свое представил: да, иль нет;
То есть, ученым вон из царства убираться,
Или попрежнему в том царстве оставаться?
Однако ж как совет ни толковал:
Кто сам свой голос подавал,
Кто голос подавал работы секретарской,
Всяк только дело затемнял
И в нерешимости запутывал ум царской.
Кто говорил, что неученье тьма;
Что не дал бы нам бог ума,
Ни дара постигать вещей небесных,
Когда бы он хотел.

Чтоб человек не боле разумел
Животных бессловесных,
И что, согласно с целью сей,
Ученье к счастию ведет людей.
Другие утверждали,
Что люди от наук лишь только хуже стали:
Что всё ученье бред,
Что от него лишь нравам вред,
И что, за просвещеньем вслед,
Сильнейшие на свете царства пали.
Короче: с обеи́х сторон,
И дело выводя и вздоры,
Бумаги исписали горы,
А о науках спор остался не решен;
Царь сделал более. Созвав отвсюду он
Разумников, из них установил собранье
И о науках спор им предложил на суд.
Но способ был и этот худ,
Затем, что царь им дал большое содержанье:
Так в голосах между собой разлад
Для них был настоящий клад;
И если бы им волю дали,
Они б доныне толковали
Да жалованье брали.
Но так как царь казною не шутил,
То он, приметя то, их скоро распустил.
Меж тем час-от-часу впадал в сомненье боле.
Вот как-то вышел он, сей мыслью занят, в поле,
И видит пред собой
Пустынника, с седою бородой
И с книгою в руках большой.
Пустынник важный взор имел, но не угрюмый;
Приветливость и доброта
Улыбкою его украсили уста,
А на челе следы глубокой видны думы.
Монарх с пустынником вступает в разговор
И, видя в нем познания несчетны,
Он просит мудреца решить тот важный спор:
Науки более ль полезны или вредны?
«Царь!» старец отвечал: «позволь, чтоб пред тобой
Открыл я притчею простой,

Что́ размышленья мне внушили многолетны».
И, с мыслями собравшись, начал так:
«На берегу, близ моря,
Жил в Индии рыбак;
Проведши долгий век и бедности, и горя,
Он умер и троих оставил сыновей.
Но дети, видя,
Что с нуждою они кормились от сетей
И ремесло отцовско ненавидя,
Брать дань богатее задумали с морей,
Не рыбой,— жемчугами;
И, зная плавать и нырять,
Ту подать доправлять
Пустились сами.
Однако ж был успех различен всех троих:
Один, ленивее других,
Всегда по берегу скитался;
Он даже не хотел ни ног мочить своих
И жемчугу того лишь дожидался,
Что выбросит к нему волной:
А с леностью такой
Едва-едва питался.
Другой,
Трудов нимало не жалея,
И выбирать умея
Себе по силе глубину,
Богатых жемчугов нырял искать по дну:
И жил, всечасно богатея.
Но третий, алчностью к сокровищам томим,
Так рассуждал с собой самим:
«Хоть жемчуг находить близ берега и можно,
Но, кажется, каких сокровищ ждать не должно,
Когда бы удалося мне
Достать морское дно на самой глубине?
Там горы, может быть, богатств несчетных:
Кораллов, жемчугу и камней самоцветных,
Которы стоит лишь достать

И взять».
Сей мыслию пленясь, безумец вскоре
В открытое пустился море,
И, выбрав, где была чернее глубина,

В пучину кинулся; но, поглощенный ею,
За дерзость, не доставши дна,
Он жизнью заплатил своею.
«О, царь!» примолвил тут мудрец:
«Хотя в ученьи зрим мы многих благ причину,
Но дерзкий ум находит в нем пучину
И свой погибельный конец,
Лишь с разницею тою
Что часто в гибель он других влечет с собою».

 

Onboard Admiral Tobakoff Van tells Lucette (Van's and Ada's half-sister who commits suicide by jumping from the ship into the Atlantic) that she is a divine diver:

 

‘Come with me, hm?’ she suggested, rising from the mat.

He shook his head, looking up at her: ‘You rise,’ he said, ‘like Aurora.’

‘His first compliment,’ observed Lucette with a little cock of her head as if speaking to an invisible confidant.

He put on his tinted glasses and watched her stand on the diving board, her ribs framing the hollow of her intake as she prepared to ardis into the amber. He wondered, in a mental footnote that might come handy some day, if sunglasses or any other varieties of vision, which certainly twist our concept of ‘space,’ do not also influence our style of speech. The two well-formed lassies, the nurse, the prurient merman, the natatorium master, all looked on with Van.

‘Second compliment ready,’ he said as she returned to his side. ‘You’re a divine diver. go in with a messy plop.’

‘But you swim faster,’ she complained, slipping off her shoulder straps and turning into a prone position; ‘Mezhdu prochim (by the way), is it true that a sailor in Tobakoff’s day was not taught to swim so he wouldn’t die a nervous wreck if the ship went down?’

‘A common sailor, perhaps,’ said Van. ‘When michman Tobakoff himself got shipwrecked off Gavaille, he swam around comfortably for hours, frightening away sharks with snatches of old songs and that sort of thing, until a fishing boat rescued him — one of those miracles that require a minimum of cooperation from all concerned, I imagine.’

Demon, she said, had told her, last year at the funeral, that he was buying an island in the Gavailles (‘incorrigible dreamer,’ drawled Van). He had ‘wept like a fountain’ in Nice, but had cried with even more abandon in Valentina, at an earlier ceremony, which poor Marina did not attend either. The wedding — in the Greek-faith style, if you please — looked like a badly faked episode in an ‘old movie, the priest was gaga and the dyakon drunk, and — perhaps, fortunately — Ada’s thick white veil was as impervious to light as a widow’s weeds. Van said he would not listen to that.

‘Oh, you must,’ she rejoined, ‘hotya bï potomu (if only because) one of her shafer’s (bachelors who take turns holding the wedding crown over the bride’s head) looked momentarily, in impassive profile and impertinent attitude (he kept raising the heavy metallic venets too high, too athletically high as if trying on purpose to keep it as far as possible from her head), exactly like you, like a pale, ill-shaven twin, delegated by you from wherever you were.’

At a place nicely called Agony, in Terra del Fuego. He felt an uncanny tingle as he recalled that when he received there the invitation to the wedding (airmailed by the groom’s sinister sister) he was haunted for several nights by dream after dream, growing fainter each time (much as her movie he was to pursue from flick-house to flick-house at a later stage of his life) of his holding that crown over her.

‘Your father,’ added Lucette, ‘paid a man from Belladonna to take pictures — but of course, real fame begins only when one’s name appears in that cine-magazine’s crossword puzzle. We all know it will never happen, never! Do you hate me now?’

‘I don’t,’ he said, passing his hand over her sun-hot back and rubbing her coccyx to make pussy purr. ‘Alas, I don’t! I love you with a brother’s love and maybe still more tenderly. Would you like me to order drinks?’

‘I’d like you to go on and on,’ she muttered, her nose buried in the rubber pillow.

‘There’s that waiter coming. What shall we have — Honoloolers?’

‘You’ll have them with Miss Condor’ (nasalizing the first syllable) ‘when I go to dress. For the moment I want only tea. Mustn’t mix drugs and drinks. Have to take the famous Robinson pill sometime tonight. Sometime tonight.’

‘Two teas, please.’

‘And lots of sandwiches, George. Foie gras, ham, anything.’

‘It’s very bad manners,’ remarked Van, ‘to invent a name for a poor chap who can’t answer: "Yes, Mademoiselle Condor." Best Franco-English pun I’ve ever heard, incidentally.’

‘But his name is George. He was awfully kind to me yesterday when I threw up in the middle of the tearoom.’

‘For the sweet all is sweet,’ murmured Van.

‘That’s very clever, darling,’ said Van ‘— except that time itself is motionless and changeless.’

‘Yes, it’s always in your lap and the receding road. Roads move?’

‘Roads move.’

After tea Lucette remembered an appointment with the hairdresser and left in a hurry. Van peeled off his jersey and stayed on for a while, brooding, fingering the little green-gemmed case with five Rosepetal cigarettes, trying to enjoy the heat of the platinum sun in its aura of ‘film-color’ but only managing to fan, with every shiver and heave of the ship, the fire of evil temptation.

A moment later, as if having spied on his solitude the pava (peahen) reappeared — this time with an apology.

Polite Van, scrambling up to his feet and browing his spectacles, started to apologize in his turn (for misleading her innocently) but his little speech petered out in stupefaction as he looked at her face and saw in it a gross and grotesque caricature of unforgettable features. That mulatto skin, that silver-blond hair, those fat purple lips, reinacted in coarse negative her ivory, her raven, her pale pout.

‘I was told,’ she explained, ‘that a great friend of mine, Vivian Vale, the cootooriay — voozavay entendue? — had shaved his beard, in which case he’d look rather like you, right?’

‘Logically, no, ma’am,’ replied Van.

She hesitated for the flirt of a second, licking her lips, not knowing whether he was being rude or ready — and here Lucette returned for her Rosepetals.

‘See you aprey,’ said Miss Condor.

Lucette’s gaze escorted to a good-riddance exit the indolent motion of those gluteal lobes and folds.

‘You deceived me, Van. It is, it is one of your gruesome girls!’

‘I swear,’ said Van, ‘that’s she’s a perfect stranger. I wouldn’t deceive you.’

‘You deceived me many, many times when I was a little girl. If you’re doing it now tu sais que j’en vais mourir.’

‘You promised me a harem,’ Van gently rebuked her.

‘Not today, not today! Today is sacred.’

The cheek he intended to kiss was replaced by her quick mad mouth.

‘Come and see my cabin,’ she pleaded as he pushed her away with the very spring, as it were, of his animal reaction to the fire of her lips and tongue. ‘I simply must show you their pillows and piano. There’s Cordula’s smell in all the drawers. I beseech you!’

‘Run along now,’ said Van. ‘You’ve no right to excite me like that. I’ll hire Miss Condor to chaperone me if you do not behave yourself. We dine at seven-fifteen.’ (3.5)

 

Darkbloom ('Notes to Ada'): I love you with a brother’s love etc.: see Eugene Onegin, Four: XVI: 3-4.

cootooriay etc.: mispronunciation of ‘couturier’, dressmaker, ‘vous avez entendu’, you’ve heard (about him).

tu sais etc.: you know it will kill me.

 

After the dinner in 'Ursus' and debauch à trois in Van's Manhattan flat Ada tells Van that she loves Lucette and will never allow him do her any harm:

 

After a while he adored [sic! Ed.] the pancakes. No Lucette, however, turned up, and when Ada, still wearing her diamonds (in sign of at least one more caro Van and a Camel before her morning bath) looked into the guest room, she found the white valise and blue furs gone. A note scrawled in Arlen Eyelid Green was pinned to the pillow.

Would go mad if remained one more night shall ski at Verma with other poor woolly worms for three weeks or so miserable

Pour Elle

Van walked over to a monastic lectern that he had acquired for writing in the vertical position of vertebrate thought and wrote what follows:

Poor L.

We are sorry you left so soon. We are even sorrier to have inveigled our Esmeralda and mermaid in a naughty prank. That sort of game will never be played again with you, darling firebird. We apollo [apologize]. Remembrance, embers and membranes of beauty make artists and morons lose all self-control. Pilots of tremendous airships and even coarse, smelly coachmen are known to have been driven insane by a pair of green eyes and a copper curl. We wished to admire and amuse you, BOP (bird of paradise). We went too far. I, Van, went too far. We regret that shameful, though basically innocent scene. These are times of emotional stress and reconditioning. Destroy and forget.

Tenderly yours A & V.

(in alphabetic order).

‘I call this pompous, puritanical rot,’ said Ada upon scanning Van’s letter. ‘Why should we apollo for her having experienced a delicious spazmochka? I love her and would never allow you to harm her. It’s curious — you know, something in the tone of your note makes me really jealous for the first time in my fire [thus in the manuscript, for "life." Ed.] Van, Van, somewhere, some day, after a sunbath or dance, you will sleep with her, Van!’

‘Unless you run out of love potions. Do you allow me to send her these lines?’

‘I do, but want to add a few words.’

Her P.S. read:

The above declaration is Van’s composition which I sign reluctantly. It is pompous and puritanical. I adore you, mon petit, and would never allow him to hurt you, no matter how gently or madly. When you’re sick of Queen, why not fly over to Holland or Italy?

A.

‘Now let’s go out for a breath of crisp air,’ suggested Van. ‘I’ll order Pardus and Peg to be saddled.’

‘Last night two men recognized me,’ she said. ‘Two separate Californians, but they didn’t dare bow — with that silk-tuxedoed bretteur of mine glaring around. One was Anskar, the producer, and the other, with a cocotte, Paul Whinnier, one of your father’s London pals. I sort of hoped we’d go back to bed.’

‘We shall now go for a ride in the park,’ said Van firmly, and rang, first of all, for a Sunday messenger to take the letter to Lucette’s hotel — or to the Verma resort, if she had already left.

‘I suppose you know what you’re doing?’ observed Ada.

‘Yes,’ he answered.

‘You are breaking her heart,’ said Ada.

‘Ada girl, adored girl,’ cried Van, ‘I’m a radiant void. I’m convalescing after a long and dreadful illness. You cried over my unseemly scar, but now life is going to be nothing but love and laughter, and corn in cans. I cannot brood over broken hearts, mine is too recently mended. You shall wear a blue veil, and I the false mustache that makes me look like Pierre Legrand, my fencing master.’

‘Au fond,’ said Ada, ‘first cousins have a perfect right to ride together. And even dance or skate, if they want. After all, first cousins are almost brother and sister. It’s a blue, icy, breathless day,’

She was soon ready, and they kissed tenderly in their hallway, between lift and stairs, before separating for a few minutes.

‘Tower,’ she murmured in reply to his questioning glance, just as she used to do on those honeyed mornings in the past, when checking up on happiness: ‘And you?’

‘A regular ziggurat.’ (2.8)

 

Darkbloom ('Notes to Ada'): spazmochka: Russ., little spasm.

bretteur: duelling bravo.

au fond: actually.

 

In March 1905 Demon Veen perishes in a mysterious airplane disaster above the Pacific in the Gavaille region. Van does not realize that his father died, because Ada (who could not pardon Demon his forcing Van to give her up) managed to persuade the pilot to destroy his machine in midair. Demon's "woman-sized strawberry" brings to mind "a goblin-sized Gulliver" and "a large boiled strawberry, still very hot" mentioned by Van when he describes the beginning of his life-long romance with Ada:

 

During our children’s kissing phase (a not particularly healthy fortnight of long messy embraces), some odd pudibund screen cut them off, so to speak, from each other’s raging bodies. But contacts and reactions to contacts could not help coming through like a distant vibration of desperate signals. Endlessly, steadily, delicately, Van would brush his lips against hers, teasing their burning bloom, back and forth, right, left, life, death, reveling in the contrast between the airy tenderness of the open idyll and the gross congestion of the hidden flesh.

There were other kisses. ‘I’d like to taste,’ he said, ‘the inside of your mouth. God, how I’d like to be a goblin-sized Gulliver and explore that cave.’

‘I can lend you my tongue,’ she said, and did.

A large boiled strawberry, still very hot. He sucked it in as far as it would go. He held her close and lapped her palate. Their chins got thoroughly wet. ‘Hanky,’ she said, and informally slipped her hand into his trouser pocket, but withdrew it quickly, and had him give it himself. No comment.

(‘I appreciated your tact,’ he told her when they recalled, with amusement and awe that rapture and that discomfort. ‘But we lost a lot of time — irretrievable opals.’) (1.17)

 

Lemuel Gulliver is the narrator and main character in Jonathan Swift's novel Gulliver's Travels (1726). During their final reunion in 1922 Ada tells Van that her two maids were supposed to have flown over to Europe on a Laputa (freight airplane):

 

There had been trouble with her luggage. There still was. Her two maids, who were supposed to have flown over the day before on a Laputa (freight airplane) with her trunks, had got stranded somewhere. All she had was a little valise. The concierge was in the act of making some calls for her. Would Van come down? She was neveroyatno golodnaya (incredibly hungry). (Part Four)

 

Laputa (the name means in Spanish 'the whore') is a flying island in Gulliver's Travels. Letayushchie ostrova ("The Flying Islands," 1882) is a humorous story (a parody of Jules Verne) by Chekhov.