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A Pale Fire Timeline by Jerry
Friedman
This is the second chronology of Pale Fire
that I know of; the first was by Kevin Pilon (218–225). I
developed this one independently. The third chronology I know of
is in German, by Dieter Zimmer (2008:563–581). When I read Pilon’s
chronology, I found that I had included a good deal more than he had,
but I had missed a few events. They are marked here with the notation
[KP], and comments on things that Pilon understood or said
differently are also introduced with his initials. Material not in
his timeline is delimited by braces {}.
This timeline contains every datable event I found in
Pale Fire, including some that I could date only
speculatively or only to a range. This inclusiveness may make reading
sizable parts of the timeline tedious, but I hope anyone looking for
something specific will be able to find it.
I’ve supplied exact dates for a few real
events, such as Tennyson’s birth, for which the text gives only
years. I have not included real events mentioned but not dated in
the text, such as the publication of In Memoriam,
or events from history or Nabokov’s life. Each event is
accompanied by a reference to the text—FW for the
Foreword, l. for a line in the poem, n. for a note to a line, and I. for the
Index. References to the Foreword include the page number in the
Vintage edition, as “FW: 13,” as do references to
the longer notes. When the Index entry isn’t obvious,
I’ve given it with the abbreviation s.v. For quotations from Pale
Fire, the reference is that given for the timeline entry in which the
quotation occurs.
Events dated “sometime” occurred at
an unknown time in the given year.
Events may not be in the right order, especially if given as
“sometime” and other non-specific dates. Dates with question marks,
“c.,” or words such as “probably” and
“possibly” are consistent with the text, I believe,
and arise from my evidence-less speculations based on my ideas of
narrative plausibility.
In some places where the dating isn’t obvious
from the reference, I’ve mentioned something about how I
reached my conclusions. Related to this is the question of whether
Kinbote’s dates are always exact. They don’t seem
to be, as he refers to “the five-month period of my
intercourse with the Shades (n. 579)”; the period is
slightly over five months, from February 16 to July 21 or a few days
later. Thus a reference to “three decades”, for
example, might also be approximate.
Real events are given with emphasis.
I’ve made no attempt to discriminate between fictionally
“real” and fictionally “unreal”
events. Like Pilon, however, I’ve referred to a character
whose life Kinbote narrates as “Gradus,” but to
the murderer as “Grey”. Unfortunately, I see no
way to date the “real story” of Botkin. I
can’t find any evidence on when Botkin’s
delusions about Zembla start, when the Kinbote personality appears,
or when Botkin arrives in America, in New Wye, at Wordsmith.
(Subsidiarily, I can’t tell whether Kinbote permanently
replaces Botkin or the two personalities alternate, and whether any
of Kinbote’s references to himself refer to Botkin.) I
have, though, given three dates, two of them speculations by Boyd
(1999), when certain of Kinbote’s delusions may start.
I’ve noted three apparent temporal discrepancies (1902, 1915,
1929). Two could have arisen if Nabokov or Kinbote thought Shade
was born in 1899 and later changed or corrected it to 1898—but not
everywhere. Although Boyd (1995) has argued that such discrepancies in other
novels can simply be mistakes on Nabokov’s part,
there’s a hint that Nabokov might have planted these two
discrepancies as a revision or mistake on Kinbote’s part: that
would explain Kinbote’s “slip” in the note to line 167.
I welcome comments and corrections of all kinds. They may
be posted to
NABOKV-L or
mailed to me.
10th Century {“A
thousand years ago five minutes were/ Equal to forty ounces of fine
sand” (ll. 120–121).}
12th Century {The
Kong-skugg-sio is written (n. 12).} (The title
is now usually written Konungs skuggsjá,
and the work has long been dated to the mid 13th Century
[Tromholt 1885, for example]).
1637 {Thomas
Flatman is born (I.).}
1688 {Thomas
Flatman does not disappear, but only dies (I.).}
1700–1800 {“Two
Queens, three Kings, and fourteen Pretenders died violent
deaths” in Zembla during this (extended) century (n.
62).}
1778 {Hodinski moves to Zembla (I.).}
1798 {Hodinski
collects or forges Zemblan variants of the Kong-skugg-sio
(n. 12).}
1798–1799 {Emperor
Uran the Last reigns in Zembla (n. 681, I.).}
1799 {Queen
Yaruga’s favorites kill Uran and she reigns in Zembla
(I.).}
1800 Jan. 1 (O.S.) {Queen
Yaruga and Hodinski drown in an ice-hole during the New Year’s
festivity (I. s.vv. Hodinski and Yaruga). She is succeeded by her son
Igor II, whose father is ostensibly her late brother Uran but
according to most historians Hodinski (n. 681, I. s.vv. Hodinski and
Igor II).} [KP gives Yaruga’s death as an example of what
he omits as “readily available in the Index”.]
Early 19th Century {Count
Komarovski, a Russian diplomat, becomes famous for mispronouncing his
own name at foreign courts (I. s.v. Marrowsky).}
1809 Aug. 5 {Alfred
[Lord] Tennyson is born (n. 920).}
1824 or 1825 {The
future Thurgus III is born (I.)} [Pilon calls him “Thurgus
Vseslav” and also refers to “Alfin
Vseslav”, possibly thinking “Vseslav”
is a surname.]
1835 June 2 {Giuseppe
Melchiorre Sarto, later Pope Saint Pius X, is born (n. 85).}
1845 Igor II dies
and is succeeded by Thurgus III (I.).
1851 or 1852 Samuel
Shade is born (n. 71). [KP: 1852. Here and elsewhere, KP assumes that
ages can be obtained by subtracting years. Thus Samuel Shade, who
“died at fifty, in 1902,” would have been born in
1852. However, he could have been born in 1851 and not yet reached
his 1902 birthday when he died.]
1855 Conmal, Duke
of Aros and half-brother of Queen Blenda, is born (I.).
1859 March 26 {A.
E. Housman is born (n. 920).}
1864 {Franklin
Knight Lane, later U.S. Secretary of the Interior, is born
(I.).}
1869 Maud Shade is
born (n. 86–90).
{The oldest of the Shadows, the probable murderer of Iris
Acht, is born (I. s.v. Acht, Iris).}
1873 The future
King Alfin the Vague is born (n. 71, I.)
1874 March 26 {Robert
Frost is born (n. 426).}
1876 {An
extraordinary episode takes place at Onhava University (n. 347).}
1877? {“Dr.
Sutton” is born (ll. 987–988). (I’m
assuming that ages are obtained simply by subtracting years. Then
Shade was 21 in 1919, the year of his marriage, so Dr. Sutton was 42,
so he was born in 1877. With other interpretations, Dr. Sutton could
have been born in 1876, 1878, or 1879.)}
1878 The future
Queen Blenda is born (I.).
c. 1880 Conmal
learns English. He translates Shakespeare’s
Sonnets on a bet with a fellow officer, and then
retires from the Army to start his career as a translator (n. 962).
[KP: 1880]
c. 1885 {The
maternal grandfather of the Shadows’ leader makes repairs
to the king’s quarters (including the secret passage?) and
shortly thereafter is poisoned in the royal kitchens (I. s.v.
Shadows).}
Mid 1880s {Thurgus
the Third has trysts with the actress Iris Acht in a secret passage
from his dressing room (later a lumber room) to a
lumbarkamer in the Royal Theater (n. 130: 134;
I.).}
1888 Iris Acht
dies, officially by suicide and unofficially by murder (n. 130: 122;
I.).
1889? {The owner of
the motor court in Cedarn is born (a “seventy-year-old
man” in the fall of 1959) (n. 810).}
Around this time (“some seventy years
ago” in 1959), Ferz and Zule Bretwit have their
correspondence (n. 286). [KP: 1889]
1890 Walter
Campbell, Charles’s tutor, is born (I.).
1890? 1895? {Sylvia
O’Connell is born (I.).}
1892 Oct. 6 {Alfred,
Lord Tennyson dies (n. 920).}
1898 Early in the year Sybil
Irondell is born (“a few months his [Shade’s]
senior”) (n. 247). [KP: “March,
approximately”]
July 5 John Shade
is born in New Wye (FW: 13, n. 167, I.).
1900 Thurgus the
Third dies (n. 130: 121; I.) and King Alfin accedes to the throne of
Zembla (n. 71, I.).
1900–1914 Summer {At
some point King Alfin mislays an emperor (n. 71).}
1902 Before July 5 Samuel
Shade dies (but John Shade seems to be “not quite
three”, which would put his birth in 1899 or Samuel’s
death in 1901, an apparent discrepancy) (n. 71).
1903 Summer {Wordsmith
College is photographed (FW: 20).}
August 9 {G.
M. Sarto becomes Pope Pius X (n. 85).}
1906 {Ferz
Bretwit’s widow publishes Ferz and Zule’s
correspondence.}
1908 Disa’s
grandfather builds a villa at Cap Turc called Villa Paradiso
(Italian) or Villa Paradisa (Zemblan), later Villa Disa (n.
433–434).
1909 July Shade has
his first fainting attack (“When I’d just turned
eleven”) (ll. 141–156). [KP: “July,
approximately”]
1909? Winter Shade
has fainting attacks every afternoon (ll. 157–159)
“for several weeks”, according to Kinbote (n.
162). [As I read it, this could be a later winter, but KP takes it to
be this winter.]
1912 King Alfin
almost drowns while flying a hydroplane (n. 71).
1914 Sometime Oswin
Bretwit is born, {as is Romulus Arnor} (I.).
Aug. 20 {Pope
Pius X dies (n. 85).}
1915 Sometime {Sylvia
O’Connell marries and divorces Leopold O’Donnell
(I.)} and Donald O’Donnell (“Odon”) is
born to them (I.).
Count Otar is born (I.).
July 5, O. S. or N. S. Prince
Charles Xavier Vseslav is born (n. 1–4, n. 433–434,
I.). The difference between his age and Shade’s is
seventeen years, not sixteen as Kinbote says to Sybil (n. 181), an
apparent discrepancy.
Jakob Gradus (henceforth “Gradus”) is
born, apparently in Riga (n. 17, 29, I.). Both Zembla (n. 71) and
Latvia used the Old Style calendar at the time; starting in 1900,
July 5 O. S. was July 18 N. S. [KP doesn’t discuss the Old
Style and New Style calendars.]
1916 {Colonel Peter
Gusev builds a monoplane, Blenda IV, for King Alfin (n. 71). His son
Oleg, future (?) duke of Rahl, is born (n. 130: 123; I.)}
{Maybe around this time Col. Gusev marries Sylvia
O’Donnell.}
Nodo is born to Leopold O’Donnell and a Zemblan
boy impersonator (I.).
1917 January {Charles
Rockwell Payne publishes his translation of The
Psychoanalytical Method by Dr. Oskar Pfister,
later quoted by Prof. C. (n. 929).}
April On a
senior-class outing, Shade falls in love with Sybil Irondell
(possibly the year before or after) (ll. 247–260). [KP:
1916]
1917 or 1918 {Fifalda
de Fyler, later Countess Otar, is born (n. 71).}
1918 or 1919 Fleur
de Fyler, later Countess de Fyler, is born (n. 71). [KP: 1919]
1919 Jan. 7 {King
Alfin and Charles are photographed together (Dec. 25, O. S.) (n. 71).}
Jan. 7–13 (Dec. 25 to 31, O.
S.) {Colonel Gusev is by now the First Duke
of Rahl.} King Alfin dies in a plane crash (n. 71, I.). [KP places
this in 1918, using O.S.]
Jan. 14? {Maybe on
Jan. 1 New Style, Zembla adopts the New Style or Gregorian calendar
(n. 71).}
Early in the year King
Alfin’s widow, Queen Blenda, becomes the ruler of Zembla
(n. 71, I.). [KP: still 1918]
Before July 7 Shade
and Sybil marry (l. 275, n. 275).
1920 Martin Gradus,
Jakob’s father, dies. {His widow moves to Strasbourg.
“Soon thereafter”, she dies too, and young Jakob
is raised by a merchant coincidentally also surnamed Gradus (n. 17,
29).}
1921 May 17 After
a major operation and one day [KP] before his death, Franklin Lane
writes a remarkable passage about life after death (n. 810,
I.).
1921 July 5 to
1922 July 4 The
six-year-old Prince Charles’s nurse consoles him with a
Zemblan proverb (n. 1000). [KP: 1921]
{Possibly around this time (“my early
boyhood”), he sees a conjurer at his uncle’s
castle (FW: 27–28).}
1922 Mr. Campbell
arrives in Zembla to become Charles’s tutor (n. 71).
[KP: Jack Grey kills his father. KP, perhaps in whimsy,
apparently assigns Gradus’s birth year (according to
Kinbote) to Grey and assumes the seven-year-old parricide who
Goldsworth kept a picture of was young Jack.]
1923 July 5 to
1924 July 4 Charles finds photographs
of his father’s plane crash (n. 71). [KP: 1923]
1925 {Baron Radomir
Mandevil is born (I.).}
{Sylvia O’Donnell leaves Zembla to marry an
Oriental prince (I.).}
1928 Sometime {Julius
Steinmann is born (I.).}
Before July 5 Disa
is born (n. 275, n. 433–434). She spends this summer and
the next fourteen at the Villa Paradisa (n. 433–434).
1929 [KP: 1928] Late April or early
May Charles and Oleg, Duke of Rahl (though
his father is still alive), share a bed for the first time (n. 130:
124).
May Mr. Campbell
sprains his ankle in the Mandevil Forest (n. 130: 124; n. 149). While
he is still laid up, Charles and Oleg find Thurgus’s secret
passage and reach the theater, where they’re frightened by
a rehearsal, possibly of The Merman. “Soon
after”, Charles almost dies of pneumonia. “To
recuperate he was sent for a couple of seasons to southern
Europe.” (n. 130: 125–128).
KP’s placement of these events in 1928 is
probably based on Kinbote’s statement that they were
“three decades earlier” than 1958 (n. 130: 123)
and “thirty-year-old patterned imprint” (N. 130:
133), taking that time as exact. A placement in 1929 would be based
on the statement (n. 130: 123) that the king was 13 in May, as he
turned 13 on July 15, 1928. The discrepancy seems minor; possible
explanations are that “three decades” is
approximate, or that Kinbote or Nabokov calculates ages simply by
subtracting years, or that Kinbote lies to Sybil about his birthdate,
perhaps to embarrass her or to suggest a connection with Shade.
1929? Summer? Charles
sees a guilty-looking priest apparently receive divine grace (n.
47–48).
1930 Conmal
finishes translating Shakespeare and starts on Milton and other poets
(n. 962).
c. 1930? {In
Gradus’s “early youth”, he joins an
unsuccessful attempt to beat up a local lad who had won a motorbike
at a fair (n. 171).}
1931 Sometime {Mr.
Campbell finishes his stint as Charles’s tutor (I.)}
Late in the year Oleg
dies at fifteen in a toboggan accident (n. 130: 128; I.).
1932 {Charles
begins “dividing his time between the University and his
regiment,” “the nicest time of his life”
(n. 71).}
After July 5 {Mr.
Campbell leaves Zembla (n. 71).}
1932–1936? A
young lecturer from Boston shows the student Prince Charles a copy of
Shade’s book Night Rote, in particular
the poem “Art” (n. 957).
1933 “The first part of the
year” The Shades visit Nice,
possibly glimpsing Disa and her English governess. Hazel is
conceived, presumably (ll. 433–435, n. 433–434,
I. s.v. Shade).
1934 Early in the year Hazel
Shade is born (l. 435, n. 86–90, n. 293, I.). [KP:
January-February, approximately.] {Her fellow college students (the
nice frail roommate, the White twins, the Korean boy, maybe Pete
Provost and his friend and his friend’s friend) would
probably have been born around this year.}
1936 Sometime {Charles
finds a goose-boy named Garh in a lane north of Troth (I. s.v.
Garh).}
April 30 {A.
E. Housman dies (n. 920).}
July 20 {Queen
Blenda’s blood ailment is much better.} Charles goes to a
ball (n. 71).
July 21 Queen
Blenda dies in the small hours. {Charles is told around 4 AM (n. 71,
I.).}
July 22 to Aug. 30 Fleur
de Fyler’s “courtship” of and three-day
cohabitation with Charles (n. 71) occur during this period. [KP:
August]
Aug. 30 Charles is
crowned king of Zembla (n. 12, n. 71, n. 275, I.). {Baron Radomir
Mandevil serves as his throne page (I, n. 130: 132–133; n.
149—the Index mentions only n. 130).}
c. 1936? {The
Shades spend a term at “Iph” while Hazel is
“a mere tot” (ll. 502–509).} [In a
note, KP dates this to “between (approximately) 1934 and
1940”, citing it as an example of an event he omits as
“very vague”.]
1936–1940 {The
undergraduates Kinbote mentions were probably born around this
time.}
1937 May 10 {Maud
Shade begins her scrapbook with an ad in Life
for the Talon Trouser Fastener (l. 91).}
c. 1939 {Charles
tries to translate Shade’s poetry into Zemblan (F).}
“Sometime in the
forties” {Gradus goes to Zembla as
a brandy salesman (n. 17, 29). He has a variety of jobs in the glass
business (n. 171). He marries a beader, the daughter of a publican
(n. 17, 29, n. 697) and after she leaves him, lives in sin with his
mother-in-law till her death. After that he tries to castrate himself
and, with the help of an infection, is freed from lust (n. 697).}
Also probably sometime in the
forties {Hazel plays Mother Time in the
school pantomime (ll. 309–314).}
1942 Summer {Disa
spends her last consecutive summer at the villa at Cap Turc (despite
the Nazi occupation—but Zembla is apparently neutral, if
the Second World War occurred in the world of the novel) (n.
433–434).}
1944 Gordon
Krummholz is born (I.).
1944 or 1945 {Dee
Goldsworth is born (between February 1944 and February 1945, if
she’s 14 when Kinbote moves in, or between the late summers
or early autumns if she’s 14 when Kinbote writes his
note—unless I’m giving him too much credit for
precision) (n. 47–48).}
1946 or 1947 {Candida
Goldsworth is born (n. 47–48).}
1947 July 5 Charles
meets the nineteen-year-old Disa at a masked ball (n. 275).
1948 or 1949 {Betty
Goldsworth is born (n. 47–48).}
1949 March 28 {Maud
Shade makes the last entry in her scrapbook, an ad in Life
for the Hanes Fig Leaf Brief (n. 91).}
Later that year Maud
Shade, at eighty, becomes paralyzed and aphasic and is hospitalized
(ll. 195–208). {Sybil has Maud’s half-paralyzed
Skye terrier destroyed, to Hazel’s distress (n. 230).}
June? King Charles
marries Disa “almost two years” after meeting
her, having prayed alone in the Onhava cathedral most of the night
before (n. 71, n. 275, I.). [KP: first half of the year.] {During the
next four years Kinbote tries and fails to have sex with her, her
parents die, she finds out he’s homosexual, he promises
several times to be faithful but never succeeds, and on a trip to an
Italian lake he tells her he doesn’t love her (n.
433–434).}
1949 or 1950 {Alphina
Goldsworth is born (n. 47–48).}
1950 January? [KP: late January–early
February] Maud Shade dies at the beginning of
the year (n. 86–90, n. 230).
That day the Shades see a cicada’s molted
integument and a dead ant on a pine trunk (ll. 237–240).
[KP: Shade sees an anonymous message on the tree, but I don’t
think “Espied on a pine’s trunk”, at
the beginning of the next sentence and verse paragraph, refers to the
message.]
Shortly thereafter, the Shades suffer poltergeist
manifestations lasting nearly a month (n. 230).
1950? Around this
year, Paul Hentzner’s wife leaves him, taking their son,
and Hentzner moves to town (n. 347). [KP: definitely 1950.]
1950 An Exposition
of Glass Animals is held in Zembla. The elder Countess de Fyler dies
in a fire there. {Gradus helps lynch the tourists mistaken for
arsonists. After the fire Disa befriends Fleur de Fyler. (n. 80).}
1951 An explosion
occurs in the Glass Works in Zembla (n. 149). [I took this to be the
same event as the fire dated to 1950, which is possible if it was
both an explosion and a fire, or the exposition lasted into 1951, or
the Russian tourist is mistaken about its nature or the year.
However, I think KP is right to make them two separate events.]
{Erich Fromm publishes The Forgotten
Language, a book on symbolism in dreams and myths.
Prof C. will quote it (n. 929).}
1952? {Hazel Shade
matriculates at Wordsmith. (The year is based on the assumption that
she does so at 18.) Her trip to France may not be too far from this
time.}
{Perhaps sometime in the next few years, Kinbote’s
future gardener works as a nurse in a hospital for blacks in Maryland
(l. 998).}
1953 Exiled from
Zembla for incompatibility, Disa returns to the Villa Disa (n.
433–434).
1954 {The
Bibliothèque de la Pléiade
publishes an edition of A la recherche du temps perdu
(n. 181).}
1955 Conmal dies (I.).
Charles complies with his dying request by beginning to teach at
Onhava University (n. 12).
{Colonel Gusev, at seventy, is one of the greatest
parachutists of all time (I.).}
1956 Sometime Charles
visits Disa for the second time since her exile (n.
433–434).
{A German academic and his wife, a Swede, attend a Sport
Festival in Zembla and see King Charles (n. 894).}
The English translation of Charles’s book on
surnames is published in Oxford (n. 894).
October A student
and his girlfriend are disturbed by rattling sounds and lights. The
Wordsmith Gazette makes the story notorious, and
psychic researchers visit. Hazel decides to investigate and gather
data for a psychology paper. The first time, with Jane Provost, a
thunderstorm drowns out any manifestations. A few nights later, Hazel
goes by herself and receives a cryptic communication from a
will-o-the-wisp. Returning home she’s frightened by her
father waiting for her on the porch. On a later night, Hazel and her
parents go the barn and wait in vain. {Shade complains to the
authorities and the barn is razed (n. 347).}
Probably late 1950s {Edsel
Ford publishes the poem containing the two lines that Kinbote quotes
(n. 603). The real poem, “The Image of
Desire”, was published in 1961 (Roth 2007), the only
discrepancy with real history that I know of.}
1957 Early in the year Shade
finishes Supremely Blest, his book on Pope
(“recently” at the time of Hazel’s
death) (l. 384).
Late winter (March?) After
a humiliating blind double-date, Hazel drowns (herself). (ll.
385–500, n. 293, I.). [KP places this in March, as does
Boyd (1999: 89, 150). Indeed “Black spring/ Stood just
around the corner” (ll. 495–496). Also, Shade
refers to March in connection with Hazel’s death (l. 431,
ll. 663–4) and the death of a child (ll. 583–4).
Nevertheless, I can find nothing that explicitly dates Hazel’s
suicide to March.]
{Not much time afterwards, Jane Provost tries to talk to
the Shades. She later writes Sybil a long letter, never answered (n.
385–386).}
Sometime Paul
Hurley, Jr., becomes head of the English Department at Wordsmith (n.
376–377).
{Baron Radomir Mandevil fights a duel (n. 169).}
1958 Sometime {Shade
sends “The Nature of Electricity” to The
Beau and the Butterfly (n. 347).}
March {The Shades
hear noises, play chess (ll. 653–664). This could possibly
be the previous March. However, Boyd (1999:150) places it “exactly
a year” after Hazel’s death.}
May 1 The Zemblan
Revolution breaks out. Disa writes a wild letter to Charles (n.
433–434). Soon (maybe the same day) the Soviet-backed
Extremists depose Charles (n. 12, I.) and hold him captive in the
South West Tower (n. 130: 119, 121). {Also Baron Bland, with help,
removes the Crown Jewels from the palace to a hiding place; he then
dies of a fall. (n. 681).}
After May 1 {The
palace commandant reads Charles the letter from Disa (n.
433–434).}
{Romulus Arnor is executed (I.).}
Summer The Shades,
starting to recover from their grief, go to Italy (ll.
668–670).
{Around this time Shade’s
essays are published as The Untamed Seahorse and
“universally acclaimed” (ll. 671–672).}
July? “Several
weeks” before her next attempt, Disa flies to Stockholm in
an attempt to help Charles, but is turned back by her loathed cousin
“Curdy Buff” (n. 433–434). [KP:
June]
Mid July Two
Russian experts, Andronnikov and Niagarin, begin searching the Onhava
Palace for the Crown Jewels (n. 130: 129–131).
Mid August Charles
is accused of communicating with sympathizers by heliograph and moved
from the tower to a “dismal lumber room”. He
remembers the secret passage. Though Odon tries to convince him to
postpone his attempt, after ostensibly going to bed Charles escapes
to the theater, interrupting Odon in a performance of The
Merman. The two run outside to Odon’s racing car
(n. 130: 135). Odon drives west and up to Mandevil Forest, where he
leaves Charles. Charles climbs Mt. Mandevil for two hours in the
rainy night (repeating the opening couplet of Goethe’s
“Erlkönig” in both
German and Zemblan, n. 662) and takes shelter in the house of a
farmer named Griff. The next morning he leaves (snubbing the
farmer’s daughter’s sexual offer), sees an
uncanny reflection of one of his impersonators, and crosses the
mountains west to Blawick (n. 597–608). In Blawick he
reunites with Odon, who takes him to the Rippleson Caves and a boat
(n. 149, n. 597–608).
{Meanwhile Royalist pranksters impersonate him, one in a
fixed-speed chase on a chairlift (n. 70). This chaff lasts
“almost a year”, as the Extremist govenment
thinks Charles is still in Zembla and tries to prevent his escape by
air (n. 171).}
Disa, alarmed by rumors that Charles might be condemned
to death, flies to Brussels and charters a plane, but a message from
Odon tells her that Charles is out of Zembla and that she should
return to Villa Disa and wait for further communications (n.
433–434).
Perhaps a bit later, Charles reclines on the sofa in
Oswin Bretwit’s flat in Meudon (n. 286).
Early fall Charles
is in Nice and Mentone (n. 240).
August, September,
October {Sybil continues translating Marvell
and Donne into French. Hurricane Lolita, Mars, the Shah’s
wedding, Russian espionage, Sybil’s portrait (l.
677–682).}
Sometime in this
period {Charles shaves for the last time (n.
12).}
Andronnikov and Niagarin keep tearing apart the palace
looking for the Crown Jewels (n. 681).
September Charles
visits Joe Lavender and Gordon Krummholz in Lex (n. 408) [KP]
Later in September: Joe
Lavender tells Disa that a representative of her husband will visit
her, but Charles himself visits her briefly, also seeing her friend
and attendant Fleur de Fyler (n. 433–434).
Oct. 17 Shade has
an apparent heart attack and “dies.” Dr. Ahlert
treats him and reassures him wittily (ll. 682–728, n. 691,
n. 727–728).
Oct. 18 or 19 Charles,
henceforth called Kinbote, parachutes near Sylvia’s
“manor” and converses with her (n. 691).
Oct. 20 Sylvia
leaves for Africa (Monday). Kinbote continues to stay at her manor
(n. 691). Sometime probably in the next year Sylvia divorces Lionel
Lavender, Joe Lavender’s cousin (I.).
After Oct. 17 {Shade
reads Jim Coates’s article about Mrs. Z.’s
near-death experience, drives 300 miles west to interview both of
them, is disappointed by the fountain-mountain misprint, and finds
some “faint hope” (ll. 745–834).}
Nov. 1 or 2 Kinbote
meets Billy Reading, president of Wordsmith, in New York. Kinbote
spends the time till Christmas in the libraries of Washington and New
York (n. 691).
Dec. 25 Kinbote
spends Christmas in Florida (n. 691).
Late 1958 or early 1959 {After
several months of impersonating Charles, Julius Steinmann is captured
and shot by a firing squad. Surviving, he is treated in a hospital,
where Gradus bursts in and shoots at him twice, missing both times.
Steinmann disappears (n. 171).}
1959 Early or mid Jan.? Classes
start at Wordsmith College. Shade resumes teaching (n. 691) [but KP
suggests that Shade resumes within two weeks after his attack,
apparently because his recovery was “very
speedy”].
Before Kinbote leaves for New
Wye {Kinbote writes Shade to introduce
himself before moving in next door. The Shades never answer or
mention the letter (n. 691).}
By Feb. 5 {Kinbote
gets a powerful red Kramler car (FW: 19–20).}
Kinbote arrives in New Wye (FW: 19).
Between Kinbote’s arrival and
(probably) his gardener’s moving in: {Something
involving advances and practical jokes happens between Kinbote and,
presumably, Gerald Emerald (I s.v. Kinbote in reference to n.
741).}
Probably after this and before the murder
of Shade (July 21) {Kinbote goes to a
student-faculty party where he demonstrates Zemblan wrestling and
gets a note, which he takes to be from Gerald Emerald, accusing him
of having hal.....s (n. 62).}
{Kinbote overhears Gerald Emerald referring to him as
“the Great Beaver” and unties G. E.’s
bow tie (FW: 24).}
Between Kinbote’s arrival and
Shade’s birthday party (July 5) {Kinbote
comes to know “quite well” a relatively slight
male student in the hotel school (n. 181).}
Between Kinbote’s arrival and
(presumably) the murder of Shade—likely before the end of
the term in May or June {Kinbote criticizes a
colleague and his or her course, and Dr. Nattochdag cautions him
about it (FW: 24–25).}
{A drama students’ skit caricatures Kinbote
(FW: 25).}
Feb. 5 Kinbote
moves into the Goldsworth chateau (FW: 19). Boyd (1999: 97–98)
notes that Kinbote encounters the name “Alphina”,
explores the Goldsworth girls’ closet (which he associates
with Charles’s escape), and reads or is reminded of
Forever Amber and The Prisoner of
Zenda. Thus Boyd suggests that at this point Kinbote starts developing the
similar elements of Zembla: the name “Alfin”, the
secret passage leading out of the closet, and much of the atmosphere.
Indeed he suggests that all of Zembla may begin here.
Feb. 7? 8? Kinbote
sees the Shades having trouble getting out of their icy driveway
(“one of my first mornings there”) (FW:
19–20). [KP: February 9–14 (approximately)].
Feb. 16 Kinbote
meets Shade at lunch at the Faculty Club (FW:20–22).
A few days after Feb.
16 Kinbote gives Shade a ride home via
Community Center, where Sybil introduces herself. {By this time
Kinbote is using his new name, as Sybil knows it. Later he has
“a kind of a little seminar... with two charming identical
twins and another boy, another boy” (Bad Bob?) (FW:
22–23).}
Thereafter Kinbote
entertains himself by spying on the Shades (FW: 23–24).
[KP: this starts in the last week of February.]
Between Feb. 16 and probably July 3,
certainly including May and June Kinbote
tells Shade his stories of Zembla. I suggest July 3 for the final
date since Kinbote writes “finally” about his
diary entry of that date, which follows a series of entries about
pressing Shade to write (n. 42).
Between the beginning of Kinbote’s
narrations and the murder of Shade {Kinbote hears
a changed version of the “what emperor?” story
(n. 71).}
{The German academic
mentioned under 1956, now a visiting lecturer at Wordsmith, suspects
that Kinbote is the ex-King. While trying to change the subject,
Shade mentions the surname book, revealing Kinbote’s
identity (as Botkin or, from Kinbote’s point of view, as
King Charles) unless our commentator had used “Kinbote”
for his pen name in 1956. Gerald Emerald insults the King, and
Kinbote snubs his apology (n. 894).}
Late Feb.? {Kinbote
shows Shade some of Judge Goldsworth’s notes, having saved
them at least two weeks (n. 47–48).}
Sometime in March {Shade,
Kinbote, and Bob go to a “dreary get-together party”
at Prof. C.’s house. Mrs. C. snickers as Kinbote helps
Shade find his galoshes (FW: 24, 27).}
March 14 Kinbote
attends a dinner party at the Shades’. {Sometime after this
and probably before May 23, Kinbote has the Shades over for dinner
along with the son of a padishah (n. 579).}
March 21? 22? Bob
takes a color snapshot of Kinbote and Shade (FW: 26).
March 28? While
Shade takes a bath, Kinbote talks with him about a reference Kinbote
is to look up on his trip to Washington, but neither can remember
what it is (n. 887–888). [KP: March 29]
March 28? 29? Kinbote
is in Washington. {Bob uses this absence to entertain a girlfriend.}
This is a week after Prof. C.’s party, and it seems
reasonable to put Kinbote’s trip on a weekend (FW:
26–27).
March 30 Kinbote,
back from Washington, evicts Bob (FW: 27, n. 802). {For the next
several nights Kinbote suffers from fear. Possibly during this
period, Kinbote sees the Goldsworths’ cat with a white bow
around its neck and, believing someone has broken in, calls the
police (n. 62).}
April 2 Kinbote
writes to Disa about his night fears and living next to Shade. The
letter includes his alias and the address of Wordsmith University (n.
768, I.).
Early April? After
an embarrassment at the college swimming pool, Kinbote meets a needy
young black man who starts gardening for him the next day (n.
998).
April? {As leaves
block Kinbote’s view, he gets more bold and proficient
about spying on the Shades (n. 47–49).}
“Soon after Easter”
(which is March 29) {Kinbote’s
gardener moves in and his nocturnal fears stop (n. 62). Sometime
thereafter, Kinbote finds that his gardener is “impotent”
(n. 998).}
April 6 Kinbote
receives a letter from Disa containing Shade’s “The
Sacred Tree” (n. 49). Is this too fast to be an answer to
his letter?
Still April Kinbote
has recently hired the gardener. The subject of anti-Semitism comes
up at the Faculty Club, after which Shade and Kinbote discuss
Prejudice and the term “colored” (n. 470).
Late April through early
May? {Spring bird migration in Appalachia,
presumably the peak of Kinbote’s bird identification with
his gardener’s help (n. 1–4).}
Spring {It’s
announced that Odon is in Paris, and the Extremist government in
Zembla conjectures that the ex-king has left the country. The Shadows
determine to hunt him down (n. 171). This is probably late in spring,
as it’s “almost a year” after the king
escaped in August, and it shouldn’t be too long before
Gradus draws the fatal card on July 2.}
May 23 Kinbote
attends a second souper chez Shade. {Sometime,
probably after this and before giving Shade the plan of the palace,
he has the Shades over for a second dinner, with his gardener as the
other guest (n. 579).}
May or June {Kinbote
and Shade look for Shade’s grandfather’s
pamphlets in Shade’s basement, and Kinbote sees the
clockwork toy, in the form of a black man, that Shade was playing
with when he had his first fainting spell (n. 143).}
During an evening stroll, Kinbote tells Shade the story
of himself and Disa and encourages Shade to include it in the poem
(n. 433–434). [KP: May.] Since people (including me) have
asked on the mailing list NABOKV-L how the insane Kinbote could get a
teaching job, I’ll point out that this could be the first
time he mentions Zembla to anyone.
End of May {Kinbote
can “make out the outlines of some of my images in the
shape his genius might give them” (n. 42).}
June Kinbote has at
least nine sunset rambles with Shade (n. 238). {One of this
month’s rambles might well be when Shade points out the
site where Hentzner’s barn stood, as most of the plants
Kinbote mentions would be blooming. The exception is the goldenrod,
which would not bloom till after Shade’s death, but Kinbote
might have called some other plant goldenrod. (n. 347).}
At some point Kinbote draws and gives Shade a plan of the
Onhava Palace. He stays for lunch (n. 71). {Probably sometime after
this, he has the Shades over for dinner with the blonde in the black
leotard as the other guest (n. 570).}
Mid June {Kinbote
feels sure Shade will write a poem about Zembla and increases his
efforts to “saturate” Shade with Zemblan stories
(n. 42).}
June 23 Kinbote and
Shade play “a game of chess, a draw” and then
converse on Kinbote’s terrace about sin, God, and the
afterlife (n. 549).
Late June
According to Shade’s obituary, this is when he writes
“The Swing” {though Kinbote believes it dates to
shortly after Hazel’s death (n. 61).}
June to mid July
{Shade recites an obscure friend’s poetry at a Summer
School party at the Hurleys’, and Kinbote hears Shade and
Mrs. H. discuss an insane porter, or Kinbote himself (n. 629).}
July 2 At 12:05 AM
Zemblan time, Gradus is chosen by a show of cards to assassinate
Kinbote (n. 171).
Shortly after midnight Eastern Daylight Time, Shade
starts “Pale Fire” (FW: 13, n. 1–4).
{Meanwhile Kinbote plays chess with an Iranian summer
student (n. 1–4).}
July 3 Sybil tells
Kinbote that Shade has begun a poem but will not discuss it till he
finishes it (n. 47–48). {Kinbote notes in his diary,
“poem begun!” (n. 42).}
That night Kinbote infers that the Shades are making love
(n. 181).
{Between here and July 21 One
morning Kinbote sees Shade burning index cards that bore unneeded
drafts (FW: 14).}
July 4 Shade
finishes Canto 1 (FW: 13) including Card 9 (n. 109) {and the card
supposedly bearing the supposed variant about the secret corridor,
which Kinbote later acknowledges is his (n. 130: 128)}.
In the evening, Kinbote drives a young friend 200 miles
to his home, where Kinbote attends two all-night parties (n.
181).
{Oswin Bretwit suffers a pain in his groin that keeps him
awake this night and the next two (n. 286).}
July 5 Shade’s
sixty-first birthday. He starts Canto 2 (FW: 13, l. 181, n. 181) and
reaches line 208.
Kinbote breakfasts at the second party and returns home.
In the evening Shade gives his birthday party, which the uninvited
Kinbote watches (n. 181).
At noon Zemblan time, Gradus leaves Onhava for
Copenhagen, synchronized with Shade’s waking up (n.
1–4, n.181).
July 6 At 3 AM
Shade returns to his desk and brings his poem up to line 230. At
sunrise (4:30), Kinbote infers that the Shades are making love. In
the morning, Kinbote delivers to Sybil his present for John and the
third volume of A la recherche du temps perdu (n.
181).
Later, Shade writes at least the next card (n. 231).
In the evening, Shade and Kinbote go on a ramble, with
Sybil accompanying them part of the way, and Shade refuses to discuss
his progress on his poem (n. 238, n. 802).
As Shade reaches line 230, Gradus and the Zemblan consul
in Copenhagen buy clothes for Gradus to wear in later notes (shortly
before noon Copenhagen time) (l. 181).
July 7 Shade’s
writings include lines 286–299 (n. 286, n. 287). Kinbote,
on his way to Dr. Ahlert’s office for a 3:30 appointment,
runs into the Shades and learns from them and Dr. Ahlert that
they’re planning to rent the Hurleys’ ranch in
Cedarn in August. Kinbote gets information from a travel agency (n.
287).
Gradus flies to Paris, telephones Oswin Bretwit from the
airport, and has a futile interview with him (n. 286).
July 8 Oswin
Bretwit dies during surgery (n. 286, I.).
July 10 Shade’s
writing includes lines 406–416 and another card (n.
403–404).
Gradus drives from Geneva to Lex, where Odon is resting
at Joe Lavender’s villa. Gradus is shown around by Gordon
Krummholz, who mentions that the King had gone to the Côte
d’Azur, but Lavender sends Gradus away by phone (n.
403–404). [KP: He stands at the road bay where the King had
stood the previous September.] {Back in Geneva, Gradus has an
incoherent phone conversation with Headquarters, who think he’s
suggested breaking into the Villa Disa to look for letters with the
ex-king’s address (n. 470).}
Around this time [KP: July 10], Kinbote mails a booking
for a cabin near the Shades’ (n. 287.) [KP]
July 11 Shade
finishes Canto 2 (FW: 13).
Kinbote prowls around the Shades’ house, sees
them crying, and accidentally bangs a garbage can but (believes he)
isn’t discovered (n. 47–49).
Gradus visits a Finnish bathhouse and sees his bare feet
for the last time until July 21 (n. 949).
[KP: July 12: Shade starts
Canto 4. This seems very likely, but he could have taken a day
off.]
Mid July {Kinbote
sees his plan of the Onhava Palace in a storage niche in the
Shades’ house (n. 71). (This could be at his intrusion of
July 15.)}
July 14 {Shade’s
writings include line 596 (n. 596).}
Around this day (“a week before Shade’s
death”) a clubwoman tells Kinbote in a grocery store that
he is remarkably disagreeable and insane (FW: 25). [KP: Definitely
July 14, and the woman is “Dr. Sutton’s daughter
(the president of Sybil’s women’s club)”.
His identification follows if New Wye has only one women’s
club and she’s the president.]
{Gradus, having fretted in his hotel in Geneva for four
days, telegraphs Headquarters to say he’s moving to the
Hotel Lazuli in Nice (n. 596).}
July 15 {Kinbote
waits in vain for Shade (I. s.v. Shade, reference given as 338
instead of the correct 334) to go on a promised walk.} Eventually he
intrudes into the Shades’ house, but Shade begs off (n.
47–48, this being St. Swithin’s Day).
Gradus lands in Nice in the early afternoon and sees but
doesn’t recognize the Shadow Izumrudov as well as
Andronnikov and Niagarin. He learns from the cab driver taking him to
his hotel that Disa has gone to Italy for the rest of July (n. 697).
[KP gives her departure date as “July 1
(approximately)”.]
That night or early the next morning, Andronnikov and
Niagarin break into the Villa Disa and find, among other things,
Kinbote’s letter of April 2 with his work address (n.
741).
July 16 [KP: Shade
writes lines 698–746 (n. 741).]
Izumrudov gives Gradus the information about Kinbote and
orders him to America to continue his mission (n. 741).
July 18 Gradus
travels by train to Paris (n. 949).
That night, or in the early morning of July 19, Shade
writes card 65 (second part of line 797 to line 809) (n. 802).
July 19 Kinbote
prays in two churches. As he gets home, he hallucinates Shade calling
to him. When he reaches Shade, he breaks down in tears, on which
Shade agrees to go on a ramble with him at eight. By then Shade has
finished Canto 3 and started Canto 4. He cuts the ramble short to
return to writing (FW: 13–14, n. 802, n.
835–838).
July 20 Shade
begins writing with line 873 (n. 873). He cites Pope in a footnote on
Zembla (n. 937), which Kinbote strangely doesn’t
reproduce.
{At the same time, at Orly airport, Gradus boards a
jetliner for America (n. 873).} He arrives in New York {in a
thunderstorm and after finding that the early flight is full and the
train is inconvenient, makes a plane reservation (n. 949).}
July 21 Shade
starts with line 949 (n. 949).
[KP: In the morning, Jack Grey escapes from the Institute
for the Criminally Insane.] This seems likely, though he could have
escaped earlier.
{Gradus passes time in New York learning all kinds of
interesting information from the New York Times,
among other things. The “pro-Red revolt in Iraq” may have been
“a confused uprising of Kurds, Communists, Moslem
factions, and Army troops” on July 14 around Kirkuk; it was
suppressed bloodily by July 20 (Dupuy and Dupuy 1977: 1282).
Gradus checks in at the airport at 2 PM and arrives in New Wye after
5, not feeling so good. He reaches the Wordsmith campus, and after
various good and bad directions and a glimpse of Kinbote in the
library, he gets a ride from Gerald Emerald to within sight of
Kinbote’s house (n. 949).}
{Kinbote gets home from the library and finds that Shade
is nearly finished with the poem. He induces Shade to come over for
Tokay and walnuts (n. 991). A Red Admiral cavorts around them in the
evening light (n. 993–995).} As they arrive at
Kinbote’s house, Jack Grey or Jakob Gradus, who has been
waiting, shoots at them. Several bullets miss, but one kills Shade.
{The gardener subdues Grey with a spade, and Kinbote calls the
police, who arrest Grey. Sybil arrives.}
Probably that night, believing from the gardener’s
testimony that Kinbote had tried to shield Shade, Sybil brings up the
possibility of recompense and agrees to let Kinbote edit the poem.
[KP places Sybil’s decision on July 22.] Kinbote puts the
poem under the Goldsworth girls’ boots {and then moves them
to his valise (FW: 16, n. 1000).}
July 22 {Kinbote
reads the poem at daybreak and is bitterly disappointed to find no
mention of Zembla, but rereads it later and likes it better, partly
because he finds gleams of Zembla in it, especially in the variants.
Could he start contributing his own variants this early (n.
1000)?}
“Immediately after Shade’s
death” Sybil and Kinbote sign a
contract according to which he’ll edit “Pale
Fire” without remuneration (FW: 16).
{Could this be about the time (“later”)
when Kinbote learns what epithets Sybil applied to him behind his
back (n. 247)?}
{Most or all of the Gradus story must date from this
point.}
“Immediately upon John
Shade’s demise” Prof.
Hurley circulates a mimeographed letter expressing concern over
Kinbote’s editing the poem (n. 376–377).
July 22–29 Kinbote
circulates in New Wye with the poem sewn into his clothes. He
interviews Jack Grey once or twice. Grey “confesses”
that he is Gradus, the Shadows’ regicide. {After the first
interview, Kinbote, reads the July
21 New York
Times in the Wordsmith University Library (WUL). Unless
his “it has been a wonderful game” is his mistake
or Nabokov’s for “it was...”, he also
writes at least the part of n. 949a summarizing stories he found
(Dowling 2003, n. 949a), though this would contradict his mention of
not being able to write the Commentary until he reaches Cedarn (FW:
17).} “A few days” after the last
interview, Grey kills himself (n. 1000, I.).
July 24 In a
newspaper interview a “professed Shadean” [KP:
Professor C.] says “Pale Fire” is fragmentary
(FW: 14).
Perhaps at this point Kinbote sees Professors H. and C.
as a pair of experts bent on gaining control of the poem. Boyd (1999:
100–102) suggests they’re the models for
Andronnikov and Niagarin, in which case it would be starting here
that Kinbote incorporates the latter pair into the escape and Gradus
stories (nn. 130, 681, 741).
July 25 Sybil Shade
states in a document (her contract with Kinbote?) that Shade
“never intended to go beyond four parts” (FW:
14).
July 25–29
During “the last week of July”, the August issue
of the Nouvelle Revue Canadienne, with two
translations by Sybil, appears in New Wye. {Kinbote makes critical
notes but doesn’t communicate them to Sybil (n. 678).}
[KP: August] {Sybil leaves New Wye before
Kinbote does (FW: 18).}
July 29 Kinbote
flies from New Wye to NY after a “lugubrious week”
(FW: 17, n. 1000).
July 29 or shortly
thereafter {Kinbote has the manuscript of
“Pale Fire” photographed. At sunset, he rejects
one of Shade’s publishers for accepting “Professor
So-and-so” as an editorial adviser (FW: 17–18).}
Probably the next day Kinbote
makes a publication deal with “good old Frank”
(FW: 18). [KP: “August (first week)”]
Not long after this {Either
Kinbote returns to New Wye to get his car or he acquires a new one,
as his trip to Cedarn is by car (n. 71).}
Before Aug. 21 Prof.
Hurley writes an Appreciation of Shade’s works.
(“Within a month” may suggest that it’s
more than a week or two.) Sometime after this, en route from New York
to Cedarn, Kinbote spends a couple of days in Chicago, where he sees
this obituary (n. 71) and meets Jane Provost. Jane gives him
information about Hazel and the Haunted Barn incident. {Pete Provost
is, “alas, selling automobiles in Detroit” (n.
385–386).}
Sometime in August? {Kinbote
takes up residence in his cabin in Cedarn.}
After this {Kinbote
sends Sybil a letter with queries about the poem (FW: 18).}
Early September? The
weather gets cooler, the tourists leave, including those whose music
Kinbote mistook for an amusement park, and the “little
blue-jeaned fisherman” stops fishing near Kinbote’s
cabin (n. 609–614, I. s.v. Kinbote with reference to that
note).
At least a month after Kinbote’s
letter {Sybil sends Kinbote a telegram asking
him to accept Professors C. and H. as co-editors (FW: 18).}
Late
September The aspen leaves fall—the
part of Utana near the Idoming border is probably not too different
from southeastern Wyoming, where the aspen color peaks in the last
two weeks of September (Moulton n. d., n. 609–614).
[KP: “October: Kinbote reads
the Letters of Franklin Lane.” (My
boldface and italics.) I don’t know why he places this in
October (n. 810).]
Sometime in here {A
newspaper reprints Shade’s poem “Mountain
View” (n. 92).}
{In the first version of this
chronology, I left out any discussion of Kinbote’s writing
in Cedarn because of the lack of definite dates. However, Bellino
(2006) and Gwynn (2007) have attempted reconstructions in NABOKV-L.
The following tentative and equivocal version draws on them.
Kinbote types up the poem. (This could happen in New Wye.)
Kinbote writes most of the
Commentary. He writes note 12 before note 550 and probably writes
note 230 before note 347 (“...as I have said in an earlier
note, he never cared to refer to his dead child”). Quite
possibly he writes the Commentary in the printed order or nearly
so.
Sometime early in his stay in
Cedarn, Kinbote writes some of the Foreword, including the references
to an amusement park (FW: 13), “and damn that music”
(15), “malicious, rotating music” (19), and a
carrousel (28). This should be early because he can’t take
many days to realize that the radio “across the road”
(n. 609–614) is not an amusement park. On the other hand,
his mention in the Foreword of Sybil’s telegram must date
to at least a month after he arrives in Cedarn. As this is in the
paragraph before the “malicious, rotating music,”,
Kinbote clearly doesn’t write the Foreword in a short time
or in the printed order.
Kinbote sends Frank his manuscript, either just the poem or some
or all of his Foreword and Commentary too.
A proofreader checks the text
of the poem and makes a few minor corrections (FW: 18).
Frank sends Kinbote the galley
proofs. Kinbote revises them, adding his editorial material if he
hadn’t before.
Kinbote writes “My
slip—change to sixty-first.” (n. 167) and
“(no, delete this craven ‘perhaps’)”
(n. 920) either on the galley proofs or later on the page proofs,
forgetting to circle these instructions to keep them from being
typeset (Bellino 2006). (If he writes “my slip”
on the galleys, they may well include the Foreword and Commentary;
the other comments might be Kinbote’s marginal or
interlinear notes in his typescript, but a good reason for him to
take the blame is that someone else has worked on what he’s
correcting.)
Frank acknowledges receipt of
the corrected galleys with a note asking Kinbote to take
responsibility for any errors in the Commentary (FW: 18). He sends
Kinbote the page proofs.
Kinbote makes changes to the
Foreword and Commentary in the page proofs. His changes to the
Foreword include the sentences about Frank’s receipt of the
galleys and request for a disclaimer. He fails to circle his
instruction “Insert before a professional.”
(Bellino 2006). As Kinbote would need the index cards of the poem to
make sure no errors had appeared in the page proofs, his looking at
the cards “for the last time” and putting them in
a manila envelope, with his simultaneous description of doing so,
would probably be here or later (FW: 15).
Kinbote writes the
cross-references in the Foreword and Commentary. At least one of them
seems to be written after the note that contains it, since Kinbote
says, “I have considered in my earlier note (I now see it
is the note to line 171)...”, as makes sense considering
the many references to later notes. In general, though, the
cross-references may not tell us much about chronology. On the one
hand, many of them could refer to things Kinbote has planned but
hasn’t written yet. On the other, Bellino (2006) places the
cross-references “perhaps” at the stage of
correcting the page proofs, making them later than the passages they
appear in.
Kinbote starts the Index.
Bellino (2006) notes that an index is always written after the
receipt of the page proofs, but Kinbote’s index refers only
to line numbers, not page numbers, so he could have written at least
part of it earlier. Indeed he could have written a few of the Index
entries—the Crown Jewels chase and Kobaltana, Igor II, and
the Shadows—before anything else, as they don’t
refer to any note. (Neither does the entry on
“marrowsky”, but it must refer to n. 347.)
Kinbote writes n. 609–614. Since he describes the aspens as
“withered”, it must be the very end of September
or sometime in October. His mention of “trying to
coordinate these notes” could mean adding the
cross-references. Maybe he writes the note late in his work on the
Commentary, after he writes the Foreword, which would allow for the
possibility that the variant is Shade’s but would leave
little time to produce the galleys and page proofs between
aspen-turning and Oct. 19. Or maybe he writes the note as a change to
the galleys or the page proofs.
On or shortly before Oct. 19
Kinbote stops work on the Index, leaving the entry for Zembla unfinished
Oct. 19 Kinbote finishes the Foreword. His changes
include (and may be limited to) the date at the end. He may send the
corrected proofs back to Frank—unless what we read is those
proofs, found in his cabin.}
Kinbote commits suicide (Nabokov 1973: 74). [Correct date from KP.]
1979 July 1 {An
$11,000,000 note for the Decker Glass Manufacturing Company comes due
(n. 949).}
Acknowledgements
I thank several people for kindly helping me. D. Barton
Johnson pointed me to Pilon’s chronology. Jansy Mello
corrected an error in a draft of this chronology that appeared on
NABOKV-L. Matthew Roth corrected an error, mentioned that Kinbote and
Botkin could alternate, discussed the loud music in Cedarn, and helped with a reference.
Dieter E. Zimmer pointed out an omission and an overly certain
conclusion on the month of Hazel’s suicide.
Works Cited
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Boyd, Brian. “‘Even
Homais Nods’: Nabokov’s Fallibility, Or, How to
Revise Lolita.” Nabokov
Studies 2 (1995):
60–85. Reprinted in Zembla.
Boyd, Brian. Nabokov’s Pale Fire: The
Magic of Artistic Discovery. Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1999.
Dowling, William C. “Who’s
the Narrator of Nabokov’s Pale Fire?” 2003. Accessed
February 18, 2008.
Dupuy, R. Ernest, and Dupuy, Trevor N. The Encyclopedia of Military
History: From 3500 BC to the Present. London: Macdonald and Jane’s,
1977.
Gwynn, R. S. “THOUGHTS
& QUERIES: Pale Fire Chronology”. Posting to NABOKV-L. October
17, 2007. Accessed August 14, 2008.
Moulton, Candy.
“Wyoming’s Fall Colors.” Wyoming Travel and Tourism.
Accessed August 14, 2008.
Nabokov, Vladimir. Pale Fire. New York: Vintage International, 1989.
Nabokov, Vladimir. Strong Opinions. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1973.
Pilon, Kevin. “A Chronology of Pale
Fire.” A Book of Things About Vladimir
Nabokov. Ed. Carl Proffer. Ann Arbor: Ardis, 1974, pp.
218–225.
Roth, Matthew. “Three Allusions in Pale Fire.”
The Nabokovian 58
(Spring 2007): 53–60.
Tromholt, Sophus.
“A Note Relating to the History of the Aurora Borealis.&rdquo
Nature 32 (1885), 89–90. Accessed August
17, 2008. Site license required.
Zimmer, Dieter. Kalender der Romanhandlung. Fahles Feuer. By Vladimir Nabokov. Trans. Uwe Friesel and Dieter Zimmer. Reinbek: Rowohlt, 2008.
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