The object
of Nabokov’s collecting is butterflies. He and his family are in Utah, staying
at James Laughlin’s ski lodge in the Wastach Mountains, an hour’s drive from
Salt Lake City. At an elevation of 8,600 feet, the lodge stands at the site of
a former mining camp. Despite the mention of “icy winds,” the date is Aug. 6 in
1943. He is writing to Mark Aldonov who, like Nabokov, is a Russian émigré
novelist. He continues:
“We are
living in wild eagle country, terribly far from everything, terribly high up.
There used to be miners here, 5000 miners, shooting in bars and all that a
captain unknown to the Americans regaled us with in our childhoods.”
The captain
is Thomas Mayne Reid, a writer of pulp thrillers immensely popular in Europe and
Russia. He is largely responsible for exporting the American Wild West in the
nineteenth century. The letter goes on:
“Now there
is no one, a rocky remoteness, a ‘ski’ hotel on an open slope . . . the grey ripple
of aspens amid black firs, bears crossing the roads, mint, Saffron crocus,
lupin flowering, Uinta ground squirrels (a kind of suslik) stand upright beside
their burrows, and from morning till night I collect the rarest butterflies and
flies for my museum.”
That is, the
Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology, where he had worked, unpaid, since the
previous October while teaching at Wellesley.
“I know you’re
no nature lover, but all the same I tell you it’s an incomparable pleasure to
clamber up a virtual cliff at 12000 feet and there observe, ‘in the
neighbourhood’ of Pushkin’s ‘God,’ the life of some wild insect on this summit
since the ice ages.”
Outside the
window above my desk, flitting among the tubular flowers of a firebush, is a
frequent visitor: a giant swallowtail, the largest butterfly in our region.
Black and yellow, with a wingspan topping seven inches, this specimen has a touchingly
awkward, floppy flutter. We
associate beauty with grace. The giant swallowtail recalls a beautiful, clumsy
woman trying to walk in high heels.
I no longer wish
to collect butterflies. I’m no vegan but I’ve even become reluctant to swat
mosquitoes. I’m enjoying the presence of life. My interest in collecting
butterflies when I was young was aesthetic. Butterflies are the most
gratuitously beautiful things in creation. Nabokov’s lifelong devotion to them
was both aesthetic and scientific.
In Utah,
Nabokov was in the early stages of writing Bend Sinister (1947), with
its famous closing lines: “ Twang. A good night for mothing.” He had completed
the manuscript of Gogol and submitted it to New Directions, whose
publisher was his landlord in Utah. It would be published, after editing tussles
with Laughlin (some of which are incorporated into the text), in 1944. In Gogol
he writes:
“The
difference between human vision and the image perceived by the faceted eye of
an insect may be compared with the difference between a half-tone block made
with the very finest screen and the corresponding picture as represented by the
very coarse screening used in common newspaper pictorial reproduction. The same
comparison holds good between the way Gogol saw things and the way average
readers and average writers see things.”
[The passages
quoted can be found in Nabokov’s Butterflies: Unpublished and Uncollected
Writings (eds. Brian Boyd and Robert Michael Pyle, Beacon Press, 2000).]
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