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Herman Melville

Herman Melville (born Melvill;[a] August 1, 1819 – September 28, 1891) was an American novelist, short story writer, and poet of the American Renaissance period. Among his best-known works are Moby-Dick (1851); Typee (1846), a romanticized account of his experiences in Polynesia; and Billy Budd, Sailor, a posthumously published novella. At the time of his death, Melville was no longer well known to the public, but the 1919 centennial of his birth was the starting point of a Melville revival.[1] Moby-Dick eventually would be considered one of the great American novels.

Herman Melville
Melville depicted in an 1870 portrait by Joseph Oriel Eaton
BornHerman Melvill
(1819-08-01)August 1, 1819
New York City, U.S.
DiedSeptember 28, 1891(1891-09-28) (aged 72)
New York City, U.S.
Resting placeWoodlawn Cemetery in Bronx, New York City
Occupation
EducationThe Albany Academy (Albany, New York)
GenresTravelogue, captivity narrative, nautical fiction, gothic romanticism, allegory, tall tale
Literary movementRomanticism
Spouse
Elizabeth Knapp Shaw (1822–1906)
(m. 1847)
Children4
Signature

Melville was born in New York City, the third child of a prosperous merchant whose death in 1832 left the family in dire financial straits. He took to sea in 1839 as a common sailor on a merchant ship and then on the whaler Acushnet, but he jumped ship in the Marquesas Islands. Typee, his first book, and its sequel, Omoo (1847), were travel-adventures based on his encounters with the peoples of the islands. Their success gave him the financial security to marry Elizabeth Shaw, the daughter of the Boston jurist Lemuel Shaw. Mardi (1849), a romance-adventure and his first book not based on his own experience, was not well received. Redburn (1849) and White-Jacket (1850), both tales based on his experience as a well-born young man at sea, were given respectable reviews, but did not sell well enough to support his expanding family.

Melville's growing literary ambition showed in Moby-Dick (1851), which took nearly a year and a half to write, but it did not find an audience, and critics scorned his psychological novel Pierre: or, The Ambiguities (1852). From 1853 to 1856, Melville published short fiction in magazines, including "Benito Cereno" and "Bartleby, the Scrivener". In 1857, he traveled to England, toured the Near East, and published his last work of prose, The Confidence-Man (1857). He moved to New York in 1863, eventually taking a position as a United States customs inspector.

From that point, Melville focused his creative powers on poetry. Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War (1866) was his poetic reflection on the moral questions of the American Civil War. In 1867, his eldest child Malcolm died at home from a self-inflicted gunshot. Melville's metaphysical epic Clarel: A Poem and Pilgrimage in the Holy Land was published in 1876. In 1886, his other son Stanwix died of apparent tuberculosis, and Melville retired. During his last years, he privately published two volumes of poetry, and left one volume unpublished. The novella Billy Budd was left unfinished at his death, but was published posthumously in 1924. Melville died from cardiovascular disease in 1891.

Early life and education edit

 
An 1810 portrait of Melville's father, Allan Melvill (1782–1832), by John Rubens Smith, now housed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. In Melville's novel Pierre (1852), he fictionalized this portrait as the portrait of Pierre's father.
 
A c. 1815 portrait of Melville's mother Maria Gansevoort Melville by Ezra Ames, now on display at the National Gallery of Art

Melville was born in New York City, on August 1, 1819,[2] the third of eight children to Allan Melvill (1782–1832)[3] and Maria (Gansevoort) Melvill (1791–1872), who were of Scottish and Dutch descent. His seven siblings, who played important roles in his career and emotional life,[4] were Gansevoort (1815–1846), Helen Maria (1817–1888), Augusta (1821–1876), Allan (1823–1872), Catherine (1825–1905), Frances Priscilla (1827–1885), and Thomas (1830–1884), who eventually became a governor of Sailors' Snug Harbor. Part of a well-established and colorful Boston family, Allan Melvill spent considerable time away from New York City, travelling regularly to Europe as a commission merchant and an importer of French dry goods.[4]

Both of Melville's grandfathers both played significant roles in the American Revolutionary War, and Melville later expressed satisfaction in his "double revolutionary descent".[5] Major Thomas Melvill (1751–1832) participated in the Boston Tea Party,[6] and Melville's maternal grandfather, General Peter Gansevoort (1749–1812), commanded the defense of Fort Stanwix in New York in 1777.[7]

At the turn of the 19th century, Major Melvill did not send his son Allan (Herman's father) to college, but instead sent him to France, where he spent two years in Paris and learned to speak French fluently.[8] In 1814, Allan, who subscribed to his father's Unitarianism, married Maria Gansevoort, who was committed to her family's more strict and biblically oriented Dutch Reformed version of the Calvinist creed. The Gansevoorts' severe Protestantism ensured that Maria was well versed in the Bible, in English as well as in Dutch,[b] the language that the Gansevoorts spoke at home.[9]

On August 19, almost three weeks after his birth, Melville was baptized at home by a minister of the South Reformed Dutch Church.[10] During the 1820s, Melville lived a privileged and opulent life in a household supported by three or more servants at a time.[11] Every four years, the family moved to more spacious and elegant quarters, finally settling on Broadway in 1828.[12] Allan Melvill lived beyond his means, on large sums that he borrowed from his father and from his wife's widowed mother. Although his wife's opinion of his financial conduct is unknown, biographer Hershel Parker says that Maria "thought her mother's money was infinite and that she was entitled to much of her portion" while her children were young.[12] How well the parents managed to hide the truth from their children is "impossible to know", according to biographer Andrew Delbanco.[13]

In 1830, the Gansevoorts ended their financial support of the Melvilles, at which point Allan's lack of financial responsibility had left him in debt to both the Melvill and Gansevoort families for sum exceeding $20,000 (equivalent to $550,000 in 2022).[14] But Melville biographer Newton Arvin writes that the relative happiness and comfort of Melville's early childhood depended less on Allan's wealth or on his profligate spending, as on the "exceptionally tender and affectionate spirit in all the family relationships, especially in the immediate circle".[15] Arvin describes Allan as "a man of real sensibility and a particularly warm and loving father," while Maria was "warmly maternal, simple, robust, and affectionately devoted to her husband and her brood".[16]

Melville's education began when he was five. In 1824, around the time the Melvills moved to a newly built house at 33 Bleecker Street in Manhattan, Herman and his older brother Gansevoort attended New York Male High School.[17] Two years later, in 1826, the year that Herman contracted scarlet fever, Allan Melvill described him as "very backwards in speech & somewhat slow in comprehension" at first,[18][19] but his development increased its pace and Allan was surprised "that Herman proved the best Speaker in the introductory Department".[18][20] In 1829, both Gansevoort and Herman transferred to Columbia Grammar and Preparatory School, and Herman enrolled in the English Department on September 28.[18] "Herman I think is making more progress than formerly," Allan wrote in May 1830 to Major Melvill, "and without being a bright Scholar, he maintains a respectable standing, and would proceed further, if he could only be induced to study more—being a most amiable and innocent child, I cannot find it in my heart to coerce him".[21]

Emotionally unstable and behind on paying the rent for the house on Broadway, Herman's father tried to recover by moving his family to Albany, New York, in 1830 and going into the fur business.[22] Herman attended The Albany Academy from October 1830 to October 1831, where he took the standard preparatory course, including reading and spelling, penmanship, arithmetic, English grammar, geography, natural history, universal, Greek, Roman, and English history, classical biography, and Jewish antiquities.[23] In early August 1831, Herman marched in the Albany city government procession of the year's "finest scholars" and was presented with a copy of The London Carcanet, a collection of poems and prose, inscribed to him as "first best in ciphering books".[24] As Melville scholar Merton Sealts observed,

The ubiquitous classical references in Melville's published writings suggest that his study of ancient history, biography, and literature during his school days left a lasting impression on both his thought and his art, as did his almost encyclopedic knowledge of both the Old and the New Testaments.[25]

In October 1831, Melville left the Academy. While the precise reason is not known definitively, Parker speculates it was for financial reasons, since "even the tiny tuition fee seemed too much to pay".[26]

In December 183`, Allan Melvill returned from New York City by steamboat, but he had to travel the last 70 miles in an open carriage for two days and two nights in subfreezing temperatures.[27] In early January, he began to show "signs of delirium",[28] and he grew worse until his wife felt that his suffering deprived him of his intellect.[29] On January 28, 1832, he died, two months prior to reaching his 50th birthday.[30] Since Herman was no longer attending school, he likely witnessed his father's medical and mental deterioration.[30] Twenty years later, Melville described a similar death in Pierre.[31]

Work as a clerk edit

The death of Allan caused many major shifts in the family's material and spiritual circumstances. One result was the greater influence of his mother's religious beliefs. Maria sought consolation in her faith and in April was admitted as a member of the First Reformed Dutch Church. Herman's saturation in orthodox Calvinism was surely the most decisive intellectual and spiritual influence of his early life.[32] Two months after his father's death, Gansevoort entered the cap and fur business. Uncle Peter Gansevoort, a director of the New York State Bank, got Herman a job as clerk for $150 a year (equivalent to $4,400 in 2022).[33] Biographers cite a passage from Redburn[13][33] when trying to answer what Herman must have felt then: "I had learned to think much and bitterly before my time," the narrator remarks, adding, "I must not think of those delightful days, before my father became a bankrupt ... and we removed from the city; for when I think of those days, something rises up in my throat and almost strangles me". With Melville, Arvin argues, one has to reckon with "psychology, the tormented psychology, of the decayed patrician".[34]

When Melville's paternal grandfather died on September 16, 1832, Maria and her children discovered Allan, somewhat unscrupulously, had borrowed more than his share of his inheritance, meaning Maria received only $20 (equivalent to $600 in 2022).[35] His paternal grandmother died almost exactly seven months later.[36] Melville did his job well at the bank; although he was only 14 in 1834, the bank considered him competent enough to be sent to Schenectady, New York, on an errand. Not much else is known from this period except that he was very fond of drawing.[37] The visual arts became a lifelong interest.[38] Around May 1834, the Melvilles moved to another house in Albany, a three-story brick house. That same month a fire destroyed Gansevoort's skin-preparing factory, which left him with personnel he could neither employ nor afford. Instead he pulled Melville out of the bank to man the cap and fur store.[37]

Intermittent work and studies edit

In 1835, while still working in the store, Melville enrolled in Albany Classical School, perhaps using Maria's part of the proceeds from the sale of the estate of his maternal grandmother in March 1835.[39] In September of the following year, Herman was back at The Albany Academy, participating in the school's Latin course. He also participated in debating societies, in an apparent effort to make up as much as he could for his missed years of schooling. During this time, he read Shakespeare, including Macbeth, whose witch scenes gave him the chance to teasingly scare his sisters.[40] By March 1837, however, he again withdrew from The Albany Academy.

Gansevoort served as a role model and support for Melville throughout his life, particularly during this time trying to cobble together an education. In early 1834, Gansevoort became a member of Albany's Young Men's Association for Mutual Improvement, and in January 1835 Melville joined him there.[41] Gansevoort also had copies of John Todd's Index Rerum, a blank register for indexing remarkable passages from books one had read for easy retrieval. Among the sample entries that Gansevoort made showing his academic scrupulousness was "Pequot, beautiful description of the war with," with a short title reference to the place in Benjamin Trumbull's A Complete History of Connecticut (Volume I in 1797, and Volume II in 1818) in which the description could be found. The two surviving volumes of Gansevoort's are the best evidence for Melville's reading in this period. Gansevoort's entries include books Melville used for Moby-Dick and Clarel, including "Parsees—of India—an excellent description of their character, and religion and an account of their descent—East India Sketch Book p. 21".[42] Other entries are on Panther, the pirate's cabin, and storm at sea from James Fenimore Cooper's The Red Rover.[43]

Work as a school teacher edit

The Panic of 1837 forced Gansevoort to file for bankruptcy in April. In June, Maria told the younger children they needed to leave Albany for somewhere cheaper. Gansevoort began studying law in New York City while Herman managed the farm before getting a teaching position at Sikes District School near Lenox, Massachusetts. He taught about 30 students of various ages, including some his own age.[44]

The semester over, he returned to his mother in 1838. In February he was elected president of the Philo Logos Society, which Peter Gansevoort invited to move into Stanwix Hall for no rent. In the Albany Microscope in March, Melville published two polemical letters about issues in vogue in the debating societies. Historians Leon Howard and Hershel Parker suggest the motive behind the letters was a youthful desire to have his rhetorical skills publicly recognized.[45] In May, the Melvilles moved to a rented house in Lansingburgh, almost 12 miles north of Albany.[46] Nothing is known about what Melville did or where he went for several months after he finished teaching at Sikes.[47] On November 12, five days after arriving in Lansingburgh, Melville paid for a term at Lansingburgh Academy to study surveying and engineering. In an April 1839 letter recommending Herman for a job in the Engineer Department of the Erie Canal, Peter Gansevoort says his nephew "possesses the ambition to make himself useful in a business which he desires to make his profession," but no job resulted.[48]

Just weeks after this failure, Melville's first known published essay appeared. Using the initials "L.A.V.", Herman contributed "Fragments from a Writing Desk" to the weekly newspaper Democratic Press and Lansingburgh Advertiser, which printed it in two installments, the first on May 4.[49] According to Merton Sealts, his use of heavy-handed allusions reveals familiarity with the work of William Shakespeare, John Milton, Walter Scott, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Edmund Burke, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, and Thomas Moore.[50] Parker calls the piece "characteristic Melvillean mood-stuff" and considers its style "excessive enough [...] to indulge his extravagances and just enough overdone to allow him to deny that he was taking his style seriously".[49] For Delbanco, the style is "overheated in the manner of Poe, with sexually charged echoes of Byron and The Arabian Nights".[51]

1839–1844: Years at sea edit

 
Richard Tobias Greene, who jumped ship with Melville in the Marquesas Islands and is Toby in Typee, pictured in 1846
 
Melville's desertion from the Acushnet in 1842

On May 31, 1839, Gansevoort, then living in New York City, wrote that he was sure Herman could get a job on a whaler or merchant vessel.[52] The next day, he signed aboard the merchant ship St. Lawrence as a "boy" (a green hand), which cruised from New York to Liverpool.[53] Redburn: His First Voyage (1849) draws on his experiences in this journey; at least two of the nine guide-books listed in chapter 30 of the book had been part of Allan Melvill's library.[50] He arrived back in New York October 1, 1839[53] and resumed teaching, now at Greenbush, New York, but left after one term because he had not been paid. In the summer of 1840 he and his friend James Murdock Fly went to Galena, Illinois, to see if his Uncle Thomas could help them find work. Unsuccessful, he and his friend returned home in autumn, likely by way of St. Louis and up the Ohio River.[54]

Inspired by contemporaneous popular cultural reading, including Richard Henry Dana Jr.'s new book Two Years Before the Mast and Jeremiah N. Reynolds's account in the May 1839 issue of The Knickerbocker magazine of the hunt for a great white sperm whale named Mocha Dick, Herman and Gansevoort traveled to New Bedford, where Herman signed up for a whaling voyage aboard a new ship, the Acushnet.[55] Built in 1840, the ship measured some 104 feet in length, almost 28 feet in breadth, and almost 14 feet in depth. She measured slightly less than 360 tons and had two decks and three masts, but no quarter galleries.[56] The Acushnet was owned by Melvin O. Bradford and Philemon Fuller of Fairhaven, Massachusetts, and was berthed near their office at the foot of Center Street in that town. Herman signed a contract on Christmas Day with the ship's agent as a "green hand" for 1/175th of whatever profits the voyage would yield. On Sunday the 27th, the brothers heard Reverend Enoch Mudge preach at the Seamen's Bethel on Johnnycake Hill, where white marble cenotaphs on the walls memorialized local sailors who had died at sea, often in battle with whales.[57] When he signed the crew list the next day, Herman was advanced $84.[56]

On January 3, 1841, the Acushnet set sail.[56][c] Melville slept with some twenty others in the forecastle; Captain Valentine Pease, the mates, and the skilled men slept aft.[58] Whales were found near The Bahamas, and in March 150 barrels of oil were sent home from Rio de Janeiro. Cutting in and trying-out (boiling) a single whale took about three days, and a whale yielded approximately one barrel of oil per foot of length and per ton of weight (the average whale weighed 40 to 60 tons). The oil was kept on deck for a day to cool off, and was then stowed down; scrubbing the deck completed the labor. An average voyage meant that some forty whales were killed to yield some 1600 barrels of oil.[59]

On April 15, the Acushnet sailed around Cape Horn and traveled to the South Pacific, where the crew sighted whales without catching any. She then went up the coast of Chile to the region of Selkirk Island, and on May 7, near Juan Fernández Islands, she had 160 barrels. On June 23, the ship anchored for the first time since Rio, in Santa Harbor.[60] The cruising grounds the Acushnet was sailing attracted much traffic, and Captain Pease not only paused to visit other whalers, but at times hunted in company with them.[61] From July 23 into August, the Acushnet regularly gammed with the Lima from Nantucket, and Melville met William Henry Chase, the son of Owen Chase, who gave him a copy of his father's account of his adventures aboard the Essex.[62] Ten years later, Melville wrote in his other copy of the book: "The reading of this wondrous story upon the landless sea, & close to the very latitude of the shipwreck had a surprising effect upon me".[63]

On September 25, the ship reported having 600 barrels of oil to another whaler, and in October 700 barrels.[d] On October 24, the Acushnet crossed the equator to the north, and six or seven days later arrived at the Galápagos Islands. This short visit would be the basis for "The Encantadas".[64] On November 2, the Acushnet and three other American whalers were hunting together near the Galápagos Islands; Melville later exaggerated that number in Sketch Fourth of "The Encantadas". From November 19 to 25, the ship anchored at Chatham's Isle,[65] and on December 2 reached the coast of Peru and anchored at Tombez near Paita, with 570 barrels of oil on board.[66] On December 27, the Acushnet sighted Cape Blanco, off Ecuador. Point St. Elena was sighted the next day, and on January 6, 1842, the ship approached the Galápagos Islands from the southeast. From February 13 to May 7,[clarification needed] seven sightings of sperm whales were recorded, but none were killed.[67] From early May to early June, the Acushnet cooperatively set about its whaling endeavors several times with the Columbus of New Bedford, which also took letters from Melville's ship; the two ships were in the same area just south of the Equator. On June 16, the Acushnet carried 750 barrels of oil and sent home 200 on the Herald the Second,[68] and, on June 23, she reached the Marquesas Islands and anchored at Nuku Hiva.[69]

In the summer of 1842, Melville and his shipmate Richard Tobias Greene ("Toby") jumped ship at Nuku Hiva Bay.[70] Melville's first book, Typee (1846), is based on his stay in or near the Taipi Valley.[71] By around mid-August, Melville had left the island aboard the Australian whaler Lucy Ann, bound for Tahiti, where he took part in a mutiny and was briefly jailed in the native Calabooza Beretanee.[70] In October, he and crew mate John B. Troy escaped Tahiti for Eimeo.[53] He then spent a month as beachcomber and island rover ("omoo" in Tahitian), eventually crossing over to Moorea. He drew on these experiences for Omoo, the sequel to Typee. In November, he contracted to be a seaman on the Nantucket whaler Charles & Henry for a six-month cruise (November 1842 – April 1843), and was discharged at Lahaina, Maui, in the Hawaiian Islands, in May 1843.[53][70]

After four months of working several jobs in Hawaii, including as a clerk, Melville joined the US Navy on August 20, as an ordinary seaman on the frigate USS United States.[70] During the next year, the homeward bound ship visited the Marquesas Islands, Tahiti, and Valparaiso, and then, from summer to fall 1844, Mazatlan, Lima, and Rio de Janeiro,[53] before reaching Boston on October 3.[70] Melville was discharged on October 14.[53] This Navy experience is used in White-Jacket (1850), Melville's fifth book.[72]

Melville's wander-years created what biographer Arvin calls "a settled hatred of external authority, a lust for personal freedom", and a "growing and intensifying sense of his own exceptionalism as a person", along with "the resentful sense that circumstance and mankind together had already imposed their will upon him in a series of injurious ways".[citation needed] Scholar Robert Milder believes the encounter with the wide ocean, where he was seemingly abandoned by God, led Melville to experience a "metaphysical estrangement" and influenced his social views in two ways: first, that he belonged to the genteel classes, but sympathized with the "disinherited commons" he had been placed among and, second, that experiencing the cultures of Polynesia let him view the West from an outsider's perspective.[73]

1845–1850: Successful writer edit

 
Elizabeth "Lizzie" Shaw Melville, Melville's wife, in 1885
 
Melville's home Arrowhead in Pittsfield, Massachusetts

Upon his return, Melville regaled his family and friends with his adventurous tales and romantic experiences, and they urged him to put them into writing. Melville completed Typee, his first book, in the summer of 1845 while living in Troy, New York. His brother Gansevoort found a publisher for it in London, where it was published in February 1846 by John Murray in his travel adventure series. It became an overnight bestseller in England, then in New York, when it was published on March 17 by Wiley & Putnam.[70]

In the narrative, Melville likely extended the period of time he had spent on the island and also incorporated material from source books he had assembled.[74] Milder calls Typee "an appealing mixture of adventure, anecdote, ethnography, and social criticism presented with a genial latitudinarianism that gave novelty to a South Sea idyll at once erotically suggestive and romantically chaste".[73]

An unsigned review in the Salem Advertiser written by Nathaniel Hawthorne called the book a "skilfully managed" narrative by an author with "that freedom of view ... which renders him tolerant of codes of morals that may be little in accordance with our own". Hawthorne continued:

This book is lightly but vigorously written; and we are acquainted with no work that gives a freer and more effective picture of barbarian life, in that unadulterated state of which there are now so few specimens remaining. The gentleness of disposition that seems akin to the delicious climate, is shown in contrast with the traits of savage fierceness...He has that freedom of view—it would be too harsh to call it laxity of principle—which renders him tolerant of codes of morals that may be little in accordance with our own, a spirit proper enough to a young and adventurous sailor, and which makes his book the more wholesome to our staid landsmen.[75]

Pleased but not overwhelmed by the adulation of his new public, Melville later expressed concern that he would "go down to posterity ... as a 'man who lived among the cannibals'!"[76] The writing of Typee brought Melville back into contact with his friend Greene—Toby in the book—who wrote confirming Melville's account in newspapers. The two corresponded until 1863, and in his final years Melville "traced and successfully located his old friend" for a further meeting of the two.[77] In March 1847, Omoo, a sequel to Typee, was published by Murray in London, and in May by Harper in New York.[70] Omoo is "a slighter but more professional book," according to Milder.[78] Typee and Omoo gave Melville overnight renown as a writer and adventurer, and he often entertained by telling stories to his admirers. As the writer and editor Nathaniel Parker Willis wrote, "With his cigar and his Spanish eyes, he talks Typee and Omoo, just as you find the flow of his delightful mind on paper".[79]

In 1847, Melville tried unsuccessfully to find a "government job" in Washington.[70]

In June 1847, Melville and Elizabeth "Lizzie" Knapp Shaw were engaged, after knowing each other for approximately three months. Melville had first asked her father, Lemuel Shaw, for her hand in March, but was at first turned down at the time.[80] Shaw, Chief Justice of Massachusetts, had been a close friend of Melville's father, and Shaw's marriage with Melville's aunt Nancy was prevented only by her death. His warmth and financial support for the family continued after Allan's death. Melville dedicated his first book, Typee, to him.[81] Lizzie was raised by her grandmother and an Irish nurse.[82] Arvin suggests that Melville's interest in Lizzie may have been stimulated by "his need of Judge Shaw's paternal presence".[81] They were married on August 4, 1847.[70] Lizzie described their marriage as "very unexpected, and scarcely thought of until about two months before it actually took place".[83] She wanted to be married in church, but they had a private wedding ceremony at home to avoid possible crowds hoping to see the celebrity.[84] The couple honeymooned in the then-British Province of Canada, and traveled to Montreal. They settled in a house on Fourth Avenue in New York City (now called Park Avenue).

According to scholars Joyce Deveau Kennedy and Frederick James Kennedy, Lizzie brought to their marriage a sense of religious obligation, an intent to make a home with Melville regardless of place, a willingness to please her husband by performing such "tasks of drudgery" as mending stockings, an ability to hide her agitation, and a desire "to shield Melville from unpleasantness".[85] The Kennedys conclude their assessment with:

If the ensuing years did bring regrets to Melville's life, it is impossible to believe he would have regretted marrying Elizabeth. In fact, he must have realized that he could not have borne the weight of those years unaided—that without her loyalty, intelligence, and affection, his own wild imagination would have had no "port or haven".

— Kennedy & Kennedy (1978b), 7[clarification needed]

Biographer Robertson-Lorant cites "Lizzie's adventurous spirit and abundant energy," and she suggests that "her pluck and good humor might have been what attracted Melville to her, and vice versa".[86] An example of such good humor appears in a letter about her not yet used to being married: "It seems sometimes exactly as if I were here for a visit. The illusion is quite dispelled however when Herman stalks into my room without even the ceremony of knocking, bringing me perhaps a button to sew on, or some equally romantic occupation".[87] On February 16, 1849, the Melvilles' first child, Malcolm, was born.[88]

In March 1848, Mardi was published by Richard Bentley in London, and in April by Harper in New York.[70] Nathaniel Hawthorne thought it a rich book "with depths here and there that compel a man to swim for his life".[89] According to Milder, the book began as another South Sea story but, as he wrote, Melville left that genre behind, first in favor of "a romance of the narrator Taji and the lost maiden Yillah," and then "to an allegorical voyage of the philosopher Babbalanja and his companions through the imaginary archipelago of Mardi".[78]

In October 1849, Redburn was published by Bentley in London, and in November by Harper in New York.[70] The bankruptcy and death of Allan Melvill, and Melville's own youthful humiliations surface in this "story of outward adaptation and inner impairment".[90] Biographer Robertson-Lorant regards the work as a deliberate attempt for popular appeal: "Melville modeled each episode almost systematically on every genre that was popular with some group of antebellum readers," combining elements of "the picaresque novel, the travelogue, the nautical adventure, the sentimental novel, the sensational French romance, the gothic thriller, temperance tracts, urban reform literature, and the English pastoral".[91] His next novel, White-Jacket, was published by Bentley in London in January 1850, and in March by Harper in New York.[70]

1850–1851: Hawthorne and Moby-Dick edit

 
Melville depicted in an oil painting, c. 1846–47
 
Mount Greylock in Massachusetts as seen from Melville's writing desk

The earliest surviving mention of Moby-Dick is from a May 1, 1850, letter in which Melville told fellow sea author Richard Henry Dana Jr. "I am half way in the work."[92] In June, he described the book to his English publisher as "a romance of adventure, founded upon certain wild legends in the Southern Sperm Whale Fisheries," and promised it would be done by the fall.[93] The original manuscript has not survived. That summer, Melville read Thomas Carlyle, borrowing copies of Sartor Resartus (1833–34) and On Heroes, Hero-Worship, & the Heroic in History (1841) from the library of his friend Evert Duyckinck.[94] These readings proved significant, occurring as Melville radically transformed his initial plan for the novel over the next several months, conceiving what Delbanco described in 2005 as "the most ambitious book ever conceived by an American writer".[95]

From August 4 to 12, 1850, the Melvilles, Sarah Morewood, Duyckinck, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and other literary figures from New York and Boston came to Pittsfield to enjoy a period of parties, picnics, dinners, and the like. Nathaniel Hawthorne and his publisher James T. Fields joined the group while Hawthorne's wife stayed at home to look after the children.[96] On one picnic outing organized by Duyckinck, Hawthorne and Melville sought shelter from the rain together and had a deep, private conversation. Melville had been given a copy of Hawthorne's short story collection Mosses from an Old Manse, though he had not yet read it.[97] Melville then avidly read it and wrote a review, "Hawthorne and His Mosses", which appeared in two installments, on August 17 and 24, in The Literary World. Melville wrote that these stories revealed a dark side to Hawthorne, "shrouded in blackness, ten times black".[98] He repeatedly compared Hawthorne to Shakespeare, and urged that "men not very much inferior to Shakespeare are this day being born on the banks of the Ohio." The critic Walter Bezanson finds the essay "so deeply related to Melville's imaginative and intellectual world while writing Moby-Dick" that it could be regarded as a virtual preface and should be "everybody's prime piece of contextual reading".[99] Later that summer, Duyckinck sent Hawthorne copies of Melville's three most recent books.[100] Hawthorne read them, as he wrote to Duyckinck on August 29 that Melville in Redburn and White-Jacket put the reality "more unflinchingly" before his reader than any writer, and he thought Mardi was "a rich book, with depths here and there that compel a man to swim for his life". But he cautioned, "It is so good that one scarcely pardons the writer for not having brooded long over it, so as to make it a great deal better".[101]

In September 1850, Melville borrowed three thousand dollars from his father-in-law Lemuel Shaw to buy a 160-acre farm in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Melville called his new home Arrowhead because of the arrowheads that were dug up around the property during planting season.[102] That winter, Melville paid Hawthorne an unexpected visit, only to discover he was working and "not in the mood for company". Hawthorne's wife Sophia gave him copies of Twice-Told Tales and, for Malcolm, The Grandfather's Chair.[103] Melville invited them to visit Arrowhead soon, hoping to "[discuss] the Universe with a bottle of brandy & cigars" with Hawthorne, but Hawthorne would not stop working on his new book for more than one day and they did not come.[104] After a second visit from Melville, Hawthorne surprised him by arriving at Arrowhead with his daughter Una. According to Robertson-Lorant, "The handsome Hawthorne made quite an impression on the Melville women, especially Augusta, who was a great fan of his books". They spent the day mostly "smoking and talking metaphysics".[105]

Robertson-Lorant writes that Melville was "infatuated with Hawthorne's intellect, captivated by his artistry, and charmed by his elusive personality," but "the friendship meant something different to each of them," with Hawthorne offering Melville "the kind of intellectual stimulation he needed". They may have been "natural allies and friends," yet they were also "fifteen years apart in age and temperamentally quite different" and Hawthorne "found Melville's manic intensity exhausting at times".[106] Bezanson identifies "sexual excitement" in all the ten letters Melville wrote to the older man.[107] In the essay on Hawthorne's Mosses, Melville wrote: "I feel that this Hawthorne has dropped germinous seeds into my soul. He expands and deepens down, the more I contemplate him; and further, and further, shoots his strong New-England roots into the hot soil of my Southern soul." Melville dedicated his book to Hawthorne: "In token of my admiration for his genius, this book is inscribed to Nathaniel Hawthorne".

On October 18, 1851, The Whale was published in Britain in three volumes, and on November 14 Moby-Dick appeared in the United States as a single volume. In between these dates, on October 22, 1851, the Melvilles' second child, Stanwix, was born.[108] In December, Hawthorne told Duyckinck, "What a book Melville has written! It gives me an idea of much greater power than his preceding ones."[109] Unlike other contemporaneous reviewers of Melville, Hawthorne had seen the uniqueness of Melville's new novel and acknowledged it. In early December 1852, Melville visited the Hawthornes in Concord and discussed the idea of the "Agatha" story he had talked of with Hawthorne. This was the last contact between the two writers before Melville visited Hawthorne in Liverpool four years later when Hawthorne had relocated to England.[110]

1852–1857: Unsuccessful writer edit

After having borrowed three thousand dollars from his father-in-law in September 1850 to buy a 160-acre farm in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, Melville had high hopes that his next book would please the public and restore his finances. In April 1851 he told his British publisher, Richard Bentley, that his new book had "unquestionable novelty" and was calculated to have wide appeal with elements of romance and mystery.[111] In fact, Pierre: or, The Ambiguities was heavily psychological, though drawing on the conventions of the romance, and difficult in style. It was not well received. The New York Day Book published a venomous attack on September 8, 1852, headlined "HERMAN MELVILLE CRAZY". The item, offered as a news story, reported,

A critical friend, who read Melville's last book, Ambiguities, between two steamboat accidents, told us that it appeared to be composed of the ravings and reveries of a madman. We were somewhat startled at the remark, but still more at learning, a few days after, that Melville was really supposed to be deranged, and that his friends were taking measures to place him under treatment. We hope one of the earliest precautions will be to keep him stringently secluded from pen and ink.[112]

On May 22, 1853, Melville's third child and first daughter Elizabeth (Bessie) was born, and on or about that day Herman finished work on the Agatha story, Isle of the Cross. Melville traveled to New York[113] to discuss a book, presumably Isle of the Cross, with his publisher, but later wrote that Harper & Brothers was "prevented" from publishing his manuscript because it was lost.[113]

After the commercial and critical failure of Pierre, Melville had difficulty finding a publisher for his follow-up novel Israel Potter. Instead, this narrative of a Revolutionary War veteran was serialized in Putnam's Monthly Magazine in 1853. From November 1853 to 1856, Melville published fourteen tales and sketches in Putnam's and Harper's magazines. In December 1855 he proposed to Dix & Edwards, the new owners of Putnam's, that they publish a selective collection of the short fiction. The collection, titled The Piazza Tales, was named after a new introductory story Melville wrote for it, "The Piazza". It also contained five previously published stories, including "Bartleby, the Scrivener" and "Benito Cereno".[114] On March 2, 1855, the Melvilles' fourth child, Frances (Fanny), was born.[115] In this period, his book Israel Potter was published.

The writing of The Confidence-Man put great strain on Melville, leading Sam Shaw, a nephew of Lizzie, to write to his uncle Lemuel Shaw: "Herman I hope has had no more of those ugly attacks"—a reference to what Robertson-Lorant calls "the bouts of rheumatism and sciatica that plagued Melville".[116] Melville's father-in-law apparently shared his daughter's "great anxiety about him" when he wrote a letter to a cousin, in which he described Melville's working habits: "When he is deeply engaged in one of his literary works, he confines him[self] to hard study many hours in the day, with little or no exercise, and this specially in winter for a great many days together. He probably thus overworks himself and brings on severe nervous affections".[117] Shaw advanced Melville $1,500 from Lizzie's inheritance to travel four or five months in Europe and the Holy Land.[116]

From October 11, 1856, to May 20, 1857,[118] Melville made a six-month Grand Tour of Europe and the Mediterranean. While in England, in November 1856, he briefly reunited for three days with Hawthorne, who had taken the position of United States Consul at Liverpool, at that time the hub of Britain's Atlantic trade. At the nearby coast resort of Southport, amid the sand dunes where they had stopped to smoke cigars, they had a conversation that Hawthorne later described in his journal: "Melville, as he always does, began to reason of Providence and futurity, and of everything that lies beyond human ken, and informed me that he 'pretty much made up his mind to be annihilated' [...] If he were a religious man, he would be one of the most truly religious and reverential; he has a very high and noble nature, and better worth immortality than most of us."[119][full citation needed]

The Mediterranean part of the tour took in the Holy Land, which inspired his epic poem Clarel.[120] During the tour he visited Mount Hope, a Christian farm near Jaffa.[121] On April 1, 1857, Melville published his last full-length novel, The Confidence-Man. This novel, subtitled His Masquerade, has won general acclaim in modern times as a complex and mysterious exploration of issues of fraud and honesty, identity and masquerade. However, when it was published, it received reviews ranging from the bewildered to the denunciatory.[122]

1857–1876: Poet edit

 
Melville in 1861

To repair his faltering finances, Melville took up public lecturing from late 1857 to 1860. He embarked upon three lecture tours[118] and spoke at lyceums, chiefly on Roman statuary and sightseeing in Rome.[123] Melville's lectures, which mocked the pseudo-intellectualism of lyceum culture, were panned by contemporary audiences.[124] On May 30, 1860, Melville boarded the clipper Meteor for California, with his brother Thomas at the helm. After a shaky trip around Cape Horn, Melville returned to New York alone via Panama in November. Later that year, he submitted a poetry collection to a publisher but it was not accepted, and is now lost. In 1863, he bought his brother's house at 104 East 26th Street in New York City and moved there.[125][126]

In 1864, Melville visited the Virginia battlefields of the American Civil War.[127] After the war, he published Battle Pieces and Aspects of the War (1866), a collection of 72 poems that has been described as "a polyphonic verse journal of the conflict".[128] The work did not do well commercially—of the print run of 1,260 copies, 300 were sent as review copies, and 551 copies were sold—and reviewers did not realize that Melville had purposely avoided the ostentatious diction and fine writing that were in fashion, choosing to be concise and spare.[129]

In 1866, Melville became a customs inspector for New York City. He held the post for 19 years and had a reputation for honesty in a notoriously corrupt institution.[130] (Unbeknownst to Melville, his position was sometimes protected by future American president Chester A. Arthur, then a customs official who admired Melville's writing but never spoke to him.[131]) During these years, Melville suffered from nervous exhaustion, physical pain, and frustration, and would sometimes, in the words of Robertson-Lorant, behave like the "tyrannical captains he had portrayed in his novels", perhaps even beating his wife Lizzie when he came home after drinking.[132] In 1867 Malcolm, the Melvilles' older son, died in his bedroom at home at the age of 18 from a self-inflicted gun shot, perhaps intentional, perhaps accidental.[133] In May 1867, Lizzie's brother Sam, who shared his family's fear for Melville's sanity, tried to arrange for her to leave Melville. Lizzie was to visit her family in Boston and assert to a court that her husband was insane. But Lizzie, whether to avoid the social shame divorce carried at the time or because she still loved her husband, refused to go along with the plan.[134]

Though Melville's professional writing career had ended, he remained dedicated to his writing. He spent years on what Milder called "his autumnal masterpiece" Clarel: A Poem and a Pilgrimage (1876), an 18,000-line epic poem inspired by his 1856 trip to the Holy Land.[135] It is among the longest single poems in American literature. The title character is a young American student of divinity who travels to Jerusalem to renew his faith. One of the central characters, Rolfe, is similar to Melville in his younger days, a seeker and adventurer, while the reclusive Vine is loosely based on Hawthorne, who had died twelve years before.[135] Publication of 350 copies was funded with a bequest from his uncle in 1876, but sales failed miserably and the unsold copies were burned when Melville was unable to buy them at cost. Critic Lewis Mumford found an unread copy in the New York Public Library in 1925 "with its pages uncut".[136]

1877–1891: Final years edit

 
The last known image of Melville, a cabinet card by George G. Rockwood in 1885
 
The New York Times' September 29, 1891 obituary notice, which misspelled Melville's masterpiece as Mobie Dick
 
The gravestones of Melville and his wife in Woodlawn Cemetery in Bronx, New York City

Melville's own income remained limited. But in 1884, Lizzie received a legacy that enabled him to buy a steady stream of books and prints each month.[137] Melville retired on December 31, 1885,[127] after several of his wife's relatives further supported the couple with supplementary legacies and inheritances. On February 22, 1886, Stanwix, their younger son, died in San Francisco at age 36, from tuberculosis.[138] In 1889, Melville became a member of the New York Society Library.[137]

Melville had a modest revival of popularity in England when readers rediscovered his novels. He published two collections of poems inspired by his early experiences at sea, with prose head notes. Intended for his relatives and friends, each had a print run of 25 copies. The first, John Marr and Other Sailors, was published in 1888, followed by Timoleon in 1891.

Melville died on the morning of September 28, 1891. His death certificate shows "cardiac dilation" as the cause.[139] He was interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery in Bronx, New York City.[140]

The New York Times' initial death notice called his masterpiece "Mobie Dick", the misspelling of which was later erroneously taken to mean that he was unappreciated at his time of death.[141][142] But there were some appreciations. The Times, for instance, published a substantial article of appreciation on October 2. The author said that thinking back to Melville's books that were so much read forty years earlier, there is "no difficulty determining why they were then read and talked about," but the difficulty is "to discover why they are read and talked about no longer."[143]

Melville left a volume of poetry, Weeds and Wildings, and a sketch, "Daniel Orme", unpublished at the time of his death. His wife also found pages for an unfinished novella, titled Billy Budd. Melville had revised and rearranged the manuscript in several stages, leaving the pages in disarray. Lizzie could not decide her husband's intentions (or even read his handwriting in some places) and abandoned attempts to edit the manuscript for publication. The pages were stored in a family breadbox until 1919 when Melville's granddaughter gave them to Raymond Weaver. Weaver, who initially dismissed the work's importance, published a quick transcription in 1924. This version, however, contained many misreadings, some of which affected interpretation. It was an immediate critical success in England, then in the United States. In 1962, the Melville scholars Harrison Hayford and Merton M. Sealts published a critical reading text that was widely accepted.[144] It was adapted as a stage play on Broadway in 1951, then an opera, and in 1961 as a film.[127]

Writing style edit

General narrative style edit

Melville's writing style shows both consistencies and enormous changes throughout the years. His development "had been abnormally postponed, and when it came, it came with a rush and a force that had the menace of quick exhaustion in it".[145] As early as "Fragments from a Writing Desk", written when Melville was 20, scholar Sealts sees "a number of elements that anticipate Melville's later writing, especially his characteristic habit of abundant literary allusion".[146] Typee and Omoo were documentary adventures that called for a division of the narrative in short chapters. Such compact organization bears the risk of fragmentation when applied to a lengthy work such as Mardi, but with Redburn and White Jacket, Melville turned the short chapter into a concentrated narrative.[147]

Some chapters of Moby-Dick are no more than two pages in standard editions, and an extreme example is Chapter 122, consisting of a single paragraph of 36 words. The skillful handling of chapters in Moby-Dick is one of the most fully developed Melvillean signatures, and is a measure of his masterly writing style (something that would lend lasting significance to the opening lines "Call me Ishmael").[148] Individual chapters have become "a touchstone for appreciation of Melville's art and for explanation" of his themes.[149] In contrast, the chapters in Pierre, called Books, are divided into short-numbered sections, seemingly an "odd formal compromise" between Melville's natural length and his purpose to write a regular romance that called for longer chapters. As satirical elements were introduced, the chapter arrangement restores "some degree of organization and pace from the chaos".[148] The usual chapter unit then reappears for Israel Potter, The Confidence-Man and even Clarel, but only becomes "a vital part in the whole creative achievement" again in the juxtaposition of accents and of topics in Billy Budd.[148]

Newton Arvin points out that only superficially the books after Mardi seem as if Melville's writing went back to the vein of his first two books. In reality, his movement "was not a retrograde but a spiral one", and while Redburn and White Jacket may lack the spontaneous, youthful charm of his first two books, they are "denser in substance, richer in feeling, tauter, more complex, more connotative in texture and imagery".[150] The rhythm of the prose in Omoo "achieves little more than easiness; the language is almost neutral and without idiosyncrasy", while Redburn shows an improved ability in narrative, which fuses imagery and emotion.[151]

Melville's early works were "increasingly baroque"[152] in style, and with Moby-Dick Melville's vocabulary had grown superabundant. Walter Bezanson calls it an "immensely varied style".[152] According to critic Warner Berthoff, three characteristic uses of language can be recognized. First, the exaggerated repetition of words, as in the series "pitiable", "pity", "pitied", and "piteous" (Ch. 81, "The Pequod Meets the Virgin"). A second typical device is the use of unusual adjective-noun combinations, as in "concentrating brow" and "immaculate manliness" (Ch. 26, "Knights and Squires").[153] A third characteristic is the presence of a participial modifier to emphasize and to reinforce the already established expectations of the reader, as the words "preluding" and "foreshadowing" ("so still and subdued and yet somehow preluding was all the scene ..." "In this foreshadowing interval ...").[154]

I tell you it will be more tolerable for the Feegee that salted down a lean missionary in his cellar against a coming famine; it will be more tolerable for that provident Feegee, I say, in the day of judgment, than for thee, civilized and enlightened gourmand, who nailest geese to the ground and feastest on their bloated livers in thy paté-de-foie-gras.

— Melville paraphrases the Bible in "The Whale as a Dish", Moby-Dick Chapter 65

After his use of hyphenated compounds in Pierre, Melville's writing gives Berthoff the impression of becoming less exploratory and less provocative in his choices of words and phrases. Instead of providing a lead "into possible meanings and openings-out of the material in hand,"[155] the vocabulary now served "to crystallize governing impressions,"[155] the diction no longer attracted attention to itself, except as an effort at exact definition. The language, Berthoff continues, reflects a "controlling intelligence, of right judgment and completed understanding".[155] The sense of free inquiry and exploration that infused his earlier writing and accounted for its "rare force and expansiveness,"[156] tended to give way to "static enumeration".[157] By comparison to the verbal music and kinetic energy of Moby-Dick, Melville's subsequent writings seem "relatively muted, even withheld" in his later works.[157]

Melville's paragraphing in his best work Berthoff considers to be the virtuous result of "compactness of form and free assembling of unanticipated further data", such as when the mysterious sperm whale is compared with Exodus's invisibility of God's face in the final paragraph of Chapter 86 ("The Tail").[158] Over time Melville's paragraphs became shorter as his sentences grew longer, until he arrived at the "one-sentence paragraphing characteristic of his later prose".[159] Berthoff points to the opening chapter of The Confidence-Man for an example, as it counts fifteen paragraphs, seven of which consist of only one elaborate sentence, and four that have only two sentences. The use of similar technique in Billy Budd contributes in large part, Berthoff says, to its "remarkable narrative economy".[160]

Verily I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment, than for that city.

—Matthew 10:15

Style and literary allusion edit

In Nathalia Wright's view, Melville's sentences generally have a looseness of structure, easy to use for devices as catalogue and allusion, parallel and refrain, proverb and allegory. The length of his clauses may vary greatly, but the narrative style of writing in Pierre and The Confidence-Man is there to convey feeling, not thought. Unlike Henry James, who was an innovator of sentence ordering to render the subtlest nuances in thought, Melville made few such innovations. His domain is the mainstream of English prose, with its rhythm and simplicity influenced by the King James Bible.[161] Another important characteristic of Melville's writing style is in its echoes and overtones.[162] Melville's imitation of certain distinct styles is responsible for this. His three most important sources, in order, are the Bible, Shakespeare, and Milton.[163] Direct quotation from any of the sources is slight; only one sixth of his Biblical allusions can be qualified as such because Melville adapts Biblical usage to his own narrated textual requirements of clarifying his plot.[164]

The Biblical elements in Melville's style can be divided into three categories.[165] In the first, allusion is more within the narrative rather than formal quotation. Several preferred Biblical allusions appear repeatedly throughout his body of work, taking on the nature of refrains. Examples are the injunctions to be 'as wise as serpents and as harmless as doves,' 'death on a pale horse,' 'the man of sorrows', the 'many mansions of heaven;' proverbs 'as the hairs on our heads are numbered,' 'pride goes before a fall,' 'the wages of sin is death;' adverbs and pronouns as 'verily, whoso, forasmuch as; phrases as come to pass, children's children, the fat of the land, vanity of vanities, outer darkness, the apple of his eye, Ancient of Days, the rose of Sharon.'[166] Second, there are paraphrases of individual and combined verses. Redburn's "Thou shalt not lay stripes upon these Roman citizens" makes use of language of the Ten Commandments in Ex.20 and Pierre's inquiry of Lucy: "Loveth she me with the love past all understanding?" combines John 21:15–17, and Philippians 4:7.[e] Third, certain Hebraisms are used, such as a succession of genitives ("all the waves of the billows of the seas of the boisterous mob"), the cognate accusative ("I dreamed a dream", "Liverpool was created with the Creation"), and the parallel ("Closer home does it go than a rammer; and fighting with steel is a play without ever an interlude"). This passage from Redburn shows how these ways of alluding interlock and result in a texture of Biblical language though there is very little direct quotation:

The other world beyond this, which was longed for by the devout before Columbus' time, was found in the New; and the deep-sea land, that first struck these soundings, brought up the soil of Earth's Paradise. Not a Paradise then, or now; but to be made so at God's good pleasure,[f] and in the fulness and mellowness of time.[g] The seed is sown, and the harvest must come; and our children's children,[h] on the world's jubilee morning, shall all go with their sickles to the reaping. Then shall the curse of Babel be revoked,[i] a new Pentecost come, and the language they shall speak shall be the language of Britain.[j] Frenchmen, and Danes, and Scots; and the dwellers on the shores of the Mediterranean,[k] and in the regions round about;[l] Italians, and Indians, and Moors; there shall appear unto them cloven tongues as of fire.[m]

— The American melting pot described in Redburn's Biblical language, with Nathalia Wright's glosses.[167]

In addition to this, Melville successfully imitates three Biblical strains: the apocalyptic, the prophetic and the sermonic narrative tone of writing. Melville sustains the apocalyptic tone of anxiety and foreboding for a whole chapter of Mardi. The prophetic strain is expressed by Melville in Moby-Dick, most notably in Father Mapple's sermon. The tradition of the Psalms is imitated at length by Melville in The Confidence-Man.[168]

In 1849, Melville acquired an edition of Shakespeare's works printed in a font large enough for his tired eyes,[169][170] which led to a deeper study of Shakespeare that greatly influenced the style of his next book, Moby-Dick (1851). The critic F. O. Matthiessen found that the language of Shakespeare far surpasses other influences upon the book, in that it inspired Melville to discover his own full strength.[171] On almost every page, debts to Shakespeare can be discovered. The "mere sounds, full of Leviathanism, but signifying nothing" at the end of "Cetology" (Ch. 32) echo the famous phrase in Macbeth: "Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury/ Signifying nothing".[171] Ahab's first extended speech to the crew, in the "Quarter-Deck" (Ch. 36) is practically blank verse and so is Ahab's soliloquy at the beginning of "Sunset" (Ch. 37):'I leave a white and turbid wake;/ Pale waters, paler cheeks, where'er I sail./ The envious billows sidelong swell to whelm/ My track; let them; but first I pass.'[172] Through Shakespeare, Melville infused Moby-Dick with a power of expression he had not previously expressed.[173] Reading Shakespeare had been "a catalytic agent"[174] for Melville, one that transformed his writing from merely reporting to "the expression of profound natural forces".[174] The extent to which Melville assimilated Shakespeare is evident in the description of Ahab, Matthiessen continues, which ends in language that seems Shakespearean yet is no imitation: 'Oh, Ahab! what shall be grand in thee, it must needs be plucked from the skies and dived for in the deep, and featured in the unbodied air!' The imaginative richness of the final phrase seems particularly Shakespearean, "but its two key words appear only once each in the plays...and to neither of these usages is Melville indebted for his fresh combination".[175] Melville's diction depended upon no source, and his prose is not based on anybody else's verse but on an awareness of "speech rhythm".[176]

Melville's mastering of Shakespeare, Matthiessen finds, supplied him with verbal resources that enabled him to create dramatic language through three essential techniques. First, the use of verbs of action creates a sense of movement and meaning. The effective tension caused by the contrast of "thou launchest navies of full-freighted worlds" and "there's that in here that still remains indifferent" in "The Candles" (Ch. 119) makes the last clause lead to a "compulsion to strike the breast," which suggests "how thoroughly the drama has come to inhere in the words;"[177] Second, Melville took advantage of the Shakespearean energy of verbal compounds, as in "full-freighted". Third, Melville employed the device of making one part of speech act as another, for example, 'earthquake' as an adjective, or turning an adjective into a noun, as in "placeless".[178]

Melville's style, in Nathalia Wright's analysis, seamlessly flows over into theme, because all these borrowings have an artistic purpose, which is to suggest an appearance "larger and more significant than life" for characters and themes that are in fact unremarkable.[179] The allusions suggest that beyond the world of appearances another world exists, one that influences this world, and where ultimate truth can be found. Moreover, the ancient background thus suggested for Melville's narratives – ancient allusions being next in number to the Biblical ones – invests them with a sense of timelessness.[179]

Critical reception edit

Melville's financial success as a writer during his lifetime was not great, relative to his posthumous success; over his entire lifetime Melville's writings earned him just over $10,000 (equivalent to $274,813 in 2022).[180] Melville's travelogues based on voyages to the South Seas and stories based on his time in the merchant marine and navy led to some initial success, but his popularity declined dramatically afterwards. By 1876, all of his books were out of print.[181] He was viewed as a minor figure in American literature in the later years of his life and during the years immediately after his death.[182]

Poetry edit

Melville did not publish poetry until his late thirties, with Battle-Pieces (1866), and did not receive recognition as a poet until well into the 20th century. But he wrote predominantly poetry for about 25 years, twice as long as his prose career. The three novels of the 1850s that Melville worked on most seriously to present his philosophical explorations, Moby-Dick, Pierre, and The Confidence Man, seem to make the step to philosophical poetry a natural one rather than simply a consequence of commercial failure. Since he turned to poetry as a meditative practice, his poetic style, even more than most Victorian poets, was not marked by linguistic play or melodic considerations.[183]

Early critics were not sympathetic. Henry Chapin, in his introduction to John Marr and Other Poems (1922), one of the earlier selections of Melville's poetry, said Melville's verse is "of an amateurish and uneven quality" but in it "that loveable freshness of personality, which his philosophical dejection never quenched, is everywhere in evidence," in "the voice of a true poet".[184] The poet and novelist Robert Penn Warren became a champion of Melville as a great American poet and issued a selection of Melville's poetry in 1971 prefaced by an admiring critical essay.[185] In the 1990s critic Lawrence Buell argued that Melville "is justly said to be nineteenth-century America's leading poet after Whitman and Dickinson"[183] and Helen Vendler remarked of Clarel: "What it cost Melville to write this poem makes us pause, reading it. Alone, it is enough to win him, as a poet, what he called 'the belated funeral flower of fame'."[186] Some critics now place him as the first modernist poet in the United States while others assert that his work more strongly suggests what today would be a postmodern view.[187]

Melville revival and Melville studies edit

 
Melville in 1860
 
Melville in 1868

The centennial of Melville's birth in 1919 coincided with a renewed interest in his writings known as the "Melville revival", during which his work experienced a significant critical reassessment. The renewed appreciation began in 1917 with Carl Van Doren's article on Melville in a standard history of American literature. Van Doren also encouraged Raymond Weaver, who wrote the author's first full-length biography, Herman Melville: Mariner and Mystic (1921). Discovering the unfinished manuscript of Billy Budd, among papers shown to him by Melville's granddaughter, Weaver edited it and published it in a new collected edition of Melville's works. Other works that helped fan the flames for Melville were Carl Van Doren's The American Novel (1921), D. H. Lawrence's Studies in Classic American Literature (1923), Carl Van Vechten's essay in The Double Dealer (1922), and Lewis Mumford's biography Herman Melville (1929).[188]

Starting in the mid-1930s, the Yale University scholar Stanley Thomas Williams supervised more than a dozen dissertations on Melville that were eventually published as books. Where the first wave of Melville scholars focused on psychology, Williams' students were prominent in establishing Melville Studies as an academic field concerned with texts and manuscripts, tracing Melville's influences and borrowings (even plagiarism), and exploring archives and local publications.[189] To provide historical evidence, the independent scholar Jay Leyda searched libraries, family papers, local archives and newspapers across New England and New York to document Melville's life day by day for his two-volume The Melville Log (1951).[190][191] Sparked by Leyda and post-war scholars, the second phase of the Melville Revival emphasized research into the biography of Melville rather than accepting Melville's early books as reliable accounts.[190]

In 1945, The Melville Society was founded, a non-profit organisation dedicated to the study of Melville's life and works. Between 1969 and 2003, the society published 125 issues of Melville Society Extracts, which are now freely available on the society's website. Since 1999 it has published Leviathan: A Journal of Melville Studies, currently three issues a year, published by Johns Hopkins University Press.[192]

The postwar scholars tended to think that Weaver, Harvard psychologist Henry Murray, and Mumford favored Freudian interpretations that read Melville's fiction as autobiography; exaggerated his suffering in the family; and inferred a homosexual attachment to Hawthorne. They saw a different arc to Melville's writing career. The first biographers saw a tragic withdrawal after the cold critical reception for his prose works and largely dismissed his poetry. A new view emerged of Melville's turn to poetry as a conscious choice that placed him among the most important American poets.[193] Other post-war studies, however, continued the broad imaginative and interpretive style; Charles Olson's Call Me Ishmael (1947) presented Ahab as a Shakespearean tragic hero, and Newton Arvin's critical biography, Herman Melville (1950), won the National Book Award for non-fiction in 1951.[193][194]

In the 1960s, Harrison Hayford organized an alliance between Northwestern University Press and the Newberry Library, with backing from the Modern Language Association and funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities, to edit and publish reliable critical texts of Melville's complete works, including unpublished poems, journals, and correspondence. The first volume of the Northwestern-Newberry Edition of The Writings of Herman Melville was published in 1968 and the last in the fall of 2017. The aim of the editors was to present a text "as close as possible to the author's intention as surviving evidence permits". The volumes have extensive appendices, including textual variants from each of the editions published in Melville's lifetime, an historical note on the publishing history and critical reception, and related documents. Because the texts were prepared with financial support from the United States Department of Education, no royalties are charged, and they have been widely reprinted.[195] Hershel Parker published his two-volume Herman Melville: A Biography, in 1996 and 2002, based on extensive original research and his involvement as editor of the Northwestern-Newberry Melville edition.[196][197]

Gender studies edit

Melville only gradually attracted the pioneering scholars of women's studies, gender, and sexuality in the 1970s and 1980s. Though some held that he hardly portrayed women at all, others saw the few women in his works as traditional figures representing, or even attacking, nineteenth-century gentility, sentimentality, and conventional morality. Melville's preference for sea-going tales that involved almost only males has been of interest to scholars in men's studies and especially gay and queer studies.[198] Melville was remarkably open in his exploration of sexuality of all sorts. Alvin Sandberg said that the short story "The Paradise of Bachelors and the Tartarus of Maids" offers "an exploration of impotency, a portrayal of a man retreating to an all-male childhood to avoid confrontation with sexual manhood," from which the narrator engages in "congenial" digressions in heterogeneity.[199] In line with this view, Warren Rosenberg argues the homosocial "Paradise of Bachelors" is "blind to what is real and painful in the world, and thus are [sic] superficial and sterile".[200]

David Harley Serlin observes in the second half of Melville's diptych, "The Tartarus of Maids", the narrator gives voice to the oppressed women he observes:

As other scholars have noted, the "slave" image here has two clear connotations. One describes the exploitation of the women's physical labor, and the other describes the exploitation of the women's reproductive organs. Of course, as models of women's oppression, the two are clearly intertwined.

In the end Serlin says that the narrator is never fully able to come to terms with the contrasting masculine and feminine modalities.[201]

Issues of sexuality have been observed in other works as well. Rosenberg notes Taji, in Mardi, and the protagonist in Pierre "think they are saving young 'maidens in distress' (Yillah and Isabel) out of the purest of reasons but both are also conscious of a lurking sexual motive".[200] When Taji kills the old priest holding Yillah captive, he says,

[R]emorse smote me hard; and like lightning I asked myself whether the death deed I had done was sprung of virtuous motive, the rescuing of a captive from thrall, or whether beneath the pretense I had engaged in this fatal affray for some other selfish purpose, the companionship of a beautiful maid.[202]

In Pierre, the motive of the protagonist's sacrifice for Isabel is admitted: "womanly beauty and not womanly ugliness invited him to champion the right".[203] Rosenberg argues,

This awareness of a double motive haunts both books and ultimately destroys their protagonists who would not fully acknowledge the dark underside of their idealism. The epistemological quest and the transcendental quest for love and belief are consequently sullied by the erotic.[200]

Rosenberg says that Melville fully explores the theme of sexuality in his major epic poem, Clarel. When the narrator is separated from Ruth, with whom he has fallen in love, he is free to explore other sexual (and religious) possibilities before deciding at the end of the poem to participate in the ritualistic order represented by marriage. In the course of the poem, "he considers every form of sexual orientation – celibacy, homosexuality, hedonism, and heterosexuality – raising the same kinds of questions as when he considers Islam or Democracy".[200]

Some passages and sections of Melville's works demonstrate his willingness to address all forms of sexuality, including the homoerotic, in his works. Commonly noted examples from Moby-Dick are the "marriage bed" episode involving Ishmael and Queequeg, who sleep with their arms wrapped around each other (Chapter 4, "The Counterpane" and Chapter 10, "A Bosom Friend"); and the "Squeeze of the Hand" (Chapter 94) describing the camaraderie of sailors' extracting spermaceti from a dead whale.[200] Clarel recognizes the homoerotic potential of its eponymous protagonist, including, in a fairly explicit passage, an erection provoked by the figure of a male interlocutor, Lyonesse.[200] In addition, Rosenberg notes that Billy Budd's physical attractiveness is described in quasi-feminine terms: "As the Handsome Sailor, Billy Budd's position aboard the seventy-four was something analogous to that of a rustic beauty transplanted from the provinces and brought into competition with the highborn dames of the court".[200]

Law and literature edit

Melville has been useful in the field of law and literature. The chapter "Fast-Fish and Loose-Fish" in Moby-Dick, for instance, challenges concepts of property rights.[204] In Billy Budd, a handsome and popular young sailor strikes and inadvertently kills the ship's master-at-arms.[205] The ship's captain immediately convenes a court-martial at which he urges the court to convict and sentence Billy to death. Critics debate Melville's intention. Some see the contradiction between unbending legalism and malleable moral principles.[206][207] Other critics have argued that the captain manipulated and misrepresented the applicable laws.[208]

Themes edit

Melville's work often touched on themes of communicative expression and the pursuit of the absolute among illusions. As early as 1839, in the juvenile sketch "Fragments from a Writing Desk", Melville explores a problem that would reappear in the short stories "Bartleby" (1853) and "Benito Cereno" (1855): the impossibility to find common ground for mutual communication. The sketch centers on the protagonist and a mute lady, leading scholar Sealts to observe: "Melville's deep concern with expression and communication evidently began early in his career".[209]

According to scholar Nathalia Wright, Melville's characters are all preoccupied by the same intense, superhuman and eternal quest for "the absolute amidst its relative manifestations,"[210] an enterprise central to the Melville canon: "All Melville's plots describe this pursuit, and all his themes represent the delicate and shifting relationship between its truth and its illusion".[210] It is not clear, however, what the moral and metaphysical implications of this quest are, because Melville did not distinguish between these two aspects.[210] Throughout his life Melville struggled with and gave shape to the same set of epistemological doubts and the metaphysical issues these doubts engendered. An obsession for the limits of knowledge led to the question of God's existence and nature, the indifference of the universe, and the problem of evil.[78]

Legacy and honors edit

 
A plaque commemorating Melville at 104 East 26th Street in Manhattan, where Melville lived from 1863 to 1891

In 1854, three years following publication of Moby-Dick, Melville, New York, on Long Island, was named in Melville's honor..[211][212]

In 1982, the Library of America (LOA) began publishing works in honor of Melville's central place in American culture; the first volume contained Typee, Omoo, and Mardi. Subsequent volumes included Melville's Redburn, White-Jacket, and Moby-Dick, published in 1983, and Pierre, Israel Potter, The Confidence-Man, Tales, and Billy Budd, published in 1985. LOA did not publish his complete poetry until 2019.

On August 1, 1984, as part of the Literary Arts Series of stamps, the U.S. Postal Service issued a 20-cent commemorative stamp to honor Melville. The setting for the first day of issue was the Whaling Museum in New Bedford, Massachusetts.[213]

In 1985, the New York City Herman Melville Society gathered at 104 East 26th Street to dedicate the intersection of Park Avenue South and 26th Street as Herman Melville Square, where Melville lived from 1863 to 1891 and where he authored Billy Budd and other works.[214] Melville's house in Lansingburgh, New York, houses the Lansingburgh Historical Society.

In 2010, a species of extinct sperm whale, Livyatan melvillei, was named in honor of Melville. The paleontologists who discovered the fossil were fans of Moby-Dick, and dedicated their discovery to the author.[215][216]

Agha Shahid Ali, a Kashmiri-American poet ends his famous English ghazal "Tonight" with the line "call me Ishmael tonight".[217]

Selected bibliography edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ After the death of Melville's father in 1832 his mother added an "e" to the family surname—seemingly at the behest of her son Gansevoort. (Parker 1996, p. 67.)
  2. ^ This would have been the Statenvertaling of 1637, the Dutch equivalent of the King James Bible.
  3. ^ On the surviving list of Acushnet crewmembers, Melville's name can be seen sixth counting from below: Original list of Acushnet crewmembers
  4. ^ This number is either what she was carrying or the total number since the voyage began (Parker (1996), 200.
  5. ^ And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts...
  6. ^ Germanism, borrowed from the promise in Luke that the kingdom will be given to the chosen people.
  7. ^ Genitive of attribute
  8. ^ Cognate construction and familiar Biblical idiom.
  9. ^ Inversion of order to resemble the speeches of the King of the account of the Last Judgment in Matthew 25:34: "Then shall the king say unto them on his right hand ..."
  10. ^ Paraphrase of familiar Biblical idiom and cognate construction
  11. ^ Allusion to Acts 2:9: "Parthians, and Medes, and Elamites, and the dwellers in Mesopotamia, and in ..."
  12. ^ Use of compound prepositions
  13. ^ Acts 2:3: "And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them".

Citations edit

  1. ^ During the week of his death, the New York Times wrote: "There has died and been buried in this city...a man who is so little known, even by name, to the generation now in the vigor of life that only one newspaper contained an obituary account of him, and this was but of three or four lines.", Poets.org, About Herman Melville, https://poets.org/poet/herman-melville, retrieved 14 July 2023
  2. ^ Parker (1996), p. 23
  3. ^ Genealogical chart in Parker (2002), pp. 926–929
  4. ^ a b Robertson-Lorant (1996), pp. 14, 28–29
  5. ^ Parker (1996), p. 12
  6. ^ Delbanco (2005), p. 19
  7. ^ Delbanco (2005), p. 17
  8. ^ Parker (1996), p. 7
  9. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 6
  10. ^ Parker (1996), p. 24
  11. ^ Parker (1996), p. 22
  12. ^ a b Parker (1996), p. 39
  13. ^ a b Delbanco (2005), p. 23
  14. ^ Parker (1996), p. 52
  15. ^ Arvin (1950), p. 16
  16. ^ Arvin (1950), pp. 16 and 18
  17. ^ Parker (1996), p. 27
  18. ^ a b c Sealts (1988), p. 17
  19. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 35 and 38
  20. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 38–39
  21. ^ Cited in Parker (1996), p. 48
  22. ^ Sullivan (1972), p. 117
  23. ^ Titus (1980), pp. 4–10
  24. ^ Bryant (2021), p. 92.
  25. ^ Sealts (1988), p. 18
  26. ^ Parker (1996), p. 56
  27. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 56–57
  28. ^ Delbanco (2005), p. 24
  29. ^ Cited in Parker (1996), p. 57
  30. ^ a b Parker (1996), p. 58
  31. ^ Parker (1996), p. 63
  32. ^ Arvin (1950), pp. 31–35
  33. ^ a b Parker (1996), p. 68
  34. ^ Arvin (1950), p. 21
  35. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 76–78
  36. ^ Parker (1996), p. 82
  37. ^ a b Parker (1996), p. 95
  38. ^ Parker (2002), pp. 674–675
  39. ^ Parker (1996), p. 98
  40. ^ Parker (1996), p. 107
  41. ^ Parker (1996), p. 97
  42. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 108–109
  43. ^ Parker (1996), p. 110
  44. ^ Parker (1996), p. 117
  45. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 112 and 124
  46. ^ Parker (1996), p. 126
  47. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 126, 128–129
  48. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 136–137
  49. ^ a b Parker (1996), p. 138
  50. ^ a b Sealts (1988), p. 16
  51. ^ Delbanco (2005), p. 27
  52. ^ Parker (1996), p. 143
  53. ^ a b c d e f Olsen-Smith (2015), p. xliv
  54. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 176–178
  55. ^ Parker (1996), p. 181
  56. ^ a b c Parker (1996), p. 185
  57. ^ Parker (1996), p. 184
  58. ^ Parker (1996), p. 187
  59. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 190–191
  60. ^ Parker (1996), p. 193
  61. ^ Parker (1996), p. 194
  62. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 196–199
  63. ^ Quoted in Parker (1996), p. 196
  64. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 200–201
  65. ^ Parker (1996), p. 201
  66. ^ Parker (1996), p. 202
  67. ^ Parker (1996), p. 204
  68. ^ Parker (1996), p. 205
  69. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 210–211
  70. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Levine (2014), p. xvi
  71. ^ Bercaw Edwards (2009), p. 41
  72. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 209
  73. ^ a b Milder (1988), p. 430
  74. ^ Parker (1996), p. 385
  75. ^ Reprinted in Branch (1974), pp. 67–68
  76. ^ Herman Melville to Nathaniel Hawthorne, May 1851, in Horth (1993), p. 193
  77. ^ Olsen-Smith (2015), p. xiii
  78. ^ a b c Milder (1988), p. 431
  79. ^ Delbanco (2005), p. 66
  80. ^ Kennedy & Kennedy (1978a), 6[clarification needed]
  81. ^ a b Arvin (1950), p. 126
  82. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 24
  83. ^ Quoted in Kennedy & Kennedy (1978a), 8[clarification needed]
  84. ^ Kennedy & Kennedy (1978), 7[clarification needed]
  85. ^ Kennedy & Kennedy (1978b), 6[clarification needed]
  86. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 164
  87. ^ Elizabeth Melville's italics. Quoted in Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 165
  88. ^ Parker (1996), p. 614
  89. ^ Arvin (1950), p. [page needed]
  90. ^ Milder (1988), p. 432
  91. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 208
  92. ^ Herman Melville in Horth (1993), p. 162
  93. ^ Herman Melville in Horth (1993), p. 163
  94. ^ Gravett, Sharon (2004). "Melville, Herman". In Cumming, Mark (ed.). The Carlyle Encyclopedia. Madison and Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. pp. 316–317. ISBN 978-0-8386-3792-0.
  95. ^ Delbanco (2005), p. 124
  96. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 244
  97. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 246
  98. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), pp. 247–252
  99. ^ Walter E. Bezanson, "Moby-Dick: Document, Drama, Dream," in John Bryant (ed.), A Companion to Melville Studies, Greenwood Press, 1986, 176–180.
  100. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 251
  101. ^ Quoted in Branch (1974), p. 25
  102. ^ Delbanco (2005), p. 125
  103. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 263
  104. ^ Quoted in Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 264
  105. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), pp. 266–267
  106. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 267
  107. ^ Bezanson (1986), p. 181
  108. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 870–871
  109. ^ Cited in Parker (1988), pp. 692–693
  110. ^ Sealts (1987), pp. 482–483
  111. ^ Parker (2002), pp. 106–107
  112. ^ Parker (1996), pp. 131–132
  113. ^ a b Parker (2002), p. 155
  114. ^ Sealts (1987), p. 458
  115. ^ Parker (2002), p. 243
  116. ^ a b Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 372
  117. ^ Quoted in Robertson-Lorant (1996), p. 372
  118. ^ a b Levine (2014), p. xvii
  119. ^ Hawthorne, entry for November 20, 1856, in The English Notebooks, (1853–1858)
  120. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), pp. 375–400
  121. ^ Perry, Yaron (2004). "John Steinbeck's Roots in Nineteenth-Century Palestine". Steinbeck Studies. 15 (1): 46–72. doi:10.1353/stn.2004.0018. ISSN 1551-6903. S2CID 144101837.
  122. ^ Branch (1974), pp. 369ff
  123. ^ Kennedy (1977)
  124. ^ Hutchins (2014)
  125. ^ Levine (2014), pp. xvii–xviii
  126. ^ Tick (1986)
  127. ^ a b c Levine (2014), p. xviii
  128. ^ Milder (1988), p. 442
  129. ^ Parker (2002), pp. 624 and 608
  130. ^ Leyda (1969), p. 730: "quietly declining offers of money for special services, quietly returning money which has been thrust into his pockets"
  131. ^ Olsen-Smith (2015), p. xviii
  132. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), pp. 534
  133. ^ Shneidman (1976)
  134. ^ Robertson-Lorant (1996), pp. 505–507
  135. ^ a b Milder (1988), p. 443
  136. ^ Delbanco (2005), p. 287
  137. ^ a b Wallace (2005), p. xii
  138. ^ Parker (2002), p. 888
  139. ^ Delbanco (2005), p. 319
  140. ^ Wilson (2016), Kindle Location 32027
  141. ^ Jordan (2019)
  142. ^ Likewise, a letter to the editor in the same paper on October 6 was headed "the late Hiram Melville", but this was a typesetting error. Parker (2002), p. 921.
  143. ^ Parker (2002), p. 921
  144. ^ Parker (1990)
  145. ^ Arvin (1950), p. 77
  146. ^ Sealts (1987), p. 461
  147. ^ Berthoff (1962), p. 176
  148. ^ a b c Berthoff (1962), p. 177
  149. ^ Berthoff (1962), p. 179
  150. ^ Arvin (1950), p. 101
  151. ^ Arvin (1950), p. 102
  152. ^ a b Bezanson (1986), p. 203
  153. ^ Berthoff (1962), p. 163
  154. ^ Berthoff (1962), p. 164
  155. ^ a b c Berthoff (1962), p. 165
  156. ^ Berthoff (1962), p. 169
  157. ^ a b Berthoff (1962), p. 170
  158. ^ Berthoff (1962), p. 175
  159. ^ Berthoff (1962), p. 173
  160. ^ Berthoff (1962), pp. 173–175
  161. ^ Wright (1949), p. 168
  162. ^ Wright (1940), p. 196 n. 59
  163. ^ Bercaw (1987), p. 10
  164. ^ Wright (1949), p. 137
  165. ^ Wright (1940), pp. 196–197
  166. ^ Wright (1949), pp. 139–141
  167. ^ Wright (1949), pp. 145–146
  168. ^ Wright (1940)
  169. ^ Delbanco (2005), pp. 130–131
  170. ^ Herman Melville to Evert A. Duyckink, February 24, 1849, in Horth (1993), p. [page needed]
  171. ^ a b Matthiessen (1941), p. 424
  172. ^ Matthiessen (1941), p. 426
  173. ^ Matthiessen (1941), p. 425
  174. ^ a b Matthiessen (1941), p. 428
  175. ^ Matthiessen (1941), pp. 428–429
  176. ^ Matthiessen (1941), pp. 425ff
  177. ^ Matthiessen (1941), pp. 430–431
  178. ^ Matthiessen (1941), p. 431
  179. ^ a b Wright (1940), p. 198
  180. ^ Delbanco (2005), p. 7
  181. ^ Delbanco (2005), p. 294
  182. ^ Scharnhorst (1983)
  183. ^ a b Buell (1998), p. 135
  184. ^ Chapin (1922), Introduction
  185. ^ Herman Melville, Robert Penn Warren, ed., Selected Poems of Herman Melville (New York: Random House, 1971).
  186. ^ Vendler (1995), Introduction, p. xxv
  187. ^ Spanos (2009), p. 54
  188. ^ Marovitz (2007), pp. 517–519
  189. ^ Wright (1987)
  190. ^ a b Marovitz (2007)
  191. ^ Leyda (1969)
  192. ^ The Melville Society (2017)
  193. ^ a b Spark (2006), p. 238
  194. ^ National Book Foundation (2018)
  195. ^ Fritz (2017)
  196. ^ Parker (1996)
  197. ^ Parker (2002)
  198. ^ Person (2006), pp. 231ff
  199. ^ Sandberg (1968)
  200. ^ a b c d e f g Rosenberg (1984)
  201. ^ Serlin (1995)
  202. ^ Melville (1973), p. 132
  203. ^ Melville (1957), p. 151
  204. ^ Piety
  205. ^ Weisberg (1984), chapters 8 and 9
  206. ^ Bowen (1960), pp. 217–218
  207. ^ Page (1986), p. 406
  208. ^ Weisberg (1984), pp. 145–153
  209. ^ Sealts (1987), p. 462
  210. ^ a b c Wright (1949), p. 77
  211. ^ . Newsday. 2008. Archived from the original on March 16, 2008. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
  212. ^ "Hartford Courant article on Melville". Hartford Courant. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
  213. ^ Scott Standard Postage Catalog (2000), p. 57
  214. ^ Mitgang (1985)
  215. ^ Fang (2010)
  216. ^ Ghosh (2010)
  217. ^ Foundation, Poetry (July 25, 2023). "Tonight by Agha Shahid Ali". Poetry Foundation. Retrieved July 26, 2023.

General and cited sources edit

  • Arvin, Newton (1950). Herman Melville. New York: William Sloane Associates. LCCN 50-7584. May be borrowed at Internet Archive here
  • Bercaw, Mary (1987). Melville's Sources. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 0-8101-0734-1. OCLC 932571921.
  • Bercaw Edwards, Mary (2009). "Questioning Typee". Leviathan. 11 (2): 24–42. doi:10.1111/j.1750-1849.2009.01340.x. ISSN 1525-6995.
  • Berthoff, Warner (1972) [1962]. The Example of Melville. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 9780393005950. OCLC 610731769.
  • Bezanson, Walter (1986). "Moby-Dick: Document, Drama, Dream". In Bryant, John (ed.). A Companion to Melville Studies. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-23874-1. OCLC 473782787.
  • Branch, Watson, ed. (1974). Melville: The Critical Heritage. London and Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul. ISBN 9780710077745. OCLC 755172141.
  • Bowen, Merlin (1960). The Long Encounter: Self and Experience in the Writings of Herman Melville. Phoenix books. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Buell, Lawrence (1998). . In Levine, Robert (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Melville. Cambridge University Press. Archived from the original on May 12, 2016.
  • Chapin, Henry (1922). Introduction. John Marr & Other Poems. By Melville, Herman. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  • Delbanco, Andrew (2005). Melville, His World and Work. New York: Knopf. ISBN 978-0-375-40314-9. OCLC 845847813.
  • Fang, Janet (June 30, 2010). "Call me Leviathan melvillei". Nature. doi:10.1038/news.2010.322. from the original on July 3, 2010. Retrieved June 30, 2010.
  • Fritz, Meaghan (November 22, 2017). "'The Coiled Fish of the Sea': A Brief History of the Northwestern-Newberry Edition of the Writings of Herman Melville". Incidental Noyes. Northwestern University Press. from the original on March 31, 2019. Retrieved March 30, 2019.
  • Ghosh, Pallah (June 30, 2010). "'Sea monster' whale fossil unearthed". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved June 30, 2010.
  • Hardwick, Elizabeth (2000). Herman Melville. Penguin. p. 65.
  • Horth, Lynn, ed. (1993). Correspondence. The Writings of Herman Melville. Vol. Fourteen. Evanston and Chicago: Northwestern University Press and The Newberry Library. ISBN 0-8101-0995-6.
  • Hutchins, Zach (2014). "Herman Melville's Fejee Mermaid, or a Confidence Man at the Lycuem". ESQ. 60 (1): 75–109. doi:10.1353/esq.2014.0004. S2CID 162189302.
  • Jordan, Tina (April 1, 2019). "'Abnormal, as Most Geniuses Are': Celebrating 200 Years of Herman Melville". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 2, 2022. Retrieved September 7, 2021.
  • Kennedy, Frederick James (March 1977). "Herman Melville's Lecture in Montreal". The New England Quarterly. 50 (1): 125–137. doi:10.2307/364707. JSTOR 364707.
  • Kennedy, Joyce Deveau; Kennedy, Frederick James (February 1978). "Elizabeth and Herman" (PDF). Melville Society Extracts (33): 4–12.[clarification needed]
  • Kennedy, Joyce Deveau; Kennedy, Frederick James (May 1978). "Elizabeth and Herman (Part II)" (PDF). Melville Society Extracts (34): 3–8.[clarification needed]
  • Levine, Robert (2014). "Chronology of Melville's Life". In Levine, Robert (ed.). The New Cambridge Companion to Herman Melville. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107470422.
  • Leyda, Jay (1969) [1951]. The Melville Log; a Documentary Life of Herman Melville, 1819–1891. New York: Gordian Press.
  • Marovitz, Sanford (2007). "The Melville Revival". In Kelley, Wyn (ed.). A Companion to Herman Melville. Blackwell. pp. 515–531. ISBN 9780470996782. OCLC 699013659.
  • Matthiessen, F. O. (1966) [1941]. American Renaissance: Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman (Tenth Printing ed.). New York, London and Toronto: Oxford University Press.
  • Melville, Herman (1973). Hillway, Tyrus (ed.). Mardi. New Haven: College and University Press. ISBN 9780805772562.
  • Melville, Herman (1957). Pierre. New York: Grove Press. OCLC 1019941646.
  • "Leviathan: A Journal of Melville Studies". melvillesociety.org. The Melville Society. from the original on November 2, 2016. Retrieved January 1, 2017.
  • Milder, Robert (1988). "Herman Melville". Columbia Literary History of the United States. Emory Elliott (General Editor). New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-05812-8.
  • Olsen-Smith, Steven (2015). ""Introduction" and "Chronology"". In Olsen-Smith, Steven (ed.). Melville in His Own Time: A Biographical Chronicle of His Life, Drawn from Recollection, Interviews, and Memoirs by Family, Friends, and Associates. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press. ISBN 978-1-60938-333-6.
  • Mitgang, Herbert (May 12, 1985). "Voyaging Far and Wide in Search of Melville". The New York Times. from the original on May 25, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2011.
  • . National Book Foundation. Archived from the original on October 28, 2018.
  • Page, William (1986). "The place of law and literature". Vanderbilt Law Review. 39 (2): 391–418.
  • Parker, Hershel (1988). "Historical Note". In Hayford, Harrison; Parker, Hershel; Tanselle, G. Thomas (eds.). Moby-Dick, or, the Whale. The writings of Herman Melville. Vol. 6. Evanston; Chicago: Northwestern University Press; Newberry Library. ISBN 0810103249.
  • Parker, Hershel (Winter 1990). "Billy Budd, Foretopman and the Dynamics of Canonization". College Literature. 1. 17 (1): 21–32. JSTOR 25111840.
  • Parker, Hershel (1996). Herman Melville: A Biography. Volume I, 1819–1851. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-5428-6.
  • Parker, Hershel (2002). Herman Melville: A Biography. Volume II, 1851–1891. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-8186-2.
  • Person, Leland S. (2006). "Gender and sexuality". In Kelley, Wyn (ed.). A Companion to Herman Melville. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781405171946.
  • Piety, Tamara R. "Something Fishy: Or Why I Make My Students Read Fast-Fish And Loose-Fish" (PDF). Vermont Law Review. 29 (33): 33, 37, 39. Retrieved December 13, 2014.
  • Robertson-Lorant, Laurie (1996). Melville: A Biography. New York: Clarkson Potter/Publishers. ISBN 978-0-517-59314-1.
  • Rosenberg, Warren (1984). "'Deeper than Sappho': Melville, poetry, and the Erotic". Modern Language Studies. 14 (1): 70–78. doi:10.2307/3194508. JSTOR 3194508.
  • Sandberg, Alvin (1968). "Erotic Patterns in 'The Paradise of Bachelors and the Tartarus of Maids'". Literature and Psychology. 18 (1): 2–8.
  • Scharnhorst, Gary (Spring 1983). "Biographical Blindspots: The Case of the Cousins Alger". Biography. 6 (2): 136–147. doi:10.1353/bio.2010.0651. JSTOR 23538983. S2CID 161222133.
  • Scott Standard Postage Catalog. Vol. 1. Sidney, Ohio: Scott Publishing Company. 2000. Scott #2094.
  • Sealts, Merton M. Jr. (1987). "Historical Note". The Piazza Tales and Other Prose Pieces 1839–1860. By Melville, Herman. Hayford, Harrison; MacDougall, Alma A.; Tanselle, G. Thomas; et al. (eds.). Evanston and Chicago: Northwestern University Press and The Newberry Library. ISBN 0810105500.
  • Sealts, Merton M. Jr. (1988). Melville's Reading (Revised and Enlarged ed.). University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 0872495159.
  • Serlin, David Harley (1995). "The Dialogue of Gender in Melville's The Paradise of Bachelors and the Tartarus of Maids". Modern Language Studies. 25 (2): 80–87. doi:10.2307/3195291. JSTOR 3195291.
  • Shneidman, E. S. (1976). "Some psychological reflections on the death of Malcolm Melville". Suicide Life Threat Behav. 6 (4): 231–242. doi:10.1111/j.1943-278X.1976.tb00881.x. PMID 799381. S2CID 33066107.
  • Spanos, William V. (2009). Herman Melville and the American Calling: The Fiction After Moby-Dick, 1851–1857. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-7563-8.
  • Spark, Clare L. (2006). Hunting Captain Ahab: Psychological Warfare and the Melville Revival. Kent, Ohio: Kent State Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0873388887.
  • Sullivan, Wilson (1972). New England Men of Letters. New York: Atheneum. ISBN 0-02-788680-8.
  • Tick, Edward (August 17, 1986). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on October 5, 2019.
  • Titus, David K. (May 1980). . Melville Society Extracts (42): 1, 4–10. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved December 3, 2013.
  • Vendler, Helen (1995). Selected Poems of Herman Melville. San Francisco: Arion Press.
  • Wallace, Robert K. (2005). Douglass & Melville: Anchored Together In Neighborly Style. New Bedford, Massachusetts: Spinner Publications, Inc. ISBN 978-0932027917.
  • Wallace, Robert K. (1992). Melville & Turner: Spheres of Love and Fright. The University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-1366-1. "Wallace explores the stylistic and aesthetic affinities of English landscape painter J. M. W. Turner (1775-1851) and American novelist Herman Melville, establishing Turner as a decisive influence on the creation of Melville's Moby-Dick". (Quotation from dust jacket)
  • Weisberg, Richard (1984). The Failure of the Word: The Lawyer as Protagonist in Modern Fiction. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300045925. OCLC 1032720496.
  • Wilson, Scott (2016). Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons (3rd (Kindle) ed.). McFarland & Company. OCLC 957437234.
  • Wright, Nathalia (May 1940). "Biblical Allusion in Melville's Prose". American Literature. 12 (2): 185–199. doi:10.2307/2920476. JSTOR 2920476.
  • Wright, Nathalia (1949). Melville's Use of the Bible. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press.
  • Wright, Nathalia (September 1987). . Melville Society Extracts (70): 1–4. Archived from the original on October 24, 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Berthold, Dennis (2012). Herman Melville. Oxford Bibliographies. Vol. Online. Oxford University Press. Extensive annotated bibliography of Melville scholarship.
  • Bryant, John (2021). Herman Melville: A Half Known Life. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley. ISBN 9781119072706. 2 vols. Volume I: Eternal Ifs: Infant, Boy, and Man (1819-1840). Volume II: Melville at Sea (1840-1846).
  • Duberstein, Larry (1998). The Handsome Sailor. Permanent Press. ISBN 978-1579620073.
  • Gale, Robert L. (1995). A Herman Melville Encyclopedia. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-29011-3.
  • Garner, Stanton (1993). The Civil War World of Herman Melville. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0602-3.
  • Johnson, Bradley A. (2011). The Characteristic Theology of Herman Melville: Aesthetics, Politics, Duplicity. Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock. ISBN 978-1-61097-341-0.
  • Lepore, Jill (July 29, 2019). "Ahab at Home: Two hundred years of Herman Melville". The New Yorker. pp. 46–51. Article about the life and works of Herman Melville on the bicentennial of his birth in 1819.
  • Levin, Harry (1980). The Power of Blackness: Hawthorne, Poe, Melville. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press. ISBN 9780821405819.
  • Pardes, Ilana (2008). Melville's Bibles. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520254541.
  • Renker, Elizabeth (1998). Strike Through the Mask: Herman Melville and the Scene of Writing. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-5875-8.
  • Talley, Sharon (2007). Student Companion to Herman Melville. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-33499-3.
  • Wallace, Robert K. (1992). Melville & Turner: Spheres of Love and Fright. The University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-1366-1. "Wallace explores the stylistic and aesthetic affinities of English landscape painter J. M. W. Turner (1775-1851) and American novelist Herman Melville, establishing Turner as a decisive influence on the creation of Melville's Moby-Dick". (Quotation from dust jacket)

External links edit

  • Works by Herman Melville in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Herman Melville at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Herman Melville at Internet Archive
  • Works by Herman Melville at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • The Melville Society
  • Melville Society Extracts, Archives 1969–2005 Online access to all 125 issues of the magazine.
  • Melville Electronic Library: a critical archive Scholarly site hosted at Hofstra University: Editions, Manuscripts, Sources, Melville's Print Collection, Adaptation, biography, Criticism.
  • Melville's Marginalia Online A digital archive of books that survive from Herman Melville's library with his annotations and markings.
  • Melvilliana:the world and writings of Herman Melville. A scholarly blog about all things Melville.
  • Arrowhead—The Home of Herman Melville
  • Obituary Notices
  • Physical description of Melville May 14, 2010, at the Wayback Machine from his 1856 passport application
  • Melville's page at Literary Journal.com: research articles on Melville's works
  • Antiquarian Booksellers' Association of America: Collecting Herman Melville
  • Guide to Herman Melville collection at L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Brigham Young University
  • The Herman Melville Collection August 1, 2020, at the Wayback Machine at the Newberry Library

herman, melville, born, melvill, august, 1819, september, 1891, american, novelist, short, story, writer, poet, american, renaissance, period, among, best, known, works, moby, dick, 1851, typee, 1846, romanticized, account, experiences, polynesia, billy, budd,. Herman Melville born Melvill a August 1 1819 September 28 1891 was an American novelist short story writer and poet of the American Renaissance period Among his best known works are Moby Dick 1851 Typee 1846 a romanticized account of his experiences in Polynesia and Billy Budd Sailor a posthumously published novella At the time of his death Melville was no longer well known to the public but the 1919 centennial of his birth was the starting point of a Melville revival 1 Moby Dick eventually would be considered one of the great American novels Herman MelvilleMelville depicted in an 1870 portrait by Joseph Oriel EatonBornHerman Melvill 1819 08 01 August 1 1819New York City U S DiedSeptember 28 1891 1891 09 28 aged 72 New York City U S Resting placeWoodlawn Cemetery in Bronx New York CityOccupationNovelist short story writer teacher sailor lecturer poet customs inspectorEducationThe Albany Academy Albany New York GenresTravelogue captivity narrative nautical fiction gothic romanticism allegory tall taleLiterary movementRomanticismSpouseElizabeth Knapp Shaw 1822 1906 m 1847 wbr Children4SignatureMelville was born in New York City the third child of a prosperous merchant whose death in 1832 left the family in dire financial straits He took to sea in 1839 as a common sailor on a merchant ship and then on the whaler Acushnet but he jumped ship in the Marquesas Islands Typee his first book and its sequel Omoo 1847 were travel adventures based on his encounters with the peoples of the islands Their success gave him the financial security to marry Elizabeth Shaw the daughter of the Boston jurist Lemuel Shaw Mardi 1849 a romance adventure and his first book not based on his own experience was not well received Redburn 1849 and White Jacket 1850 both tales based on his experience as a well born young man at sea were given respectable reviews but did not sell well enough to support his expanding family Melville s growing literary ambition showed in Moby Dick 1851 which took nearly a year and a half to write but it did not find an audience and critics scorned his psychological novel Pierre or The Ambiguities 1852 From 1853 to 1856 Melville published short fiction in magazines including Benito Cereno and Bartleby the Scrivener In 1857 he traveled to England toured the Near East and published his last work of prose The Confidence Man 1857 He moved to New York in 1863 eventually taking a position as a United States customs inspector From that point Melville focused his creative powers on poetry Battle Pieces and Aspects of the War 1866 was his poetic reflection on the moral questions of the American Civil War In 1867 his eldest child Malcolm died at home from a self inflicted gunshot Melville s metaphysical epic Clarel A Poem and Pilgrimage in the Holy Land was published in 1876 In 1886 his other son Stanwix died of apparent tuberculosis and Melville retired During his last years he privately published two volumes of poetry and left one volume unpublished The novella Billy Budd was left unfinished at his death but was published posthumously in 1924 Melville died from cardiovascular disease in 1891 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Work as a clerk 3 Intermittent work and studies 4 Work as a school teacher 5 1839 1844 Years at sea 6 1845 1850 Successful writer 7 1850 1851 Hawthorne and Moby Dick 8 1852 1857 Unsuccessful writer 9 1857 1876 Poet 10 1877 1891 Final years 11 Writing style 11 1 General narrative style 11 2 Style and literary allusion 12 Critical reception 12 1 Poetry 12 2 Melville revival and Melville studies 12 3 Gender studies 12 4 Law and literature 13 Themes 14 Legacy and honors 15 Selected bibliography 16 Explanatory notes 17 Citations 18 General and cited sources 19 Further reading 20 External linksEarly life and education edit nbsp An 1810 portrait of Melville s father Allan Melvill 1782 1832 by John Rubens Smith now housed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City In Melville s novel Pierre 1852 he fictionalized this portrait as the portrait of Pierre s father nbsp A c 1815 portrait of Melville s mother Maria Gansevoort Melville by Ezra Ames now on display at the National Gallery of ArtMelville was born in New York City on August 1 1819 2 the third of eight children to Allan Melvill 1782 1832 3 and Maria Gansevoort Melvill 1791 1872 who were of Scottish and Dutch descent His seven siblings who played important roles in his career and emotional life 4 were Gansevoort 1815 1846 Helen Maria 1817 1888 Augusta 1821 1876 Allan 1823 1872 Catherine 1825 1905 Frances Priscilla 1827 1885 and Thomas 1830 1884 who eventually became a governor of Sailors Snug Harbor Part of a well established and colorful Boston family Allan Melvill spent considerable time away from New York City travelling regularly to Europe as a commission merchant and an importer of French dry goods 4 Both of Melville s grandfathers both played significant roles in the American Revolutionary War and Melville later expressed satisfaction in his double revolutionary descent 5 Major Thomas Melvill 1751 1832 participated in the Boston Tea Party 6 and Melville s maternal grandfather General Peter Gansevoort 1749 1812 commanded the defense of Fort Stanwix in New York in 1777 7 At the turn of the 19th century Major Melvill did not send his son Allan Herman s father to college but instead sent him to France where he spent two years in Paris and learned to speak French fluently 8 In 1814 Allan who subscribed to his father s Unitarianism married Maria Gansevoort who was committed to her family s more strict and biblically oriented Dutch Reformed version of the Calvinist creed The Gansevoorts severe Protestantism ensured that Maria was well versed in the Bible in English as well as in Dutch b the language that the Gansevoorts spoke at home 9 On August 19 almost three weeks after his birth Melville was baptized at home by a minister of the South Reformed Dutch Church 10 During the 1820s Melville lived a privileged and opulent life in a household supported by three or more servants at a time 11 Every four years the family moved to more spacious and elegant quarters finally settling on Broadway in 1828 12 Allan Melvill lived beyond his means on large sums that he borrowed from his father and from his wife s widowed mother Although his wife s opinion of his financial conduct is unknown biographer Hershel Parker says that Maria thought her mother s money was infinite and that she was entitled to much of her portion while her children were young 12 How well the parents managed to hide the truth from their children is impossible to know according to biographer Andrew Delbanco 13 In 1830 the Gansevoorts ended their financial support of the Melvilles at which point Allan s lack of financial responsibility had left him in debt to both the Melvill and Gansevoort families for sum exceeding 20 000 equivalent to 550 000 in 2022 14 But Melville biographer Newton Arvin writes that the relative happiness and comfort of Melville s early childhood depended less on Allan s wealth or on his profligate spending as on the exceptionally tender and affectionate spirit in all the family relationships especially in the immediate circle 15 Arvin describes Allan as a man of real sensibility and a particularly warm and loving father while Maria was warmly maternal simple robust and affectionately devoted to her husband and her brood 16 Melville s education began when he was five In 1824 around the time the Melvills moved to a newly built house at 33 Bleecker Street in Manhattan Herman and his older brother Gansevoort attended New York Male High School 17 Two years later in 1826 the year that Herman contracted scarlet fever Allan Melvill described him as very backwards in speech amp somewhat slow in comprehension at first 18 19 but his development increased its pace and Allan was surprised that Herman proved the best Speaker in the introductory Department 18 20 In 1829 both Gansevoort and Herman transferred to Columbia Grammar and Preparatory School and Herman enrolled in the English Department on September 28 18 Herman I think is making more progress than formerly Allan wrote in May 1830 to Major Melvill and without being a bright Scholar he maintains a respectable standing and would proceed further if he could only be induced to study more being a most amiable and innocent child I cannot find it in my heart to coerce him 21 Emotionally unstable and behind on paying the rent for the house on Broadway Herman s father tried to recover by moving his family to Albany New York in 1830 and going into the fur business 22 Herman attended The Albany Academy from October 1830 to October 1831 where he took the standard preparatory course including reading and spelling penmanship arithmetic English grammar geography natural history universal Greek Roman and English history classical biography and Jewish antiquities 23 In early August 1831 Herman marched in the Albany city government procession of the year s finest scholars and was presented with a copy of The London Carcanet a collection of poems and prose inscribed to him as first best in ciphering books 24 As Melville scholar Merton Sealts observed The ubiquitous classical references in Melville s published writings suggest that his study of ancient history biography and literature during his school days left a lasting impression on both his thought and his art as did his almost encyclopedic knowledge of both the Old and the New Testaments 25 In October 1831 Melville left the Academy While the precise reason is not known definitively Parker speculates it was for financial reasons since even the tiny tuition fee seemed too much to pay 26 In December 183 Allan Melvill returned from New York City by steamboat but he had to travel the last 70 miles in an open carriage for two days and two nights in subfreezing temperatures 27 In early January he began to show signs of delirium 28 and he grew worse until his wife felt that his suffering deprived him of his intellect 29 On January 28 1832 he died two months prior to reaching his 50th birthday 30 Since Herman was no longer attending school he likely witnessed his father s medical and mental deterioration 30 Twenty years later Melville described a similar death in Pierre 31 Work as a clerk editThe death of Allan caused many major shifts in the family s material and spiritual circumstances One result was the greater influence of his mother s religious beliefs Maria sought consolation in her faith and in April was admitted as a member of the First Reformed Dutch Church Herman s saturation in orthodox Calvinism was surely the most decisive intellectual and spiritual influence of his early life 32 Two months after his father s death Gansevoort entered the cap and fur business Uncle Peter Gansevoort a director of the New York State Bank got Herman a job as clerk for 150 a year equivalent to 4 400 in 2022 33 Biographers cite a passage from Redburn 13 33 when trying to answer what Herman must have felt then I had learned to think much and bitterly before my time the narrator remarks adding I must not think of those delightful days before my father became a bankrupt and we removed from the city for when I think of those days something rises up in my throat and almost strangles me With Melville Arvin argues one has to reckon with psychology the tormented psychology of the decayed patrician 34 When Melville s paternal grandfather died on September 16 1832 Maria and her children discovered Allan somewhat unscrupulously had borrowed more than his share of his inheritance meaning Maria received only 20 equivalent to 600 in 2022 35 His paternal grandmother died almost exactly seven months later 36 Melville did his job well at the bank although he was only 14 in 1834 the bank considered him competent enough to be sent to Schenectady New York on an errand Not much else is known from this period except that he was very fond of drawing 37 The visual arts became a lifelong interest 38 Around May 1834 the Melvilles moved to another house in Albany a three story brick house That same month a fire destroyed Gansevoort s skin preparing factory which left him with personnel he could neither employ nor afford Instead he pulled Melville out of the bank to man the cap and fur store 37 Intermittent work and studies editIn 1835 while still working in the store Melville enrolled in Albany Classical School perhaps using Maria s part of the proceeds from the sale of the estate of his maternal grandmother in March 1835 39 In September of the following year Herman was back at The Albany Academy participating in the school s Latin course He also participated in debating societies in an apparent effort to make up as much as he could for his missed years of schooling During this time he read Shakespeare including Macbeth whose witch scenes gave him the chance to teasingly scare his sisters 40 By March 1837 however he again withdrew from The Albany Academy Gansevoort served as a role model and support for Melville throughout his life particularly during this time trying to cobble together an education In early 1834 Gansevoort became a member of Albany s Young Men s Association for Mutual Improvement and in January 1835 Melville joined him there 41 Gansevoort also had copies of John Todd s Index Rerum a blank register for indexing remarkable passages from books one had read for easy retrieval Among the sample entries that Gansevoort made showing his academic scrupulousness was Pequot beautiful description of the war with with a short title reference to the place in Benjamin Trumbull s A Complete History of Connecticut Volume I in 1797 and Volume II in 1818 in which the description could be found The two surviving volumes of Gansevoort s are the best evidence for Melville s reading in this period Gansevoort s entries include books Melville used for Moby Dick and Clarel including Parsees of India an excellent description of their character and religion and an account of their descent East India Sketch Book p 21 42 Other entries are on Panther the pirate s cabin and storm at sea from James Fenimore Cooper s The Red Rover 43 Work as a school teacher editThe Panic of 1837 forced Gansevoort to file for bankruptcy in April In June Maria told the younger children they needed to leave Albany for somewhere cheaper Gansevoort began studying law in New York City while Herman managed the farm before getting a teaching position at Sikes District School near Lenox Massachusetts He taught about 30 students of various ages including some his own age 44 The semester over he returned to his mother in 1838 In February he was elected president of the Philo Logos Society which Peter Gansevoort invited to move into Stanwix Hall for no rent In the Albany Microscope in March Melville published two polemical letters about issues in vogue in the debating societies Historians Leon Howard and Hershel Parker suggest the motive behind the letters was a youthful desire to have his rhetorical skills publicly recognized 45 In May the Melvilles moved to a rented house in Lansingburgh almost 12 miles north of Albany 46 Nothing is known about what Melville did or where he went for several months after he finished teaching at Sikes 47 On November 12 five days after arriving in Lansingburgh Melville paid for a term at Lansingburgh Academy to study surveying and engineering In an April 1839 letter recommending Herman for a job in the Engineer Department of the Erie Canal Peter Gansevoort says his nephew possesses the ambition to make himself useful in a business which he desires to make his profession but no job resulted 48 Just weeks after this failure Melville s first known published essay appeared Using the initials L A V Herman contributed Fragments from a Writing Desk to the weekly newspaper Democratic Press and Lansingburgh Advertiser which printed it in two installments the first on May 4 49 According to Merton Sealts his use of heavy handed allusions reveals familiarity with the work of William Shakespeare John Milton Walter Scott Richard Brinsley Sheridan Edmund Burke Samuel Taylor Coleridge Lord Byron and Thomas Moore 50 Parker calls the piece characteristic Melvillean mood stuff and considers its style excessive enough to indulge his extravagances and just enough overdone to allow him to deny that he was taking his style seriously 49 For Delbanco the style is overheated in the manner of Poe with sexually charged echoes of Byron and The Arabian Nights 51 1839 1844 Years at sea edit nbsp Richard Tobias Greene who jumped ship with Melville in the Marquesas Islands and is Toby in Typee pictured in 1846 nbsp Melville s desertion from the Acushnet in 1842On May 31 1839 Gansevoort then living in New York City wrote that he was sure Herman could get a job on a whaler or merchant vessel 52 The next day he signed aboard the merchant ship St Lawrence as a boy a green hand which cruised from New York to Liverpool 53 Redburn His First Voyage 1849 draws on his experiences in this journey at least two of the nine guide books listed in chapter 30 of the book had been part of Allan Melvill s library 50 He arrived back in New York October 1 1839 53 and resumed teaching now at Greenbush New York but left after one term because he had not been paid In the summer of 1840 he and his friend James Murdock Fly went to Galena Illinois to see if his Uncle Thomas could help them find work Unsuccessful he and his friend returned home in autumn likely by way of St Louis and up the Ohio River 54 Inspired by contemporaneous popular cultural reading including Richard Henry Dana Jr s new book Two Years Before the Mast and Jeremiah N Reynolds s account in the May 1839 issue of The Knickerbocker magazine of the hunt for a great white sperm whale named Mocha Dick Herman and Gansevoort traveled to New Bedford where Herman signed up for a whaling voyage aboard a new ship the Acushnet 55 Built in 1840 the ship measured some 104 feet in length almost 28 feet in breadth and almost 14 feet in depth She measured slightly less than 360 tons and had two decks and three masts but no quarter galleries 56 The Acushnet was owned by Melvin O Bradford and Philemon Fuller of Fairhaven Massachusetts and was berthed near their office at the foot of Center Street in that town Herman signed a contract on Christmas Day with the ship s agent as a green hand for 1 175th of whatever profits the voyage would yield On Sunday the 27th the brothers heard Reverend Enoch Mudge preach at the Seamen s Bethel on Johnnycake Hill where white marble cenotaphs on the walls memorialized local sailors who had died at sea often in battle with whales 57 When he signed the crew list the next day Herman was advanced 84 56 On January 3 1841 the Acushnet set sail 56 c Melville slept with some twenty others in the forecastle Captain Valentine Pease the mates and the skilled men slept aft 58 Whales were found near The Bahamas and in March 150 barrels of oil were sent home from Rio de Janeiro Cutting in and trying out boiling a single whale took about three days and a whale yielded approximately one barrel of oil per foot of length and per ton of weight the average whale weighed 40 to 60 tons The oil was kept on deck for a day to cool off and was then stowed down scrubbing the deck completed the labor An average voyage meant that some forty whales were killed to yield some 1600 barrels of oil 59 On April 15 the Acushnet sailed around Cape Horn and traveled to the South Pacific where the crew sighted whales without catching any She then went up the coast of Chile to the region of Selkirk Island and on May 7 near Juan Fernandez Islands she had 160 barrels On June 23 the ship anchored for the first time since Rio in Santa Harbor 60 The cruising grounds the Acushnet was sailing attracted much traffic and Captain Pease not only paused to visit other whalers but at times hunted in company with them 61 From July 23 into August the Acushnet regularly gammed with the Lima from Nantucket and Melville met William Henry Chase the son of Owen Chase who gave him a copy of his father s account of his adventures aboard the Essex 62 Ten years later Melville wrote in his other copy of the book The reading of this wondrous story upon the landless sea amp close to the very latitude of the shipwreck had a surprising effect upon me 63 On September 25 the ship reported having 600 barrels of oil to another whaler and in October 700 barrels d On October 24 the Acushnet crossed the equator to the north and six or seven days later arrived at the Galapagos Islands This short visit would be the basis for The Encantadas 64 On November 2 the Acushnet and three other American whalers were hunting together near the Galapagos Islands Melville later exaggerated that number in Sketch Fourth of The Encantadas From November 19 to 25 the ship anchored at Chatham s Isle 65 and on December 2 reached the coast of Peru and anchored at Tombez near Paita with 570 barrels of oil on board 66 On December 27 the Acushnet sighted Cape Blanco off Ecuador Point St Elena was sighted the next day and on January 6 1842 the ship approached the Galapagos Islands from the southeast From February 13 to May 7 clarification needed seven sightings of sperm whales were recorded but none were killed 67 From early May to early June the Acushnet cooperatively set about its whaling endeavors several times with the Columbus of New Bedford which also took letters from Melville s ship the two ships were in the same area just south of the Equator On June 16 the Acushnet carried 750 barrels of oil and sent home 200 on the Herald the Second 68 and on June 23 she reached the Marquesas Islands and anchored at Nuku Hiva 69 In the summer of 1842 Melville and his shipmate Richard Tobias Greene Toby jumped ship at Nuku Hiva Bay 70 Melville s first book Typee 1846 is based on his stay in or near the Taipi Valley 71 By around mid August Melville had left the island aboard the Australian whaler Lucy Ann bound for Tahiti where he took part in a mutiny and was briefly jailed in the native Calabooza Beretanee 70 In October he and crew mate John B Troy escaped Tahiti for Eimeo 53 He then spent a month as beachcomber and island rover omoo in Tahitian eventually crossing over to Moorea He drew on these experiences for Omoo the sequel to Typee In November he contracted to be a seaman on the Nantucket whaler Charles amp Henry for a six month cruise November 1842 April 1843 and was discharged at Lahaina Maui in the Hawaiian Islands in May 1843 53 70 After four months of working several jobs in Hawaii including as a clerk Melville joined the US Navy on August 20 as an ordinary seaman on the frigate USS United States 70 During the next year the homeward bound ship visited the Marquesas Islands Tahiti and Valparaiso and then from summer to fall 1844 Mazatlan Lima and Rio de Janeiro 53 before reaching Boston on October 3 70 Melville was discharged on October 14 53 This Navy experience is used in White Jacket 1850 Melville s fifth book 72 Melville s wander years created what biographer Arvin calls a settled hatred of external authority a lust for personal freedom and a growing and intensifying sense of his own exceptionalism as a person along with the resentful sense that circumstance and mankind together had already imposed their will upon him in a series of injurious ways citation needed Scholar Robert Milder believes the encounter with the wide ocean where he was seemingly abandoned by God led Melville to experience a metaphysical estrangement and influenced his social views in two ways first that he belonged to the genteel classes but sympathized with the disinherited commons he had been placed among and second that experiencing the cultures of Polynesia let him view the West from an outsider s perspective 73 1845 1850 Successful writer edit nbsp Elizabeth Lizzie Shaw Melville Melville s wife in 1885 nbsp Melville s home Arrowhead in Pittsfield MassachusettsUpon his return Melville regaled his family and friends with his adventurous tales and romantic experiences and they urged him to put them into writing Melville completed Typee his first book in the summer of 1845 while living in Troy New York His brother Gansevoort found a publisher for it in London where it was published in February 1846 by John Murray in his travel adventure series It became an overnight bestseller in England then in New York when it was published on March 17 by Wiley amp Putnam 70 In the narrative Melville likely extended the period of time he had spent on the island and also incorporated material from source books he had assembled 74 Milder calls Typee an appealing mixture of adventure anecdote ethnography and social criticism presented with a genial latitudinarianism that gave novelty to a South Sea idyll at once erotically suggestive and romantically chaste 73 An unsigned review in the Salem Advertiser written by Nathaniel Hawthorne called the book a skilfully managed narrative by an author with that freedom of view which renders him tolerant of codes of morals that may be little in accordance with our own Hawthorne continued This book is lightly but vigorously written and we are acquainted with no work that gives a freer and more effective picture of barbarian life in that unadulterated state of which there are now so few specimens remaining The gentleness of disposition that seems akin to the delicious climate is shown in contrast with the traits of savage fierceness He has that freedom of view it would be too harsh to call it laxity of principle which renders him tolerant of codes of morals that may be little in accordance with our own a spirit proper enough to a young and adventurous sailor and which makes his book the more wholesome to our staid landsmen 75 Pleased but not overwhelmed by the adulation of his new public Melville later expressed concern that he would go down to posterity as a man who lived among the cannibals 76 The writing of Typee brought Melville back into contact with his friend Greene Toby in the book who wrote confirming Melville s account in newspapers The two corresponded until 1863 and in his final years Melville traced and successfully located his old friend for a further meeting of the two 77 In March 1847 Omoo a sequel to Typee was published by Murray in London and in May by Harper in New York 70 Omoo is a slighter but more professional book according to Milder 78 Typee and Omoo gave Melville overnight renown as a writer and adventurer and he often entertained by telling stories to his admirers As the writer and editor Nathaniel Parker Willis wrote With his cigar and his Spanish eyes he talks Typee and Omoo just as you find the flow of his delightful mind on paper 79 In 1847 Melville tried unsuccessfully to find a government job in Washington 70 In June 1847 Melville and Elizabeth Lizzie Knapp Shaw were engaged after knowing each other for approximately three months Melville had first asked her father Lemuel Shaw for her hand in March but was at first turned down at the time 80 Shaw Chief Justice of Massachusetts had been a close friend of Melville s father and Shaw s marriage with Melville s aunt Nancy was prevented only by her death His warmth and financial support for the family continued after Allan s death Melville dedicated his first book Typee to him 81 Lizzie was raised by her grandmother and an Irish nurse 82 Arvin suggests that Melville s interest in Lizzie may have been stimulated by his need of Judge Shaw s paternal presence 81 They were married on August 4 1847 70 Lizzie described their marriage as very unexpected and scarcely thought of until about two months before it actually took place 83 She wanted to be married in church but they had a private wedding ceremony at home to avoid possible crowds hoping to see the celebrity 84 The couple honeymooned in the then British Province of Canada and traveled to Montreal They settled in a house on Fourth Avenue in New York City now called Park Avenue According to scholars Joyce Deveau Kennedy and Frederick James Kennedy Lizzie brought to their marriage a sense of religious obligation an intent to make a home with Melville regardless of place a willingness to please her husband by performing such tasks of drudgery as mending stockings an ability to hide her agitation and a desire to shield Melville from unpleasantness 85 The Kennedys conclude their assessment with If the ensuing years did bring regrets to Melville s life it is impossible to believe he would have regretted marrying Elizabeth In fact he must have realized that he could not have borne the weight of those years unaided that without her loyalty intelligence and affection his own wild imagination would have had no port or haven Kennedy amp Kennedy 1978b 7 clarification needed Biographer Robertson Lorant cites Lizzie s adventurous spirit and abundant energy and she suggests that her pluck and good humor might have been what attracted Melville to her and vice versa 86 An example of such good humor appears in a letter about her not yet used to being married It seems sometimes exactly as if I were here for a visit The illusion is quite dispelled however when Herman stalks into my room without even the ceremony of knocking bringing me perhaps a button to sew on or some equally romantic occupation 87 On February 16 1849 the Melvilles first child Malcolm was born 88 In March 1848 Mardi was published by Richard Bentley in London and in April by Harper in New York 70 Nathaniel Hawthorne thought it a rich book with depths here and there that compel a man to swim for his life 89 According to Milder the book began as another South Sea story but as he wrote Melville left that genre behind first in favor of a romance of the narrator Taji and the lost maiden Yillah and then to an allegorical voyage of the philosopher Babbalanja and his companions through the imaginary archipelago of Mardi 78 In October 1849 Redburn was published by Bentley in London and in November by Harper in New York 70 The bankruptcy and death of Allan Melvill and Melville s own youthful humiliations surface in this story of outward adaptation and inner impairment 90 Biographer Robertson Lorant regards the work as a deliberate attempt for popular appeal Melville modeled each episode almost systematically on every genre that was popular with some group of antebellum readers combining elements of the picaresque novel the travelogue the nautical adventure the sentimental novel the sensational French romance the gothic thriller temperance tracts urban reform literature and the English pastoral 91 His next novel White Jacket was published by Bentley in London in January 1850 and in March by Harper in New York 70 1850 1851 Hawthorne and Moby Dick edit nbsp Melville depicted in an oil painting c 1846 47 nbsp Mount Greylock in Massachusetts as seen from Melville s writing deskThe earliest surviving mention of Moby Dick is from a May 1 1850 letter in which Melville told fellow sea author Richard Henry Dana Jr I am half way in the work 92 In June he described the book to his English publisher as a romance of adventure founded upon certain wild legends in the Southern Sperm Whale Fisheries and promised it would be done by the fall 93 The original manuscript has not survived That summer Melville read Thomas Carlyle borrowing copies of Sartor Resartus 1833 34 and On Heroes Hero Worship amp the Heroic in History 1841 from the library of his friend Evert Duyckinck 94 These readings proved significant occurring as Melville radically transformed his initial plan for the novel over the next several months conceiving what Delbanco described in 2005 as the most ambitious book ever conceived by an American writer 95 From August 4 to 12 1850 the Melvilles Sarah Morewood Duyckinck Oliver Wendell Holmes and other literary figures from New York and Boston came to Pittsfield to enjoy a period of parties picnics dinners and the like Nathaniel Hawthorne and his publisher James T Fields joined the group while Hawthorne s wife stayed at home to look after the children 96 On one picnic outing organized by Duyckinck Hawthorne and Melville sought shelter from the rain together and had a deep private conversation Melville had been given a copy of Hawthorne s short story collection Mosses from an Old Manse though he had not yet read it 97 Melville then avidly read it and wrote a review Hawthorne and His Mosses which appeared in two installments on August 17 and 24 in The Literary World Melville wrote that these stories revealed a dark side to Hawthorne shrouded in blackness ten times black 98 He repeatedly compared Hawthorne to Shakespeare and urged that men not very much inferior to Shakespeare are this day being born on the banks of the Ohio The critic Walter Bezanson finds the essay so deeply related to Melville s imaginative and intellectual world while writing Moby Dick that it could be regarded as a virtual preface and should be everybody s prime piece of contextual reading 99 Later that summer Duyckinck sent Hawthorne copies of Melville s three most recent books 100 Hawthorne read them as he wrote to Duyckinck on August 29 that Melville in Redburn and White Jacket put the reality more unflinchingly before his reader than any writer and he thought Mardi was a rich book with depths here and there that compel a man to swim for his life But he cautioned It is so good that one scarcely pardons the writer for not having brooded long over it so as to make it a great deal better 101 In September 1850 Melville borrowed three thousand dollars from his father in law Lemuel Shaw to buy a 160 acre farm in Pittsfield Massachusetts Melville called his new home Arrowhead because of the arrowheads that were dug up around the property during planting season 102 That winter Melville paid Hawthorne an unexpected visit only to discover he was working and not in the mood for company Hawthorne s wife Sophia gave him copies of Twice Told Tales and for Malcolm The Grandfather s Chair 103 Melville invited them to visit Arrowhead soon hoping to discuss the Universe with a bottle of brandy amp cigars with Hawthorne but Hawthorne would not stop working on his new book for more than one day and they did not come 104 After a second visit from Melville Hawthorne surprised him by arriving at Arrowhead with his daughter Una According to Robertson Lorant The handsome Hawthorne made quite an impression on the Melville women especially Augusta who was a great fan of his books They spent the day mostly smoking and talking metaphysics 105 Robertson Lorant writes that Melville was infatuated with Hawthorne s intellect captivated by his artistry and charmed by his elusive personality but the friendship meant something different to each of them with Hawthorne offering Melville the kind of intellectual stimulation he needed They may have been natural allies and friends yet they were also fifteen years apart in age and temperamentally quite different and Hawthorne found Melville s manic intensity exhausting at times 106 Bezanson identifies sexual excitement in all the ten letters Melville wrote to the older man 107 In the essay on Hawthorne s Mosses Melville wrote I feel that this Hawthorne has dropped germinous seeds into my soul He expands and deepens down the more I contemplate him and further and further shoots his strong New England roots into the hot soil of my Southern soul Melville dedicated his book to Hawthorne In token of my admiration for his genius this book is inscribed to Nathaniel Hawthorne On October 18 1851 The Whale was published in Britain in three volumes and on November 14 Moby Dick appeared in the United States as a single volume In between these dates on October 22 1851 the Melvilles second child Stanwix was born 108 In December Hawthorne told Duyckinck What a book Melville has written It gives me an idea of much greater power than his preceding ones 109 Unlike other contemporaneous reviewers of Melville Hawthorne had seen the uniqueness of Melville s new novel and acknowledged it In early December 1852 Melville visited the Hawthornes in Concord and discussed the idea of the Agatha story he had talked of with Hawthorne This was the last contact between the two writers before Melville visited Hawthorne in Liverpool four years later when Hawthorne had relocated to England 110 1852 1857 Unsuccessful writer editAfter having borrowed three thousand dollars from his father in law in September 1850 to buy a 160 acre farm in Pittsfield Massachusetts Melville had high hopes that his next book would please the public and restore his finances In April 1851 he told his British publisher Richard Bentley that his new book had unquestionable novelty and was calculated to have wide appeal with elements of romance and mystery 111 In fact Pierre or The Ambiguities was heavily psychological though drawing on the conventions of the romance and difficult in style It was not well received The New York Day Book published a venomous attack on September 8 1852 headlined HERMAN MELVILLE CRAZY The item offered as a news story reported A critical friend who read Melville s last book Ambiguities between two steamboat accidents told us that it appeared to be composed of the ravings and reveries of a madman We were somewhat startled at the remark but still more at learning a few days after that Melville was really supposed to be deranged and that his friends were taking measures to place him under treatment We hope one of the earliest precautions will be to keep him stringently secluded from pen and ink 112 On May 22 1853 Melville s third child and first daughter Elizabeth Bessie was born and on or about that day Herman finished work on the Agatha story Isle of the Cross Melville traveled to New York 113 to discuss a book presumably Isle of the Cross with his publisher but later wrote that Harper amp Brothers was prevented from publishing his manuscript because it was lost 113 After the commercial and critical failure of Pierre Melville had difficulty finding a publisher for his follow up novel Israel Potter Instead this narrative of a Revolutionary War veteran was serialized in Putnam s Monthly Magazine in 1853 From November 1853 to 1856 Melville published fourteen tales and sketches in Putnam s and Harper s magazines In December 1855 he proposed to Dix amp Edwards the new owners of Putnam s that they publish a selective collection of the short fiction The collection titled The Piazza Tales was named after a new introductory story Melville wrote for it The Piazza It also contained five previously published stories including Bartleby the Scrivener and Benito Cereno 114 On March 2 1855 the Melvilles fourth child Frances Fanny was born 115 In this period his book Israel Potter was published The writing of The Confidence Man put great strain on Melville leading Sam Shaw a nephew of Lizzie to write to his uncle Lemuel Shaw Herman I hope has had no more of those ugly attacks a reference to what Robertson Lorant calls the bouts of rheumatism and sciatica that plagued Melville 116 Melville s father in law apparently shared his daughter s great anxiety about him when he wrote a letter to a cousin in which he described Melville s working habits When he is deeply engaged in one of his literary works he confines him self to hard study many hours in the day with little or no exercise and this specially in winter for a great many days together He probably thus overworks himself and brings on severe nervous affections 117 Shaw advanced Melville 1 500 from Lizzie s inheritance to travel four or five months in Europe and the Holy Land 116 From October 11 1856 to May 20 1857 118 Melville made a six month Grand Tour of Europe and the Mediterranean While in England in November 1856 he briefly reunited for three days with Hawthorne who had taken the position of United States Consul at Liverpool at that time the hub of Britain s Atlantic trade At the nearby coast resort of Southport amid the sand dunes where they had stopped to smoke cigars they had a conversation that Hawthorne later described in his journal Melville as he always does began to reason of Providence and futurity and of everything that lies beyond human ken and informed me that he pretty much made up his mind to be annihilated If he were a religious man he would be one of the most truly religious and reverential he has a very high and noble nature and better worth immortality than most of us 119 full citation needed The Mediterranean part of the tour took in the Holy Land which inspired his epic poem Clarel 120 During the tour he visited Mount Hope a Christian farm near Jaffa 121 On April 1 1857 Melville published his last full length novel The Confidence Man This novel subtitled His Masquerade has won general acclaim in modern times as a complex and mysterious exploration of issues of fraud and honesty identity and masquerade However when it was published it received reviews ranging from the bewildered to the denunciatory 122 1857 1876 Poet edit nbsp Melville in 1861To repair his faltering finances Melville took up public lecturing from late 1857 to 1860 He embarked upon three lecture tours 118 and spoke at lyceums chiefly on Roman statuary and sightseeing in Rome 123 Melville s lectures which mocked the pseudo intellectualism of lyceum culture were panned by contemporary audiences 124 On May 30 1860 Melville boarded the clipper Meteor for California with his brother Thomas at the helm After a shaky trip around Cape Horn Melville returned to New York alone via Panama in November Later that year he submitted a poetry collection to a publisher but it was not accepted and is now lost In 1863 he bought his brother s house at 104 East 26th Street in New York City and moved there 125 126 In 1864 Melville visited the Virginia battlefields of the American Civil War 127 After the war he published Battle Pieces and Aspects of the War 1866 a collection of 72 poems that has been described as a polyphonic verse journal of the conflict 128 The work did not do well commercially of the print run of 1 260 copies 300 were sent as review copies and 551 copies were sold and reviewers did not realize that Melville had purposely avoided the ostentatious diction and fine writing that were in fashion choosing to be concise and spare 129 In 1866 Melville became a customs inspector for New York City He held the post for 19 years and had a reputation for honesty in a notoriously corrupt institution 130 Unbeknownst to Melville his position was sometimes protected by future American president Chester A Arthur then a customs official who admired Melville s writing but never spoke to him 131 During these years Melville suffered from nervous exhaustion physical pain and frustration and would sometimes in the words of Robertson Lorant behave like the tyrannical captains he had portrayed in his novels perhaps even beating his wife Lizzie when he came home after drinking 132 In 1867 Malcolm the Melvilles older son died in his bedroom at home at the age of 18 from a self inflicted gun shot perhaps intentional perhaps accidental 133 In May 1867 Lizzie s brother Sam who shared his family s fear for Melville s sanity tried to arrange for her to leave Melville Lizzie was to visit her family in Boston and assert to a court that her husband was insane But Lizzie whether to avoid the social shame divorce carried at the time or because she still loved her husband refused to go along with the plan 134 Though Melville s professional writing career had ended he remained dedicated to his writing He spent years on what Milder called his autumnal masterpiece Clarel A Poem and a Pilgrimage 1876 an 18 000 line epic poem inspired by his 1856 trip to the Holy Land 135 It is among the longest single poems in American literature The title character is a young American student of divinity who travels to Jerusalem to renew his faith One of the central characters Rolfe is similar to Melville in his younger days a seeker and adventurer while the reclusive Vine is loosely based on Hawthorne who had died twelve years before 135 Publication of 350 copies was funded with a bequest from his uncle in 1876 but sales failed miserably and the unsold copies were burned when Melville was unable to buy them at cost Critic Lewis Mumford found an unread copy in the New York Public Library in 1925 with its pages uncut 136 1877 1891 Final years edit nbsp The last known image of Melville a cabinet card by George G Rockwood in 1885 nbsp The New York Times September 29 1891 obituary notice which misspelled Melville s masterpiece as Mobie Dick nbsp The gravestones of Melville and his wife in Woodlawn Cemetery in Bronx New York CityMelville s own income remained limited But in 1884 Lizzie received a legacy that enabled him to buy a steady stream of books and prints each month 137 Melville retired on December 31 1885 127 after several of his wife s relatives further supported the couple with supplementary legacies and inheritances On February 22 1886 Stanwix their younger son died in San Francisco at age 36 from tuberculosis 138 In 1889 Melville became a member of the New York Society Library 137 Melville had a modest revival of popularity in England when readers rediscovered his novels He published two collections of poems inspired by his early experiences at sea with prose head notes Intended for his relatives and friends each had a print run of 25 copies The first John Marr and Other Sailors was published in 1888 followed by Timoleon in 1891 Melville died on the morning of September 28 1891 His death certificate shows cardiac dilation as the cause 139 He was interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery in Bronx New York City 140 The New York Times initial death notice called his masterpiece Mobie Dick the misspelling of which was later erroneously taken to mean that he was unappreciated at his time of death 141 142 But there were some appreciations The Times for instance published a substantial article of appreciation on October 2 The author said that thinking back to Melville s books that were so much read forty years earlier there is no difficulty determining why they were then read and talked about but the difficulty is to discover why they are read and talked about no longer 143 Melville left a volume of poetry Weeds and Wildings and a sketch Daniel Orme unpublished at the time of his death His wife also found pages for an unfinished novella titled Billy Budd Melville had revised and rearranged the manuscript in several stages leaving the pages in disarray Lizzie could not decide her husband s intentions or even read his handwriting in some places and abandoned attempts to edit the manuscript for publication The pages were stored in a family breadbox until 1919 when Melville s granddaughter gave them to Raymond Weaver Weaver who initially dismissed the work s importance published a quick transcription in 1924 This version however contained many misreadings some of which affected interpretation It was an immediate critical success in England then in the United States In 1962 the Melville scholars Harrison Hayford and Merton M Sealts published a critical reading text that was widely accepted 144 It was adapted as a stage play on Broadway in 1951 then an opera and in 1961 as a film 127 Writing style editGeneral narrative style edit Melville s writing style shows both consistencies and enormous changes throughout the years His development had been abnormally postponed and when it came it came with a rush and a force that had the menace of quick exhaustion in it 145 As early as Fragments from a Writing Desk written when Melville was 20 scholar Sealts sees a number of elements that anticipate Melville s later writing especially his characteristic habit of abundant literary allusion 146 Typee and Omoo were documentary adventures that called for a division of the narrative in short chapters Such compact organization bears the risk of fragmentation when applied to a lengthy work such as Mardi but with Redburn and White Jacket Melville turned the short chapter into a concentrated narrative 147 Some chapters of Moby Dick are no more than two pages in standard editions and an extreme example is Chapter 122 consisting of a single paragraph of 36 words The skillful handling of chapters in Moby Dick is one of the most fully developed Melvillean signatures and is a measure of his masterly writing style something that would lend lasting significance to the opening lines Call me Ishmael 148 Individual chapters have become a touchstone for appreciation of Melville s art and for explanation of his themes 149 In contrast the chapters in Pierre called Books are divided into short numbered sections seemingly an odd formal compromise between Melville s natural length and his purpose to write a regular romance that called for longer chapters As satirical elements were introduced the chapter arrangement restores some degree of organization and pace from the chaos 148 The usual chapter unit then reappears for Israel Potter The Confidence Man and even Clarel but only becomes a vital part in the whole creative achievement again in the juxtaposition of accents and of topics in Billy Budd 148 Newton Arvin points out that only superficially the books after Mardi seem as if Melville s writing went back to the vein of his first two books In reality his movement was not a retrograde but a spiral one and while Redburn and White Jacket may lack the spontaneous youthful charm of his first two books they are denser in substance richer in feeling tauter more complex more connotative in texture and imagery 150 The rhythm of the prose in Omoo achieves little more than easiness the language is almost neutral and without idiosyncrasy while Redburn shows an improved ability in narrative which fuses imagery and emotion 151 Melville s early works were increasingly baroque 152 in style and with Moby Dick Melville s vocabulary had grown superabundant Walter Bezanson calls it an immensely varied style 152 According to critic Warner Berthoff three characteristic uses of language can be recognized First the exaggerated repetition of words as in the series pitiable pity pitied and piteous Ch 81 The Pequod Meets the Virgin A second typical device is the use of unusual adjective noun combinations as in concentrating brow and immaculate manliness Ch 26 Knights and Squires 153 A third characteristic is the presence of a participial modifier to emphasize and to reinforce the already established expectations of the reader as the words preluding and foreshadowing so still and subdued and yet somehow preluding was all the scene In this foreshadowing interval 154 I tell you it will be more tolerable for the Feegee that salted down a lean missionary in his cellar against a coming famine it will be more tolerable for that provident Feegee I say in the day of judgment than for thee civilized and enlightened gourmand who nailest geese to the ground and feastest on their bloated livers in thy pate de foie gras Melville paraphrases the Bible in The Whale as a Dish Moby Dick Chapter 65 After his use of hyphenated compounds in Pierre Melville s writing gives Berthoff the impression of becoming less exploratory and less provocative in his choices of words and phrases Instead of providing a lead into possible meanings and openings out of the material in hand 155 the vocabulary now served to crystallize governing impressions 155 the diction no longer attracted attention to itself except as an effort at exact definition The language Berthoff continues reflects a controlling intelligence of right judgment and completed understanding 155 The sense of free inquiry and exploration that infused his earlier writing and accounted for its rare force and expansiveness 156 tended to give way to static enumeration 157 By comparison to the verbal music and kinetic energy of Moby Dick Melville s subsequent writings seem relatively muted even withheld in his later works 157 Melville s paragraphing in his best work Berthoff considers to be the virtuous result of compactness of form and free assembling of unanticipated further data such as when the mysterious sperm whale is compared with Exodus s invisibility of God s face in the final paragraph of Chapter 86 The Tail 158 Over time Melville s paragraphs became shorter as his sentences grew longer until he arrived at the one sentence paragraphing characteristic of his later prose 159 Berthoff points to the opening chapter of The Confidence Man for an example as it counts fifteen paragraphs seven of which consist of only one elaborate sentence and four that have only two sentences The use of similar technique in Billy Budd contributes in large part Berthoff says to its remarkable narrative economy 160 Verily I say unto you It shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment than for that city Matthew 10 15 Style and literary allusion edit In Nathalia Wright s view Melville s sentences generally have a looseness of structure easy to use for devices as catalogue and allusion parallel and refrain proverb and allegory The length of his clauses may vary greatly but the narrative style of writing in Pierre and The Confidence Man is there to convey feeling not thought Unlike Henry James who was an innovator of sentence ordering to render the subtlest nuances in thought Melville made few such innovations His domain is the mainstream of English prose with its rhythm and simplicity influenced by the King James Bible 161 Another important characteristic of Melville s writing style is in its echoes and overtones 162 Melville s imitation of certain distinct styles is responsible for this His three most important sources in order are the Bible Shakespeare and Milton 163 Direct quotation from any of the sources is slight only one sixth of his Biblical allusions can be qualified as such because Melville adapts Biblical usage to his own narrated textual requirements of clarifying his plot 164 The Biblical elements in Melville s style can be divided into three categories 165 In the first allusion is more within the narrative rather than formal quotation Several preferred Biblical allusions appear repeatedly throughout his body of work taking on the nature of refrains Examples are the injunctions to be as wise as serpents and as harmless as doves death on a pale horse the man of sorrows the many mansions of heaven proverbs as the hairs on our heads are numbered pride goes before a fall the wages of sin is death adverbs and pronouns as verily whoso forasmuch as phrases as come to pass children s children the fat of the land vanity of vanities outer darkness the apple of his eye Ancient of Days the rose of Sharon 166 Second there are paraphrases of individual and combined verses Redburn s Thou shalt not lay stripes upon these Roman citizens makes use of language of the Ten Commandments in Ex 20 and Pierre s inquiry of Lucy Loveth she me with the love past all understanding combines John 21 15 17 and Philippians 4 7 e Third certain Hebraisms are used such as a succession of genitives all the waves of the billows of the seas of the boisterous mob the cognate accusative I dreamed a dream Liverpool was created with the Creation and the parallel Closer home does it go than a rammer and fighting with steel is a play without ever an interlude This passage from Redburn shows how these ways of alluding interlock and result in a texture of Biblical language though there is very little direct quotation The other world beyond this which was longed for by the devout before Columbus time was found in the New and the deep sea land that first struck these soundings brought up the soil of Earth s Paradise Not a Paradise then or now but to be made so at God s good pleasure f and in the fulness and mellowness of time g The seed is sown and the harvest must come and our children s children h on the world s jubilee morning shall all go with their sickles to the reaping Then shall the curse of Babel be revoked i a new Pentecost come and the language they shall speak shall be the language of Britain j Frenchmen and Danes and Scots and the dwellers on the shores of the Mediterranean k and in the regions round about l Italians and Indians and Moors there shall appear unto them cloven tongues as of fire m The American melting pot described in Redburn s Biblical language with Nathalia Wright s glosses 167 In addition to this Melville successfully imitates three Biblical strains the apocalyptic the prophetic and the sermonic narrative tone of writing Melville sustains the apocalyptic tone of anxiety and foreboding for a whole chapter of Mardi The prophetic strain is expressed by Melville in Moby Dick most notably in Father Mapple s sermon The tradition of the Psalms is imitated at length by Melville in The Confidence Man 168 In 1849 Melville acquired an edition of Shakespeare s works printed in a font large enough for his tired eyes 169 170 which led to a deeper study of Shakespeare that greatly influenced the style of his next book Moby Dick 1851 The critic F O Matthiessen found that the language of Shakespeare far surpasses other influences upon the book in that it inspired Melville to discover his own full strength 171 On almost every page debts to Shakespeare can be discovered The mere sounds full of Leviathanism but signifying nothing at the end of Cetology Ch 32 echo the famous phrase in Macbeth Told by an idiot full of sound and fury Signifying nothing 171 Ahab s first extended speech to the crew in the Quarter Deck Ch 36 is practically blank verse and so is Ahab s soliloquy at the beginning of Sunset Ch 37 I leave a white and turbid wake Pale waters paler cheeks where er I sail The envious billows sidelong swell to whelm My track let them but first I pass 172 Through Shakespeare Melville infused Moby Dick with a power of expression he had not previously expressed 173 Reading Shakespeare had been a catalytic agent 174 for Melville one that transformed his writing from merely reporting to the expression of profound natural forces 174 The extent to which Melville assimilated Shakespeare is evident in the description of Ahab Matthiessen continues which ends in language that seems Shakespearean yet is no imitation Oh Ahab what shall be grand in thee it must needs be plucked from the skies and dived for in the deep and featured in the unbodied air The imaginative richness of the final phrase seems particularly Shakespearean but its two key words appear only once each in the plays and to neither of these usages is Melville indebted for his fresh combination 175 Melville s diction depended upon no source and his prose is not based on anybody else s verse but on an awareness of speech rhythm 176 Melville s mastering of Shakespeare Matthiessen finds supplied him with verbal resources that enabled him to create dramatic language through three essential techniques First the use of verbs of action creates a sense of movement and meaning The effective tension caused by the contrast of thou launchest navies of full freighted worlds and there s that in here that still remains indifferent in The Candles Ch 119 makes the last clause lead to a compulsion to strike the breast which suggests how thoroughly the drama has come to inhere in the words 177 Second Melville took advantage of the Shakespearean energy of verbal compounds as in full freighted Third Melville employed the device of making one part of speech act as another for example earthquake as an adjective or turning an adjective into a noun as in placeless 178 Melville s style in Nathalia Wright s analysis seamlessly flows over into theme because all these borrowings have an artistic purpose which is to suggest an appearance larger and more significant than life for characters and themes that are in fact unremarkable 179 The allusions suggest that beyond the world of appearances another world exists one that influences this world and where ultimate truth can be found Moreover the ancient background thus suggested for Melville s narratives ancient allusions being next in number to the Biblical ones invests them with a sense of timelessness 179 Critical reception editMelville s financial success as a writer during his lifetime was not great relative to his posthumous success over his entire lifetime Melville s writings earned him just over 10 000 equivalent to 274 813 in 2022 180 Melville s travelogues based on voyages to the South Seas and stories based on his time in the merchant marine and navy led to some initial success but his popularity declined dramatically afterwards By 1876 all of his books were out of print 181 He was viewed as a minor figure in American literature in the later years of his life and during the years immediately after his death 182 Poetry edit Melville did not publish poetry until his late thirties with Battle Pieces 1866 and did not receive recognition as a poet until well into the 20th century But he wrote predominantly poetry for about 25 years twice as long as his prose career The three novels of the 1850s that Melville worked on most seriously to present his philosophical explorations Moby Dick Pierre and The Confidence Man seem to make the step to philosophical poetry a natural one rather than simply a consequence of commercial failure Since he turned to poetry as a meditative practice his poetic style even more than most Victorian poets was not marked by linguistic play or melodic considerations 183 Early critics were not sympathetic Henry Chapin in his introduction to John Marr and Other Poems 1922 one of the earlier selections of Melville s poetry said Melville s verse is of an amateurish and uneven quality but in it that loveable freshness of personality which his philosophical dejection never quenched is everywhere in evidence in the voice of a true poet 184 The poet and novelist Robert Penn Warren became a champion of Melville as a great American poet and issued a selection of Melville s poetry in 1971 prefaced by an admiring critical essay 185 In the 1990s critic Lawrence Buell argued that Melville is justly said to be nineteenth century America s leading poet after Whitman and Dickinson 183 and Helen Vendler remarked of Clarel What it cost Melville to write this poem makes us pause reading it Alone it is enough to win him as a poet what he called the belated funeral flower of fame 186 Some critics now place him as the first modernist poet in the United States while others assert that his work more strongly suggests what today would be a postmodern view 187 Melville revival and Melville studies edit See also Melville Society nbsp Melville in 1860 nbsp Melville in 1868The centennial of Melville s birth in 1919 coincided with a renewed interest in his writings known as the Melville revival during which his work experienced a significant critical reassessment The renewed appreciation began in 1917 with Carl Van Doren s article on Melville in a standard history of American literature Van Doren also encouraged Raymond Weaver who wrote the author s first full length biography Herman Melville Mariner and Mystic 1921 Discovering the unfinished manuscript of Billy Budd among papers shown to him by Melville s granddaughter Weaver edited it and published it in a new collected edition of Melville s works Other works that helped fan the flames for Melville were Carl Van Doren s The American Novel 1921 D H Lawrence s Studies in Classic American Literature 1923 Carl Van Vechten s essay in The Double Dealer 1922 and Lewis Mumford s biography Herman Melville 1929 188 Starting in the mid 1930s the Yale University scholar Stanley Thomas Williams supervised more than a dozen dissertations on Melville that were eventually published as books Where the first wave of Melville scholars focused on psychology Williams students were prominent in establishing Melville Studies as an academic field concerned with texts and manuscripts tracing Melville s influences and borrowings even plagiarism and exploring archives and local publications 189 To provide historical evidence the independent scholar Jay Leyda searched libraries family papers local archives and newspapers across New England and New York to document Melville s life day by day for his two volume The Melville Log 1951 190 191 Sparked by Leyda and post war scholars the second phase of the Melville Revival emphasized research into the biography of Melville rather than accepting Melville s early books as reliable accounts 190 In 1945 The Melville Society was founded a non profit organisation dedicated to the study of Melville s life and works Between 1969 and 2003 the society published 125 issues of Melville Society Extracts which are now freely available on the society s website Since 1999 it has published Leviathan A Journal of Melville Studies currently three issues a year published by Johns Hopkins University Press 192 The postwar scholars tended to think that Weaver Harvard psychologist Henry Murray and Mumford favored Freudian interpretations that read Melville s fiction as autobiography exaggerated his suffering in the family and inferred a homosexual attachment to Hawthorne They saw a different arc to Melville s writing career The first biographers saw a tragic withdrawal after the cold critical reception for his prose works and largely dismissed his poetry A new view emerged of Melville s turn to poetry as a conscious choice that placed him among the most important American poets 193 Other post war studies however continued the broad imaginative and interpretive style Charles Olson s Call Me Ishmael 1947 presented Ahab as a Shakespearean tragic hero and Newton Arvin s critical biography Herman Melville 1950 won the National Book Award for non fiction in 1951 193 194 In the 1960s Harrison Hayford organized an alliance between Northwestern University Press and the Newberry Library with backing from the Modern Language Association and funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities to edit and publish reliable critical texts of Melville s complete works including unpublished poems journals and correspondence The first volume of the Northwestern Newberry Edition of The Writings of Herman Melville was published in 1968 and the last in the fall of 2017 The aim of the editors was to present a text as close as possible to the author s intention as surviving evidence permits The volumes have extensive appendices including textual variants from each of the editions published in Melville s lifetime an historical note on the publishing history and critical reception and related documents Because the texts were prepared with financial support from the United States Department of Education no royalties are charged and they have been widely reprinted 195 Hershel Parker published his two volume Herman Melville A Biography in 1996 and 2002 based on extensive original research and his involvement as editor of the Northwestern Newberry Melville edition 196 197 Gender studies edit Melville only gradually attracted the pioneering scholars of women s studies gender and sexuality in the 1970s and 1980s Though some held that he hardly portrayed women at all others saw the few women in his works as traditional figures representing or even attacking nineteenth century gentility sentimentality and conventional morality Melville s preference for sea going tales that involved almost only males has been of interest to scholars in men s studies and especially gay and queer studies 198 Melville was remarkably open in his exploration of sexuality of all sorts Alvin Sandberg said that the short story The Paradise of Bachelors and the Tartarus of Maids offers an exploration of impotency a portrayal of a man retreating to an all male childhood to avoid confrontation with sexual manhood from which the narrator engages in congenial digressions in heterogeneity 199 In line with this view Warren Rosenberg argues the homosocial Paradise of Bachelors is blind to what is real and painful in the world and thus are sic superficial and sterile 200 David Harley Serlin observes in the second half of Melville s diptych The Tartarus of Maids the narrator gives voice to the oppressed women he observes As other scholars have noted the slave image here has two clear connotations One describes the exploitation of the women s physical labor and the other describes the exploitation of the women s reproductive organs Of course as models of women s oppression the two are clearly intertwined Serlin 1995 In the end Serlin says that the narrator is never fully able to come to terms with the contrasting masculine and feminine modalities 201 Issues of sexuality have been observed in other works as well Rosenberg notes Taji in Mardi and the protagonist in Pierre think they are saving young maidens in distress Yillah and Isabel out of the purest of reasons but both are also conscious of a lurking sexual motive 200 When Taji kills the old priest holding Yillah captive he says R emorse smote me hard and like lightning I asked myself whether the death deed I had done was sprung of virtuous motive the rescuing of a captive from thrall or whether beneath the pretense I had engaged in this fatal affray for some other selfish purpose the companionship of a beautiful maid 202 In Pierre the motive of the protagonist s sacrifice for Isabel is admitted womanly beauty and not womanly ugliness invited him to champion the right 203 Rosenberg argues This awareness of a double motive haunts both books and ultimately destroys their protagonists who would not fully acknowledge the dark underside of their idealism The epistemological quest and the transcendental quest for love and belief are consequently sullied by the erotic 200 Rosenberg says that Melville fully explores the theme of sexuality in his major epic poem Clarel When the narrator is separated from Ruth with whom he has fallen in love he is free to explore other sexual and religious possibilities before deciding at the end of the poem to participate in the ritualistic order represented by marriage In the course of the poem he considers every form of sexual orientation celibacy homosexuality hedonism and heterosexuality raising the same kinds of questions as when he considers Islam or Democracy 200 Some passages and sections of Melville s works demonstrate his willingness to address all forms of sexuality including the homoerotic in his works Commonly noted examples from Moby Dick are the marriage bed episode involving Ishmael and Queequeg who sleep with their arms wrapped around each other Chapter 4 The Counterpane and Chapter 10 A Bosom Friend and the Squeeze of the Hand Chapter 94 describing the camaraderie of sailors extracting spermaceti from a dead whale 200 Clarel recognizes the homoerotic potential of its eponymous protagonist including in a fairly explicit passage an erection provoked by the figure of a male interlocutor Lyonesse 200 In addition Rosenberg notes that Billy Budd s physical attractiveness is described in quasi feminine terms As the Handsome Sailor Billy Budd s position aboard the seventy four was something analogous to that of a rustic beauty transplanted from the provinces and brought into competition with the highborn dames of the court 200 Law and literature edit Melville has been useful in the field of law and literature The chapter Fast Fish and Loose Fish in Moby Dick for instance challenges concepts of property rights 204 In Billy Budd a handsome and popular young sailor strikes and inadvertently kills the ship s master at arms 205 The ship s captain immediately convenes a court martial at which he urges the court to convict and sentence Billy to death Critics debate Melville s intention Some see the contradiction between unbending legalism and malleable moral principles 206 207 Other critics have argued that the captain manipulated and misrepresented the applicable laws 208 Themes editMelville s work often touched on themes of communicative expression and the pursuit of the absolute among illusions As early as 1839 in the juvenile sketch Fragments from a Writing Desk Melville explores a problem that would reappear in the short stories Bartleby 1853 and Benito Cereno 1855 the impossibility to find common ground for mutual communication The sketch centers on the protagonist and a mute lady leading scholar Sealts to observe Melville s deep concern with expression and communication evidently began early in his career 209 According to scholar Nathalia Wright Melville s characters are all preoccupied by the same intense superhuman and eternal quest for the absolute amidst its relative manifestations 210 an enterprise central to the Melville canon All Melville s plots describe this pursuit and all his themes represent the delicate and shifting relationship between its truth and its illusion 210 It is not clear however what the moral and metaphysical implications of this quest are because Melville did not distinguish between these two aspects 210 Throughout his life Melville struggled with and gave shape to the same set of epistemological doubts and the metaphysical issues these doubts engendered An obsession for the limits of knowledge led to the question of God s existence and nature the indifference of the universe and the problem of evil 78 Legacy and honors edit nbsp A plaque commemorating Melville at 104 East 26th Street in Manhattan where Melville lived from 1863 to 1891In 1854 three years following publication of Moby Dick Melville New York on Long Island was named in Melville s honor 211 212 In 1982 the Library of America LOA began publishing works in honor of Melville s central place in American culture the first volume contained Typee Omoo and Mardi Subsequent volumes included Melville s Redburn White Jacket and Moby Dick published in 1983 and Pierre Israel Potter The Confidence Man Tales and Billy Budd published in 1985 LOA did not publish his complete poetry until 2019 On August 1 1984 as part of the Literary Arts Series of stamps the U S Postal Service issued a 20 cent commemorative stamp to honor Melville The setting for the first day of issue was the Whaling Museum in New Bedford Massachusetts 213 In 1985 the New York City Herman Melville Society gathered at 104 East 26th Street to dedicate the intersection of Park Avenue South and 26th Street as Herman Melville Square where Melville lived from 1863 to 1891 and where he authored Billy Budd and other works 214 Melville s house in Lansingburgh New York houses the Lansingburgh Historical Society In 2010 a species of extinct sperm whale Livyatan melvillei was named in honor of Melville The paleontologists who discovered the fossil were fans of Moby Dick and dedicated their discovery to the author 215 216 Agha Shahid Ali a Kashmiri American poet ends his famous English ghazal Tonight with the line call me Ishmael tonight 217 Selected bibliography editMain article Herman Melville bibliography Typee A Peep at Polynesian Life 1846 Omoo A Narrative of Adventures in the South Seas 1847 Mardi and a Voyage Thither 1849 Redburn His First Voyage 1849 White Jacket or The World in a Man of War 1850 Moby Dick or The Whale 1851 Pierre or The Ambiguities 1852 Isle of the Cross 1853 unpublished and now lost Bartleby the Scrivener 1853 short story The Encantadas or Enchanted Isles 1854 novella Benito Cereno 1855 novella Israel Potter His Fifty Years of Exile 1855 The Confidence Man His Masquerade 1857 Battle Pieces and Aspects of the War 1866 poetry collection Clarel A Poem and Pilgrimage in the Holy Land 1876 epic poem John Marr and Other Sailors 1888 poetry collection Timoleon 1891 poetry collection Billy Budd Sailor An Inside Narrative 1891 unfinished published posthumously in 1924 authoritative edition in 1962 Explanatory notes edit After the death of Melville s father in 1832 his mother added an e to the family surname seemingly at the behest of her son Gansevoort Parker 1996 p 67 This would have been the Statenvertaling of 1637 the Dutch equivalent of the King James Bible On the surviving list of Acushnet crewmembers Melville s name can be seen sixth counting from below Original list of Acushnet crewmembers This number is either what she was carrying or the total number since the voyage began Parker 1996 200 And the peace of God which passeth all understanding shall keep your hearts Germanism borrowed from the promise in Luke that the kingdom will be given to the chosen people Genitive of attribute Cognate construction and familiar Biblical idiom Inversion of order to resemble the speeches of the King of the account of the Last Judgment in Matthew 25 34 Then shall the king say unto them on his right hand Paraphrase of familiar Biblical idiom and cognate construction Allusion to Acts 2 9 Parthians and Medes and Elamites and the dwellers in Mesopotamia and in Use of compound prepositions Acts 2 3 And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire and it sat upon each of them Citations edit During the week of his death the New York Times wrote There has died and been buried in this city a man who is so little known even by name to the generation now in the vigor of life that only one newspaper contained an obituary account of him and this was but of three or four lines Poets org About Herman Melville https poets org poet herman melville retrieved 14 July 2023 Parker 1996 p 23 Genealogical chart in Parker 2002 pp 926 929 a b Robertson Lorant 1996 pp 14 28 29 Parker 1996 p 12 Delbanco 2005 p 19 Delbanco 2005 p 17 Parker 1996 p 7 Robertson Lorant 1996 p 6 Parker 1996 p 24 Parker 1996 p 22 a b Parker 1996 p 39 a b Delbanco 2005 p 23 Parker 1996 p 52 Arvin 1950 p 16 Arvin 1950 pp 16 and 18 Parker 1996 p 27 a b c Sealts 1988 p 17 Parker 1996 pp 35 and 38 Parker 1996 pp 38 39 Cited in Parker 1996 p 48 Sullivan 1972 p 117 Titus 1980 pp 4 10 Bryant 2021 p 92 Sealts 1988 p 18 Parker 1996 p 56 Parker 1996 pp 56 57 Delbanco 2005 p 24 Cited in Parker 1996 p 57 a b Parker 1996 p 58 Parker 1996 p 63 Arvin 1950 pp 31 35 a b Parker 1996 p 68 Arvin 1950 p 21 Parker 1996 pp 76 78 Parker 1996 p 82 a b Parker 1996 p 95 Parker 2002 pp 674 675 Parker 1996 p 98 Parker 1996 p 107 Parker 1996 p 97 Parker 1996 pp 108 109 Parker 1996 p 110 Parker 1996 p 117 Parker 1996 pp 112 and 124 Parker 1996 p 126 Parker 1996 pp 126 128 129 Parker 1996 pp 136 137 a b Parker 1996 p 138 a b Sealts 1988 p 16 Delbanco 2005 p 27 Parker 1996 p 143 a b c d e f Olsen Smith 2015 p xliv Parker 1996 pp 176 178 Parker 1996 p 181 a b c Parker 1996 p 185 Parker 1996 p 184 Parker 1996 p 187 Parker 1996 pp 190 191 Parker 1996 p 193 Parker 1996 p 194 Parker 1996 pp 196 199 Quoted in Parker 1996 p 196 Parker 1996 pp 200 201 Parker 1996 p 201 Parker 1996 p 202 Parker 1996 p 204 Parker 1996 p 205 Parker 1996 pp 210 211 a b c d e f g h i j k l Levine 2014 p xvi Bercaw Edwards 2009 p 41 Robertson Lorant 1996 p 209 a b Milder 1988 p 430 Parker 1996 p 385 Reprinted in Branch 1974 pp 67 68 Herman Melville to Nathaniel Hawthorne May 1851 in Horth 1993 p 193 Olsen Smith 2015 p xiii a b c Milder 1988 p 431 Delbanco 2005 p 66 Kennedy amp Kennedy 1978a 6 clarification needed a b Arvin 1950 p 126 Robertson Lorant 1996 p 24 Quoted in Kennedy amp Kennedy 1978a 8 clarification needed Kennedy amp Kennedy 1978 7 clarification needed Kennedy amp Kennedy 1978b 6 clarification needed Robertson Lorant 1996 p 164 Elizabeth Melville s italics Quoted in Robertson Lorant 1996 p 165 Parker 1996 p 614 Arvin 1950 p page needed Milder 1988 p 432 Robertson Lorant 1996 p 208 Herman Melville in Horth 1993 p 162 Herman Melville in Horth 1993 p 163 Gravett Sharon 2004 Melville Herman In Cumming Mark ed The Carlyle Encyclopedia Madison and Teaneck NJ Fairleigh Dickinson University Press pp 316 317 ISBN 978 0 8386 3792 0 Delbanco 2005 p 124 Robertson Lorant 1996 p 244 Robertson Lorant 1996 p 246 Robertson Lorant 1996 pp 247 252 Walter E Bezanson Moby Dick Document Drama Dream in John Bryant ed A Companion to Melville Studies Greenwood Press 1986 176 180 Robertson Lorant 1996 p 251 Quoted in Branch 1974 p 25 Delbanco 2005 p 125 Robertson Lorant 1996 p 263 Quoted in Robertson Lorant 1996 p 264 Robertson Lorant 1996 pp 266 267 Robertson Lorant 1996 p 267 Bezanson 1986 p 181 Parker 1996 pp 870 871 Cited in Parker 1988 pp 692 693 Sealts 1987 pp 482 483 Parker 2002 pp 106 107 Parker 1996 pp 131 132 a b Parker 2002 p 155 Sealts 1987 p 458 Parker 2002 p 243 a b Robertson Lorant 1996 p 372 Quoted in Robertson Lorant 1996 p 372 a b Levine 2014 p xvii Hawthorne entry for November 20 1856 in The English Notebooks 1853 1858 Robertson Lorant 1996 pp 375 400 Perry Yaron 2004 John Steinbeck s Roots in Nineteenth Century Palestine Steinbeck Studies 15 1 46 72 doi 10 1353 stn 2004 0018 ISSN 1551 6903 S2CID 144101837 Branch 1974 pp 369ff Kennedy 1977 Hutchins 2014 Levine 2014 pp xvii xviii Tick 1986 a b c Levine 2014 p xviii Milder 1988 p 442 Parker 2002 pp 624 and 608 Leyda 1969 p 730 quietly declining offers of money for special services quietly returning money which has been thrust into his pockets Olsen Smith 2015 p xviii Robertson Lorant 1996 pp 534 Shneidman 1976 Robertson Lorant 1996 pp 505 507 a b Milder 1988 p 443 Delbanco 2005 p 287 a b Wallace 2005 p xii Parker 2002 p 888 Delbanco 2005 p 319 Wilson 2016 Kindle Location 32027 Jordan 2019 Likewise a letter to the editor in the same paper on October 6 was headed the late Hiram Melville but this was a typesetting error Parker 2002 p 921 Parker 2002 p 921 Parker 1990 Arvin 1950 p 77 Sealts 1987 p 461 Berthoff 1962 p 176 a b c Berthoff 1962 p 177 Berthoff 1962 p 179 Arvin 1950 p 101 Arvin 1950 p 102 a b Bezanson 1986 p 203 Berthoff 1962 p 163 Berthoff 1962 p 164 a b c Berthoff 1962 p 165 Berthoff 1962 p 169 a b Berthoff 1962 p 170 Berthoff 1962 p 175 Berthoff 1962 p 173 Berthoff 1962 pp 173 175 Wright 1949 p 168 Wright 1940 p 196 n 59 Bercaw 1987 p 10 Wright 1949 p 137 Wright 1940 pp 196 197 Wright 1949 pp 139 141 Wright 1949 pp 145 146 Wright 1940 Delbanco 2005 pp 130 131 Herman Melville to Evert A Duyckink February 24 1849 in Horth 1993 p page needed a b Matthiessen 1941 p 424 Matthiessen 1941 p 426 Matthiessen 1941 p 425 a b Matthiessen 1941 p 428 Matthiessen 1941 pp 428 429 Matthiessen 1941 pp 425ff Matthiessen 1941 pp 430 431 Matthiessen 1941 p 431 a b Wright 1940 p 198 Delbanco 2005 p 7 Delbanco 2005 p 294 Scharnhorst 1983 a b Buell 1998 p 135 Chapin 1922 Introduction Herman Melville Robert Penn Warren ed Selected Poems of Herman Melville New York Random House 1971 Vendler 1995 Introduction p xxv Spanos 2009 p 54 Marovitz 2007 pp 517 519 Wright 1987 a b Marovitz 2007 Leyda 1969 The Melville Society 2017 a b Spark 2006 p 238 National Book Foundation 2018 Fritz 2017 Parker 1996 Parker 2002 Person 2006 pp 231ff Sandberg 1968 a b c d e f g Rosenberg 1984 Serlin 1995 Melville 1973 p 132 Melville 1957 p 151 Piety Weisberg 1984 chapters 8 and 9 Bowen 1960 pp 217 218 Page 1986 p 406 Weisberg 1984 pp 145 153 Sealts 1987 p 462 a b c Wright 1949 p 77 archived Newsday article on Melville Newsday 2008 Archived from the original on March 16 2008 Retrieved June 1 2010 Hartford Courant article on Melville Hartford Courant Retrieved June 1 2010 Scott Standard Postage Catalog 2000 p 57 Mitgang 1985 Fang 2010 Ghosh 2010 Foundation Poetry July 25 2023 Tonight by Agha Shahid Ali Poetry Foundation Retrieved July 26 2023 General and cited sources editArvin Newton 1950 Herman Melville New York William Sloane Associates LCCN 50 7584 May be borrowed at Internet Archive here Bercaw Mary 1987 Melville s Sources Evanston Illinois Northwestern University Press ISBN 0 8101 0734 1 OCLC 932571921 Bercaw Edwards Mary 2009 Questioning Typee Leviathan 11 2 24 42 doi 10 1111 j 1750 1849 2009 01340 x ISSN 1525 6995 Berthoff Warner 1972 1962 The Example of Melville New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 9780393005950 OCLC 610731769 Bezanson Walter 1986 Moby Dick Document Drama Dream In Bryant John ed A Companion to Melville Studies Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 23874 1 OCLC 473782787 Branch Watson ed 1974 Melville The Critical Heritage London and Boston Routledge and Kegan Paul ISBN 9780710077745 OCLC 755172141 Bowen Merlin 1960 The Long Encounter Self and Experience in the Writings of Herman Melville Phoenix books Chicago University of Chicago Press Buell Lawrence 1998 Melville The Poet In Levine Robert ed The Cambridge Companion to Melville Cambridge University Press Archived from the original on May 12 2016 Chapin Henry 1922 Introduction John Marr amp Other Poems By Melville Herman Princeton NJ Princeton University Press Delbanco Andrew 2005 Melville His World and Work New York Knopf ISBN 978 0 375 40314 9 OCLC 845847813 Fang Janet June 30 2010 Call me Leviathan melvillei Nature doi 10 1038 news 2010 322 Archived from the original on July 3 2010 Retrieved June 30 2010 Fritz Meaghan November 22 2017 The Coiled Fish of the Sea A Brief History of the Northwestern Newberry Edition of the Writings of Herman Melville Incidental Noyes Northwestern University Press Archived from the original on March 31 2019 Retrieved March 30 2019 Ghosh Pallah June 30 2010 Sea monster whale fossil unearthed BBC News BBC Retrieved June 30 2010 Hardwick Elizabeth 2000 Herman Melville Penguin p 65 Horth Lynn ed 1993 Correspondence The Writings of Herman Melville Vol Fourteen Evanston and Chicago Northwestern University Press and The Newberry Library ISBN 0 8101 0995 6 Hutchins Zach 2014 Herman Melville s Fejee Mermaid or a Confidence Man at the Lycuem ESQ 60 1 75 109 doi 10 1353 esq 2014 0004 S2CID 162189302 Jordan Tina April 1 2019 Abnormal as Most Geniuses Are Celebrating 200 Years of Herman Melville The New York Times Archived from the original on January 2 2022 Retrieved September 7 2021 Kennedy Frederick James March 1977 Herman Melville s Lecture in Montreal The New England Quarterly 50 1 125 137 doi 10 2307 364707 JSTOR 364707 Kennedy Joyce Deveau Kennedy Frederick James February 1978 Elizabeth and Herman PDF Melville Society Extracts 33 4 12 clarification needed Kennedy Joyce Deveau Kennedy Frederick James May 1978 Elizabeth and Herman Part II PDF Melville Society Extracts 34 3 8 clarification needed Levine Robert 2014 Chronology of Melville s Life In Levine Robert ed The New Cambridge Companion to Herman Melville New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107470422 Leyda Jay 1969 1951 The Melville Log a Documentary Life of Herman Melville 1819 1891 New York Gordian Press Marovitz Sanford 2007 The Melville Revival In Kelley Wyn ed A Companion to Herman Melville Blackwell pp 515 531 ISBN 9780470996782 OCLC 699013659 Matthiessen F O 1966 1941 American Renaissance Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman Tenth Printing ed New York London and Toronto Oxford University Press Melville Herman 1973 Hillway Tyrus ed Mardi New Haven College and University Press ISBN 9780805772562 Melville Herman 1957 Pierre New York Grove Press OCLC 1019941646 Leviathan A Journal of Melville Studies melvillesociety org The Melville Society Archived from the original on November 2 2016 Retrieved January 1 2017 Milder Robert 1988 Herman Melville Columbia Literary History of the United States Emory Elliott General Editor New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 05812 8 Olsen Smith Steven 2015 Introduction and Chronology In Olsen Smith Steven ed Melville in His Own Time A Biographical Chronicle of His Life Drawn from Recollection Interviews and Memoirs by Family Friends and Associates Iowa City University of Iowa Press ISBN 978 1 60938 333 6 Mitgang Herbert May 12 1985 Voyaging Far and Wide in Search of Melville The New York Times Archived from the original on May 25 2012 Retrieved March 15 2011 National Book Awards 1951 National Book Foundation Archived from the original on October 28 2018 Page William 1986 The place of law and literature Vanderbilt Law Review 39 2 391 418 Parker Hershel 1988 Historical Note In Hayford Harrison Parker Hershel Tanselle G Thomas eds Moby Dick or the Whale The writings of Herman Melville Vol 6 Evanston Chicago Northwestern University Press Newberry Library ISBN 0810103249 Parker Hershel Winter 1990 Billy Budd Foretopman and the Dynamics of Canonization College Literature 1 17 1 21 32 JSTOR 25111840 Parker Hershel 1996 Herman Melville A Biography Volume I 1819 1851 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5428 6 Parker Hershel 2002 Herman Melville A Biography Volume II 1851 1891 Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 8186 2 Person Leland S 2006 Gender and sexuality In Kelley Wyn ed A Companion to Herman Melville John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781405171946 Piety Tamara R Something Fishy Or Why I Make My Students Read Fast Fish And Loose Fish PDF Vermont Law Review 29 33 33 37 39 Retrieved December 13 2014 Robertson Lorant Laurie 1996 Melville A Biography New York Clarkson Potter Publishers ISBN 978 0 517 59314 1 Rosenberg Warren 1984 Deeper than Sappho Melville poetry and the Erotic Modern Language Studies 14 1 70 78 doi 10 2307 3194508 JSTOR 3194508 Sandberg Alvin 1968 Erotic Patterns in The Paradise of Bachelors and the Tartarus of Maids Literature and Psychology 18 1 2 8 Scharnhorst Gary Spring 1983 Biographical Blindspots The Case of the Cousins Alger Biography 6 2 136 147 doi 10 1353 bio 2010 0651 JSTOR 23538983 S2CID 161222133 Scott Standard Postage Catalog Vol 1 Sidney Ohio Scott Publishing Company 2000 Scott 2094 Sealts Merton M Jr 1987 Historical Note The Piazza Tales and Other Prose Pieces 1839 1860 By Melville Herman Hayford Harrison MacDougall Alma A Tanselle G Thomas et al eds Evanston and Chicago Northwestern University Press and The Newberry Library ISBN 0810105500 Sealts Merton M Jr 1988 Melville s Reading Revised and Enlarged ed University of South Carolina Press ISBN 0872495159 Serlin David Harley 1995 The Dialogue of Gender in Melville s The Paradise of Bachelors and the Tartarus of Maids Modern Language Studies 25 2 80 87 doi 10 2307 3195291 JSTOR 3195291 Shneidman E S 1976 Some psychological reflections on the death of Malcolm Melville Suicide Life Threat Behav 6 4 231 242 doi 10 1111 j 1943 278X 1976 tb00881 x PMID 799381 S2CID 33066107 Spanos William V 2009 Herman Melville and the American Calling The Fiction After Moby Dick 1851 1857 SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 7563 8 Spark Clare L 2006 Hunting Captain Ahab Psychological Warfare and the Melville Revival Kent Ohio Kent State Univ Press ISBN 978 0873388887 Sullivan Wilson 1972 New England Men of Letters New York Atheneum ISBN 0 02 788680 8 Tick Edward August 17 1986 Melville Ashore The New York Times Archived from the original on October 5 2019 Titus David K May 1980 Herman Melville at the Albany Academy Melville Society Extracts 42 1 4 10 Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved December 3 2013 Vendler Helen 1995 Selected Poems of Herman Melville San Francisco Arion Press Wallace Robert K 2005 Douglass amp Melville Anchored Together In Neighborly Style New Bedford Massachusetts Spinner Publications Inc ISBN 978 0932027917 Wallace Robert K 1992 Melville amp Turner Spheres of Love and Fright The University of Georgia Press ISBN 0 8203 1366 1 Wallace explores the stylistic and aesthetic affinities of English landscape painter J M W Turner 1775 1851 and American novelist Herman Melville establishing Turner as a decisive influence on the creation of Melville s Moby Dick Quotation from dust jacket Weisberg Richard 1984 The Failure of the Word The Lawyer as Protagonist in Modern Fiction New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 9780300045925 OCLC 1032720496 Wilson Scott 2016 Resting Places The Burial Sites of More Than 14 000 Famous Persons 3rd Kindle ed McFarland amp Company OCLC 957437234 Wright Nathalia May 1940 Biblical Allusion in Melville s Prose American Literature 12 2 185 199 doi 10 2307 2920476 JSTOR 2920476 Wright Nathalia 1949 Melville s Use of the Bible Durham North Carolina Duke University Press Wright Nathalia September 1987 Melville and STW at Yale Studies under Stanley T Williams Melville Society Extracts 70 1 4 Archived from the original on October 24 2014 Further reading editBerthold Dennis 2012 Herman Melville Oxford Bibliographies Vol Online Oxford University Press Extensive annotated bibliography of Melville scholarship Bryant John 2021 Herman Melville A Half Known Life Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley ISBN 9781119072706 2 vols Volume I Eternal Ifs Infant Boy and Man 1819 1840 Volume II Melville at Sea 1840 1846 Duberstein Larry 1998 The Handsome Sailor Permanent Press ISBN 978 1579620073 Gale Robert L 1995 A Herman Melville Encyclopedia Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 29011 3 Garner Stanton 1993 The Civil War World of Herman Melville Lawrence University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0602 3 Johnson Bradley A 2011 The Characteristic Theology of Herman Melville Aesthetics Politics Duplicity Eugene OR Wipf and Stock ISBN 978 1 61097 341 0 Lepore Jill July 29 2019 Ahab at Home Two hundred years of Herman Melville The New Yorker pp 46 51 Article about the life and works of Herman Melville on the bicentennial of his birth in 1819 Levin Harry 1980 The Power of Blackness Hawthorne Poe Melville Athens OH Ohio University Press ISBN 9780821405819 Pardes Ilana 2008 Melville s Bibles University of California Press ISBN 9780520254541 Renker Elizabeth 1998 Strike Through the Mask Herman Melville and the Scene of Writing Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5875 8 Talley Sharon 2007 Student Companion to Herman Melville Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 33499 3 Wallace Robert K 1992 Melville amp Turner Spheres of Love and Fright The University of Georgia Press ISBN 0 8203 1366 1 Wallace explores the stylistic and aesthetic affinities of English landscape painter J M W Turner 1775 1851 and American novelist Herman Melville establishing Turner as a decisive influence on the creation of Melville s Moby Dick Quotation from dust jacket External links editHerman Melville at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Works by Herman Melville in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Herman Melville at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Herman Melville at Internet Archive Works by Herman Melville at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp The Melville Society Melville Society Extracts Archives 1969 2005 Online access to all 125 issues of the magazine Melville Electronic Library a critical archive Scholarly site hosted at Hofstra University Editions Manuscripts Sources Melville s Print Collection Adaptation biography Criticism Melville s Marginalia Online A digital archive of books that survive from Herman Melville s library with his annotations and markings Melvilliana the world and writings of Herman Melville A scholarly blog about all things Melville Arrowhead The Home of Herman Melville Obituary Notices Physical description of Melville Archived May 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine from his 1856 passport application Melville s page at Literary Journal com research articles on Melville s works Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America Collecting Herman Melville Guide to Herman Melville collection at L Tom Perry Special Collections Brigham Young University The Herman Melville Collection Archived August 1 2020 at the Wayback Machine at the Newberry Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Herman Melville amp oldid 1206499609, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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