Vladimir Nabokov’s Lecture on “The Metamorphosis” by Franz Kafka

Scene V: This is a very distressing scene. It transpires that in his human past Gregor has

been deceived by his family. Gregor had taken that dreadful job with that nightmare firm

because he wished to help his father who five years ago had gone bankrupt. “They had

simply got used to it, both the family and Gregor; the money was gratefully accepted and

gladly given, but there was no special uprush of warm feeling. With his sister alone had

he remained intimate, and it was a secret plan of his that she, who loved music, unlike

himself, and could play movingly on the violin, should be sent next year to study at the

School of Music, despite the great expense that would entail, which must be made up in

some other way. During his brief visits home the School of Music was often mentioned in

the talks he had with his sister, but always merely as a beautiful dream which could never

come true, and his parents discouraged even these innocent references to it; yet Gregor

had made up his mind firmly about it and meant to announce the fact with due solemnity

on Christmas Day.” Gregor now overhears his father explaining “that a certain amount of

investments, a very small amount it was true, had survived the wreck of their fortunes

and had even increased a little because the dividends had not been touched meanwhile.

And besides that, the money Gregor brought home every month—he had kept only a few

dollars for himself—had never been quite used up and now amounted to a small capital

sum. Behind the door Gregor nodded his head eagerly, rejoiced at his evidence of

unexpected thrift and foresight. True, he could really have paid off some more of his

father’s debts to the boss with this extra money, and so brought much nearer the day on

which he could quit his job, but doubtless it was better the way his father had arranged

it.” The family believes this sum should be kept untouched for a rainy day, but in the

meantime how are the living expenses to be met? The father has not worked for five

years and could not be expected to do much. And Gregor’s mother’s asthma would keep

her from working. ”And was his sister to earn her bread, she who was still a child of

seventeen and whose life hitherto had been so pleasant, consisting as it did in dressing

herself nicely, sleeping long, helping in the housekeeping, going out to a few modest

entertainments and above all playing the violin? At first whenever the need for earning

money was mentioned Gregor let go his hold on the door and threw himself down on the

cool leather sofa beside it, he felt so hot with shame and grief.”

Scene VI: A new relationship begins between brother and sister, this time having to do

with a window instead of a door. Gregor “nerved himself to the great effort of pushing an

armchair to the window, then crawled up over the window sill and, braced against the

chair, leaned against the windowpanes, obviously in some recollection of the sense of

freedom that looking out of a window always used to give him.” Gregor, or Kafka, seems

to think that Gregor’s urge to approach the window was a recollection of human

experience. Actually, it is a typical insect reaction to light: one finds all sorts of dusty

bugs near windowpanes, a moth on its back, a lame daddy longlegs, poor insects

cobwebbed in a corner, a buzzing fly still trying to conquer the glass pane. Gregor’s

human sight is growing dimmer so that he cannot see clearly even across the street. The

human detail is dominated by the insect general idea. (But let us not ourselves be insects.

Let us first of all study every detail in this story; the general idea will come of itself later

when we have all the data we need.) His sister does not understand that Gregor has

retained a human heart, human sensitivity, a human sense of decorum, of shame, of

humility and pathetic pride. She disturbs him horribly by the noise and haste with which

she opens the window to breathe some fresh air, and she does not bother to conceal her

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