Home Categories foreign novel dim fire

Chapter 7 index

dim fire 弗拉基米尔·纳博科夫 8709Words 2018-03-18
Numbers in entries refer to lines of poetry and their commentaries.Among them, G, K, and S (refer to each article) represent the three main characters in this work. Baron A, Oswain Affenpin, last Baron Aff, a lowly traitor, 286. Elise Atcht, famous actress, died 1888, a passionate woman of considerable influence, mistress of Saugus III (cf. the article), 130.Officially she committed suicide; unofficially, she was strangled to death in her dressing room by a fellow actor, a jealous Gotland youth who is still alive in his nineties , is the oldest and least important member of the Shadow faction (refer to this article).

King Alphonse, nicknamed the Confused King, 1873-1918, in power since 1900; father of K; a benevolent, urbane and absent-minded monarch, mainly interested in automobiles, airplanes and motorcycles, and for a time also fond of them Played with sea shells; died in a plane crash, 71. Andronikov and Negalin, two Soviet specialists in the search for buried treasure, 130, 681, 741; see the entry on "Royal jewels". Romulus Arnault, poet of towns, Zambala patriot, 1914-1958, excerpts from poems, 80; executed by extremists. Aros, a beautiful city in the east of Zambala, the capital of the Principality of Cornmar; the honorable Fitz (meaning "chess queen") Brewett was the mayor of the city for a time, and he was Oswain Brewe A cousin of Te's (cf. that) uncle's father, 149, 284.

Baron B, involuntarily chosen father-in-law of Baron A, imaginary old friend of the Brewett (cf. that) family, 286. Bella, the Long Range of Mountains Dividing the Peninsula; Depiction of Its Shining Peaks, Mysterious Passes, and Picturesque Slopes, 149. Brawick, Blue Bay, a seaside summer resort on the west coast of Zambala, with casinos, golf courses, seafood cuisine and motorboats for hire, 149. Queen Brenda, Mother of Kings, 1878-1936, Reigning since 1918, 71. Boscobel, site of the Royal Summer House, a beautiful pine-fringed and dune-strewn area west of Zambala, with some of the most nostalgic glens for the author; now (1959) a "naked camp" Places - Whatever You Say, 149, 596.

Potkin V, Russian-American scholar, 894; King Potkin, extinct fly maggot that once infested mammoths, thought to have hastily exterminated its lineage itself, 247; The meaning of the neck bottle, 71; Porter, plop sound; Pottery (Russian), the meaning of the big belly; Potkin or Podkin, also known as the Danish dagger. Bellaig Hill, see "Bella" entry. Brewett, Oswain, 1914-1959, diplomat, Zambala patriot, 286.See the entry for "Odevala and Aros". Walter Campbell, born in Glasgow in 1890; tutor to K from 1922 to 1931; a thoughtful, gentle and lovable gentleman; sharpshooter and champion skater; currently based in Iran ;130.

Charles II, Charles Xavier Forsyslav, the last king of Zambala, nicknamed "The Beloved", was born in 1915 and ruled from 1936 to 1958; his shield Huitong decoration, 1; his academic research and rule, 12; the terrible encounters of his predecessors, 62; his supporters, 70; parents, 71; bedrooms, 80; Marriage to Disa, 275; Interlude via Paris, 286; Interlude via Switzerland, 408; Visit to Villa Disa, 433; Remembrance of a mountain night, 597, 662; see that article), 681; Arrival in America, 691; Letter to Disa stolen, 741; Letter to Disa quoted, 768; Discussion of his portrait, 894; Appearance in library, 949; Identity almost exposed, 991 ; the solitary monarch, 1000.See also the "Golden Porter" entry.

Cammar, Duke of Aros, 1855-1955, K's uncle, half-brother of Queen Brenda (refer to this article); noble paraphrase translator, 12; Gates, 39, 130; Life and Work, 962. Crown Jewels, 130, 681; see the entry for "The Stash". Disa, Duchess of Penn, born of noble Penn and Mona, my lovely pale and melancholy queen, who haunts my dreams and is troubled by my nightmares; born in 1928 ; her notebook and favorite trees, 49; married in 1944, 80; her letters on that thin paper with a watermark I can't make out, her image torments me in my dreams Me, 433. Umberra, an old town with a wooden church surrounded by sphagnum ponds, in the loneliest and most desolate point of the foggy peninsula, 149, 433.

Amberland, Zambala for "blossom"; a beautiful bay in the southernmost part of the Zambala, with quirky blue and black stripes on the rocks and lush rhododendrons on the gentle slopes flowers, 433. Mount Falk, a pink cone, 71; summit snow-covered, 149. Thomas Flatman, 1637–88, English poet, scholar and miniature painter, of whom the old crooks knew nothing, 894. Countess Flor Ferrier, a graceful lady-in-waiting, 71, 80, 433. G, see Gladus. Ga'er, a peasant's daughter, 149, 433.It was also a goose boy with a rosy face found in an alley in the northern countryside of Truth in 1936, which the author only recently remembered clearly.

Glitterdin, a splendid mountain in the Beira range (cf. that); unfortunately I may never have the opportunity to climb it again, 149. Gordon, see "Krumholtz" entry. Jacob Gradus, 1915-1959; aliases Jack DeGrade, De Gray, Dagus, Winogradus, Leningradus, etc.; the fellow, a killer, 12, 17; lynching and killing many, 80; his approach synchronized in time with S.'s psalm, 120, 131; his past ordeals and his selection as a killer, 171; The first part of his journey, from Enhava to Copenhagen, 181, 209; to Paris, to meet Oswain Brewitt, 286; Conversation with Gordon, 408; phone call from Geneva to headquarters, 469; his name appears in a variant text, he waited in Geneva, 596; went to Nice, waited there, 697; he met Izum Rodolphe in Nice, King's address found, 741; From Paris to New York, 873; in New York, 949, morning spent in New York, departing for Newway, arriving at campus, arriving at Dulwich Road, 949; big mistake, 1000 .

Griff, old hill farmer, Zambala patriot, 149. Greendale Wood, a fine town east of Zambara, 71, 149. Stash, Potajanik (see that article). Haodinsky, Russian explorer, died 1800, also known as Khedina, 681; lived in Zambala from 1778 to 1800; author of a famous parody, Jasmine The lover of Princess Luja (refer to this article) (later the queen), Yaluja is the mother of Igor II and the grandmother of Saugus (refer to this article). Igor II, in power from 1800 to 1845, a benevolent and wise monarch, son of Queen Yaluja (see this article), father of Sogus III (see this article); there is a gallery in the palace The isolated area is only for the appreciation of the ruling monarch, but it is easy for a curious teenager in development to sneak in through the prince's bedroom for a peek. It contains four hundred pink marble statues of Igor's favorite child molester, embedded with glass eyes and All kinds of embellishment details, it is really a kind of clumsy and realistic unique art exhibition, which was later presented by K to an Asian monarch.

K, see "Charles II" and "Golden Potter" entries. Carricks Haven, a characteristic seaport on the west coast, a few kilometers north of Brawick (see this), 171; many interesting memories. Dr. Charles Kingport, close friend of S, his literary advisor, editor, and commentator; first encounter with and friendship with S, see Foreword; his interest in the birds of Appalachia, 1; His amiable request that S use the stories he told for poetry, 12; his modesty, 34; the absence of books in his Timonian cave, 39; Lu's house and windows in S's house, 47; refuting and correcting Professor He's words, 61, 71; his worries and insomnia, 62; his palace plan for S, 71; his sense of humor, 79, 91; thinks that the term "iridescent cloud" was coined by S, 109; his exhaustion, 120; his physical activity, 130; his visit to the basement of S's home, 143; he believes the reader will appreciate that note, 149; Express, 162; he refers the reader to a later note, 169; he calmly advises G, 171, he speaks of critics and other witticisms which S agrees with, 172; Attends S's birthday party, next morning he takes cunning revenge, 181; he hears about Hazel's "cracking and mischievous haunting" phenomenon, 230; poor who? 231; his vain attempts to get S to talk about the progress of his poems instead of natural history, 238; his memories of the docks at Nice and Menton, 240; he treats his friend's wife with the greatest condescension, 247; His limited knowledge of Lepidoptera, his dark Vanessa-like morose disposition evidently possessed of momentary joy, 270; finding out that Mrs. S intended to take S suddenly to Sedan, he resolved to go there as well. , 288; his attitude towards swans, 319; his resemblance to Hazel, 334, 348; he and S went to the overgrown area where the once haunted barn stood, 347; The indiscretion with which well-known contemporaries, 376; his contempt for Professor Heck (who is not included in this index), 377; his meticulous memory, 35; his interview with Jane Provost, beautifully reviewed A snapshot by the lake, 385; his commentary on the part of the poem, lines 403-474, 403; whether his secret had been guessed by S, he told S about Disa and S' reaction, 417; Controversy on the subject, 470; he discusses suicide with himself, 493; he is surprised to find that a depressing tree in French has the same name as another in Zambala, 501; he disagrees Certain indiscreet passages in Chapter III, 502; his views on sin and faith, 549; his editorial honesty and spiritual distress, 550; his references to a certain schoolgirl and the number of times he went to Shade's and Banquet Situations, 579; his delight and surprise at the ominous combination of syllables of two words next to each other, 596; his aphorisms about murderer and victim, 597; his cabin at Sedan and The fisherman, a boy of honey-colored skin, naked except for a pair of ragged denim overalls with the legs rolled up, often eats marzipan and dried fruit, but then either school starts Either the climate changed, the boy disappeared, 609; he appeared at He's house, 629; Pale fire", etc., 671; his sense of humor, 680; his recollection of arriving at Mrs. O'Donnell's country house, 691; Skeptical attitude, 727; he hates someone who, after having achieved something, betrays a noble and innocent heart, speaks ill of the man he has victimized, and hunts him down with savage mischief, 741; Some mental disorder or fear of another G, he failed to go to a city only sixty or seventy miles away, where he would have found a good library, 747; he in 1959 Letter to a lady on April 2, who locked the letter and other valuables in a villa near Nice before going to Rome that summer, 768; went to church in the morning to pray, and in the evening to walk and chat with the poet , the latter finally speaks of his poem, 802; he speaks ofThe Linguistic Miracle of a Word, 803; He Borrows a Book of F. Nye Lane Letters from a Motel Owner, 810; Talking in the lounge about his resemblance to the king, and his eventual rift with a man (not included in this index), 894; a book by Professor Ke (not included in this index) A tidbit in a textbook makes him and S lean forward with joy, 929; his melancholic manifestations of demoralization and gentle reprimands, 937; vivid memories of a young lecturer at the University of Anghava, 957; The last meeting with the poet at the porch, etc., 991; recalls his discovery of the learned gardener, 998; his vain attempt to rescue S, and his successful salvage of the manuscript, 1000; he Arranging the publication of the manuscript without the assistance of two "experts", see the preface.

Kobaltana, once a mountain resort for the upper class, near the ruins of some old barracks, is now an inaccessible and unimportant desolation, but it is still remembered by military families and forest castle owners; in the text Did not appear. Mount Kron, a snow-capped rocky peak in the Bella range, with a cozy hotel in it, 70, 130, 149. Gordon Krumholtz, born 1944, a musical prodigy and an amusing favourite; son of Joseph Lavender's well-known sister, Alvina Krumholtz, 408 . Franklyn Knight Lane, American lawyer and statesman, 1864-1921, author of a remarkable surviving manuscript, 810. Little girl, see the "Mass" entry. Joseph S. Lavender, see the entry for "Sylvia O'Donnell". See the "Word Golf" entry, lads. Baron Mirador Mandevo, cousin of Radomir Mandevo (see article), scientific experimenter, madman and traitor, 171. Baron Radomir Mandevo, born in 1925, socialite, Zambala patriot; in 1936, he was a child serving the throne of K, 130; in 1958, he disguised himself as a king, 149. Marcel, the indulgent, busy, tiresome, not always plausible protagonist of Proust's Remembrance of Time Gone, 181, 691. Marrowski-type character, a character whose surname is misplaced with the first sound, originated from the Russian diplomat Count Komalrovsky in the early 19th century, who often misspelled the pronunciation of his surname in foreign courts Famous, such as Makarrowski, Makarrowski, Skomolowski, etc. Mars, Mars (god of war), Maier (jack), see entry for "lad". Mount Mutra, see the entry for "Beira". Negalin and Andronikov, two Soviet "experts", are still searching for buried treasures, 130, 681, 741; see the entry on "Royal jewels". Nitra and Indra, a pair of islets off Brawick Bay, 149. Nodu, Auden's half-brother, was born in 1916, the son of Leopard O'Donnell and a Zambala boy-player; A card-cheater, a mean traitor, 171. Odaiwala, a fine town north of Anghava, east of Zambala, was mayor for a time by the Honorable Zolle (meaning "Rook in Chess") Brewitt, who was Oswin Great-uncle of Brawitt (crowding like a crow, q·v, q·v), 149, 286. Auden, pseudonym of Donald O'Donnell, born in 1915, world-renowned actor, Zambala patriot; learned of the secret passage from K, but had to go to the theater, 130; Escorted K from the theater to the foot of Mount Mandevo, 149; met K near the seaside cave, fled with him in a motorboat, ibid; directed a film in Paris, 171; stayed at Lavender's apartment in Laix, 408; Shouldn't marry that fat-lipped, scruffy-haired film actress, 691; see entry for "Sylvia O'Donnell". Sylvia O'Donnell, née O'Connell, born in 1895?1890?Mother of Auden (cf. the article), many travellers, multiple marriages, 149, 691; married Leopard O'Donnell, Dean of the Academy, 1915, fathered Auden, divorced The marriage of Peter Gusev, Duke of Riel, made Zambala a lot of glory until she divorced in 1925, and then married an oriental prince she met in Chamonix; A number of more or less glamorous marriages; at the time this index was compiled, she was divorcing Joseph Lavender's cousin, Lionel Lavender. Oleg, Duke of Riel, 1916-1931, son of Colonel Gusev, Duke of Riel (born in 1885, still alive); K's closest companion, died in a skiing accident, 130. On Hawa, the beautiful capital of Zambala, 12, 71, 130, 149, 171, 181, 275, 579, 894, 1000. Count Otar, upper-class heterosexual, Zambala patriot, born in 1915, his bald head, his two teenage lovers Flor and Fifalda (later to become Otar Countess de Tal), both noble daughters of the Countess de Ferrier, interesting lighting scene, 71. Mount Pa, see the entry for "Bela Mountains". The House of the Dukes of Penn, Coat of Arms of Penn, 270; see the entry for My Queen Disa. Scheider's Short Poems: "The Sacred Tree," 49: "The Swing," 61; ", 782; the opening quatrain of "Art", 957. Potayanik, that is, Tayanik (refer to this article). Religion: Communion with God, 47; The Pope, 85; Freedom of thought, 101; Questions of sin and faith, 549; see the entry on Suicide. Rippleson's Cave, a grotto in Blawick Bay, named after a famous glassmaker who made reflections of the twists and ripples of the turquoise water in special stained-glass windows made for the palace, 130, 149. Hazel Scheider, Daughter of S, 1934-1957; Deserving of Deep Respect, Preferring a Beautiful Death to an Ugly Life; Ghosts at Home, 230; Haunted Barn, 347. John Francis Schneider, Poet and Scholar, 1898-1959; his composition and his friendship with K, see Preface; his appearance, proclivities, habits, etc., ibid; Contact, when S began to write the long poem, K was playing chess in the student club, 1; he and K walked and chatted in the evening, 12; he slightly foresees G, 17; K observes S' apartment through the lighted window, 47 ;He began to write poems, completed the second chapter, half-written the third chapter, K. visited three times during this period, ibid.; his parents, Samuel Scheider and Caroline Lukin, 71; K The influence of this is found in a different passage, 79; Maud Scheider, S's aunt, 86; showing K the wind-up toy as a symbol of death, 143; K talking about S's frequent fainting problem, 162; S begins Writes the second chapter, 167; S talks about critics, Shakespeare and education, etc., 172; K watches the arrival of guests from S's house on his own birthday and S's birthday, S writes the second chapter, 181; S recalls his love for his daughter Concern, 230; his fragility or prudence, 231; his exaggerated interest in local flora and fauna, 238, 270; K's complexity compared to S's simplicity in marriage, 275; K reminds S noticed a kind of pastel-like smudge across the sky in the evening sunset, 286; he was worried that S might leave before completing the book they jointly collaborated on, 288; he waited for S for a long time on July 15th, 338 ; He walks with S through Old Man Henzner's Fields, Reconstructing S' Daughter's Expedition to the Haunted Barn, 347; S's Pronunciation, 367; S on Pope's Writings, 384; Te's complaint, 385; his writing lines 406-416 were synchronized in time with G's activities in Switzerland; 408; again his prudence or consideration, 417; he might have glimpsed Disa's villa and the little Duchess of Penn and her English governess, 433; he apparently drew on Disa's material, K promised to divulge the last truth, idem; S on prejudice, 470; K on Suicide insights, 493; S and K's views on sin and faith, 549; S's surly solicitude, fond of vegetarian food at my house, 579; Rumors of his special interest in a schoolgirl, idem; He denies a train station Stationmaster's insanity, 629; his heart attack coincides with K's spectacular arrival in America, 691; K mentions S in a letter to Disa, 768; K walks with S for the last time, and Delighted to learn that S is laboriously writing on the subject of "Mountains"—a sad misunderstanding, 802; K playing a golf game with S, 819; K going to check something in the library for S, 887; S defending Zamba King La, 894; S and K are amused by the nonsense in a textbook written by Professor Ke, psychiatrist and literary expert (!), 929; he begins to use the last batch of cards, 949; he reveals to K his mission Completed, 991; a bullet that shoots someone elseTo his death, 1000. Sybil Shade, wife of S, can be seen everywhere. The Shadow faction, a regicide organization, assigned Gradus (cf. the article) to assassinate the king in self-exile; the hideous name of the leader of the organization cannot be mentioned even in an index of obscure works compiled by a scholar the man's grandfather, a very brave and well-known master builder, was employed by the flamboyant King Saugus around 1885 to do some repairs in his quarters, and then under mysterious circumstances followed Three of his young apprentices were poisoned to death in the royal kitchen. Those three apprentices were named Yan, Rong Ni and Anglin, and a ballad with their three names can still be heard in the wild valley. Baron Haierfa, Shakespeare, alias curd fan, was born in 1921, a member of the upper class, Zambala patriot, 433. Julius Steinman, born 1928, tennis champion, Zambala patriot, 171. Sudag of Bokai, a gifted mirror-maker and local patron of Bokai in the Zambala mountains, 80; life span unknown. Suicide, K's Perspectives on Suicide, 493. Tayanik, Russian, secret location, see entry "Royal jewels". Zorgus III, nicknamed the Pompous King, K's grandfather, died in 1900 at the age of seventy-five after a long and stolid reign; With only a medal pinned to his shirt, he rode a bicycle around the park; he was short and bald, with a nose like a red plum, a handsome old-fashioned beard, and a green silk dress. Dressing gown, holding a torch, often met his hooded mistress Elise Achter every night in the middle of the secret passage between the palace and the theater for a period of time in the mid-eighties (see this article) , that passage was later discovered by his grandson, 130. Glass mirror, a dark blue precious glass, made in Bokai, a medieval region in the mountains of Zambala, 149; see the entry for Sudag of Bokai. Translation of Poetry; from English into Zambala, of Cornmart's translations of Shakespeare, Milton, Kipling, etc., 962; from English into French, of Donne and Marvell, 678; from German into English and Zambala, The Evil Spirit, 662; from Zambala into English, Timon of Athens, 39; Old Edda, 79; Arno's The Girl of the Mirage, 80. The last king of Ulam, the Zambala lord, reigned from 1798 to 1799; an unbelievably wise and brutal extravagant monarch whose swishing whip made the Zambala top Turned like a rainbow; put to death one night by his sister's gang of cronies, 681. Vanessa, Sumpsimus, recalling this butterfly, 270; Flying over a parapet on the side of a Swiss mountain, 408; Depicted, 470; Caricatured, 949; The last moments of life, 993. Alternative texts: Sun and moon as thieves; 39-40; Arranging the scene for the release of repressed emotions, 57; The flight of King Zambala (contributed by K, octet), 70; Edda (K Contribution, one line), 79; Shrimp shriveled cocoon of the luna moth, 90--93; Child finds a secret passage (Contribution K, quatrain), 130; Poor Swift, poor-- (probably referring to K), 231; Shade, Ombre, 215; Virginia Vanessa, 316; Our Tie-Head, 377;—A Fairy, 413; Added Pope's verse (probably referring to K), 417 ; Tanagra Dust (A Preeminent Example of Foresight), 596; This America, 609--614; --The first two meters of the line are replaced, 629; Parody of Pope, 895-- 899; Lamentable Times and Social Fiction, 922. Eveny, a bird of the genus Silkornis, 1-4, 131, 1000; Shades' Bird, 71; interesting association belatedly realized. Windows, see Preface; 47, 62, 181. Word golf, S's preference for it, 819; see entry for "little girl". Queen Yaruga, reigning from 1799 to 1800, sister of Ulan (cf. article); drowned in an ice cave with her Russian lover during the traditional New Year's festival, 681. Yeslev, a fine town, district, and bishopric north of the city of Onhava, 149, 275. Zambala, a country far to the north.
Press "Left Key ←" to return to the previous chapter; Press "Right Key →" to enter the next chapter; Press "Space Bar" to scroll down.
Chapters
Chapters
Setting
Setting
Add
Return
Book