This significant passage begins to explain Shade’s spirituality and metaphysics. While he rejects God as a concept that doesn’t give enough credit to the freedom of mankind, he’s not actually convinced that, as a human being, he is free—although the constraint to his freedom isn’t found in God, but in “nature.” By this, Shade presumably means that his awareness of mankind’s place in the natural world makes him skeptical of the notion that human beings are any more or less free than any other aspect of nature, which is interdependent and weighted with eons of genetic programming. But while Shade finds the idea of God oppressive, he seems to admire the way that nature might constrain his freedom—people, after all, are “artistically caged,” he writes, which seems to suggest that nature both controls people and provides them with transcendent beauty. It’s possible to see the events of
Pale Fire as an endorsement of this notion, as Shade is both a prisoner of fate (he is doomed to die) and a person who derives profound meaning and pleasure from the natural beauty around him.