“My memory is the best guardian of my past.”
That’s Nabokov, speaking
with a defiant certainty almost arrogant. His boast is self-protective. He was remembering
his paradisial life in pre-Soviet Russia and wished to preserve it from the
predations of the Bolsheviks, for whom even the past could be destroyed. Memory
– of bliss, of horror -- is sacred. We dwell in the past as certainly as we do in the
present, and more so than in the future. Think of Robert Browning in “Memorabilia” (1855):
“Ah, did you once see
Shelley plain,
And did he stop and speak
to you?
And did you speak to him
again?
How strange it seems, and
new!
“But you were living
before that,
And you are living after,
And the memory I started
at—
My starting moves your
laughter!
“I crossed a moor, with a
name of its own
And a certain use in the
world no doubt,
Yet a hand’s-breadth of it
shines alone
’Mid the blank miles round
about:
“For there I picked up on
the heather
And there I put inside my
breast
A moulted feather, an
eagle-feather—
Well, I forget the rest.”
Browning was age nine when
Shelley died in 1822. Browning’s stand-in spoke with a man who met the older
poet. The linkage in memory [Shelleyàstand-inàspeaker (Browning)] causes him to “start,” a
reaction the storyteller finds amusing. Kinship is no respecter of bloodlines.
Linkage to nominal strangers, those with a distant genotype, can prove more
vital than mere phenotype. Who wouldn’t wish to prune one’s family tree? Here's
one of my pleasing sets of elective affinities:
I shook hands with Guy
Davenport, who shook hands with Ezra Pound, who shook hands with Henry James,
who shook hands with George Eliot and Gustave Flaubert. Davenport also shook
the hand of Samuel Beckett, who had shaken the hand of James Joyce, who had shaken
the hand of Italo Svevo, who shook the hand of Eugenio Montale. Likewise, I
shook hands with William H. Gass who shook hands with many worthies; foremost among them, Ludwig Wittgenstein.
And here's a pleasingly closed
loop: I shook hands with Steven Millhauser, who shook hands with Lionel
Trilling, who shook hands with Whitaker Chambers, who shook hands with Louis
Zukofsky, who shook hands with Davenport, who shook hands with me (many
sub-loops could be traced, leading us to Auden, Barzun and Bellow, among others). I’m tempted
to start another such chain of affinity beginning with my introduction to Ralph
Ellison but that’s enough phantom associations for now.
[Nabokov was speaking with
an Italian journalist, Claudio Gorlier of Corriere della Sera, on October
30, 1969. The interview is collected in Think, Write, Speak: Uncollected
Essays, Reviews, Interviews, and Letters to the Editor (eds. Brian Boyd and
Anastasia Tolstoy, 2019.)]
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