Herman Melville

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Herman Melville (August 1 1819 – September 28 1891) was an American novelist, essayist, and poet. Together with Nathaniel Hawthorne, Melville is one of the most important and widely read American novelists of the 19th century. During his lifetime his early novels were popular, but as Melville grew older he began to write in an increasingly psychological style, culminating in his dense, symbolic masterpiece Moby-Dick and the unfinished novella Billy Budd. Melville pushed the limits of his readers in the 19th century, and as a result he fell out of popularity and was not rediscovered until the early 1920's. Today, critics agree that Melville was the first truly modern novelist writing in English or, debatably, in any language. His late style broke compeltely with the expectation of readers in his own time and it would be decades after his death before the world would catch up with him.

Unlike his contemporary and fellow author Hawthorne, Melville was relatively uneducated. He learned about the sea from his own life experience. His great novel about life aboard a whaling vessel was born from his time sailing the seas, working as a whaler. In the words of Whitman, he was the man, he suffered, he was there. Yet, Melville was no ordinary sea-dog. In the intensity of the struggle and the beauty of his language, one discerns the two major influences on Melville's style: the soliloquys of Shakespeare and the Bible of King James. In his novels, one finds a subtle and searching philosophical mind, probing, through the allegory of the sea, the great and most enduring questions of life: How do we live? What we do know? Who shall we be?

Life

Herman Melville was born in New York City on August 1, 1819 as the third child to Allan and Maria Gansevoort Melvill (Maria would later add an 'e' to the surname), receiving his early education at Columbia Grammar and Preparatory School in Manhattan. One of his grandfathers, Major Thomas Melvill, participated in the Boston Tea Party. Another was General Peter Gansevoort who was acquainted with James Fenimore Cooper and defended Fort Stanwix in 1777. His father had described the young Melville as being somewhat slow as a child. He was also weakened by scarlet fever, permanently affecting his eyesight. The family importing business went bankrupt in 1830, so the family went to Albany, New York, with Herman entering Albany Academy. After the death of his father in 1832, the family (with eight children) moved again to the village of Lansingburgh on the Hudson River. Herman and his brother Gansevoort were forced to work to help support the family. There Herman remained until 1835, when he attended the Albany Classical School for some months.

Melville's roving disposition, and a desire to support himself independently of family assistance, led him to seek work as a surveyor on the Erie Canal. After this effort failed, his brother helped him get a job as a cabin boy on a New York vessel bound for Liverpool. He made the voyage, visited London, and returned in the same ship. Redburn: His First Voyage, published in 1849, is partly founded on the experiences on this trip. A good part of the succeeding three years, from 1837 to 1840, was occupied with school-teaching, after which he once more signed a ship's articles. On January 1, 1841, he sailed from New Bedford, Massachusetts harbor in the whaler Acushnet, bound for the Pacific Ocean and the sperm fishery. The vessel sailed around Cape Horn and traveled to the South Pacific. He has left very little direct information about the events of this eighteen months' cruise, although his whaling romance, Moby-Dick; or, the Whale, probably gives many pictures of life on board the Acushnet. Melville decided to abandon the vessel on reaching the Marquesas Islands. He lived among the natives of the island for several weeks and the narrative of Typee and its sequel, Omoo, tell this tale. After a sojourn at the Society Islands, Melville shipped out for Honolulu. There he remained for four months, employed as a clerk. He joined the crew of the American frigate United States, which reached Boston, stopping on the way at one of the Peruvian ports, in October of 1844. Upon his return, he recorded his experiences in the books, Typee, Omoo, Mardi, Redburn, and White-Jacket, published in the following six years. All of these early "adventure story" novels of Melville's were relatively well-received, and for a time Melville was a minor literary celebrity in 19th century America.

Melville married Elizabeth Shaw (daughter of noted jurist, Lemuel Shaw) on August 4, 1847. The Melvilles resided in New York City until 1850, when they purchased Arrowhead, a farm house in Pittsfield, Massachusetts which is today a museum. Here Melville remained for thirteen years, occupied with his writing, and managing his farm. While there he befriended Nathaniel Hawthorne, who lived nearby. At Arrowhead he wrote Moby Dick and Pierre, works that did not achieve the same popular and critical success of his earlier books, but which were later considered among his most profound.

While at Pittsfield, because of financial reasons, Melville was induced to enter the lecture field. From 1857 to 1860 he spoke at lycea, chiefly speaking of his adventures in the South Seas. He also became a customs inspector for the City of New York,. He loathed his work at the customs house and he desperately wanted more time to write, but financial needs pressed him and he continued on in the post for 19 years. Not having the time to compose sprawling novels like Moby-Dick, during these long years in his late life Melville primarily wrote poetry, including his moderatley populary book of war poetry Battle Pieces, and his epic religious poem Clarel. During this time he also wrote his last (and some argue, greatest) prose work, the novella Billy Budd.

In his later life, his works no longer accessible to a broad audience, he was not able to make money from writing. He depended on his wife's family for money along with his other attempts at employment. After an illness that lasted a number of months, Herman Melville died at his home in New York City early on the morning of September 28, 1891. He was interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery in The Bronx.

Literature

Moby-Dick has become Melville's most famous work and is justly considered as the great American novel. It was dedicated to Melville's friend Nathaniel Hawthorne. Melville also wrote White-Jacket, Typee, Omoo, Pierre: or, The Ambiguities, The Confidence-Man and many short stories and works of various genres. His short story "Bartleby the Scrivener" is among his most important pieces, and has been considered a precursor to Existentialist and Absurdist literature. Melville is less well known as a poet and did not publish poetry until late in life; after the Civil War, he published Battle-Pieces, which sold well. But again tending to outrun the tastes of his readers, Melville's epic length verse-narrative Clarel, about a student's pilgrimage to the Holy Land, was also quite unknown in his own time. His poetry is not as highly critically esteemed as his fiction, although a handful of poets have esteemed his poetry, including Robert Lowell.

Bartleby the Scrievener

Themes and Analysis

"Bartleby the Scrivener" is easily Melville's most famous short-story, and one of the most influential American short stories of the 19th century. The story first appeared, anonymously, in two parts in Putnam's Magazine. The first part appeared in November 1853, with the conclusion published in December of the same year. It was reprinted in Melville's The Piazza Tales in 1856 with minor textual alterations. The work is said to have been inspired, in part, by Melville's reading of Emerson. Some have pointed to specific parallels with Emerson's essay, "The Transcendentalist." The story was adapted into a movie starring Crispin Glover in 2001.

Plot Summary

The narrator of the story is an unnamed lawyer with offices on Wall Street in New York City. He describes himself as doing "a snug business among rich men's bonds and mortgages and title-deeds." He has three employees: "First, Turkey; second, Nippers; third, Ginger Nut," each of whom is described. Turkey and Nippers are copyists or scriveners while Ginger Nut does delivery work and other assorted jobs around the office. The lawyer decides his business needs a third scrivener. Bartleby responds to his advertisement and arrives at the office, "pallidly neat, pitiably respectable, incurably forlorn!"

At first Bartleby appears to be a competent worker, but later he refuses to work when requested, repeatedly uttering the phrase "I would prefer not to." He is also found to be living in the lawyer's office. Bartleby refuses to explain his behavior, and also refuses to leave when he is dismissed. The lawyer moves offices to avoid any further confrontation, and Bartleby is taken away to The Tombs—that is, the city's penitentiary. At the end of the story, Bartleby slowly starves in prison, preferring not to eat, and finally expiring just prior to a visit by the lawyer. The lawyer suspects Bartleby's conjectured previous career in the Dead Letter Office in Washington, D.C. drove him to his bizarre behavior.

Another explanation is that since Bartleby was paid per page of copied documents, that, at least in the beginning, he was unwilling to work at tasks such as checking the work for accuracy, and running errands to the post-office for his employer, since he would not be paid for these activities. This does not explain his gradual decision to stop working altogether, and his apparent total withdrawal from life, leading to his inevitable death, presumably by starvation.

Influence

"Bartleby the Scrivener" is among the most famous of American short stories. It contains elements of the grotesque, in the manner of Russian writer Nikolai Gogol from the same period. Bartleby has been considered a precursor to existentialist and absurdist literature even though at the time that this story was published it was not very popular. "Bartleby" touches on many of the themes extant in the work of Franz Kafka, particularly in The Trial and "A Hunger Artist". However, there exists nothing to indicate that the Czech writer was at all familiar with Melville, who was largely forgotten until after Kafka's death.

Albert Camus cites Melville (explicitly over Kafka) as one of his key influences in a personal letter to Liselotte Dieckmann printed in the French Review in 1998.

Pierre

Pierre is the only novel of Melville's that does not take place on a ship. Its publication was a financial disaster for Melville, and it signaled the end of his popularity and the beginning of his much more abstract later works.

Plot Summary

The novel tells the story of Pierre Glendinning, the 21-year-old heir of the manor at Saddle Meadows in upstate New York. Pierre is engaged to the blonde Lucy Tartan in a match approved by his domineering mother, who controls the estate since the death of his father, Pierre Sr. When he encounters the dark and mysterious Isabel Banford, he hears from her the claim that she is his half-sister, the illegitimate and orphaned child of his father and a European refugee. Pierre reacts to the story (and to his magnetic attraction for Isabel) by devising a remarkable scheme to preserve his father’s name, spare his mother’s grief, and give Isabel her proper share of the estate.

He announces to his mother that he is married; she promptly throws him out of the house. He and Isabel then depart for New York City, accompanied by a disgraced young woman, Delly Ulver. During their stagecoach journey, Pierre finds and reads a fragment of a treatise on “Chronometricals and Horologicals” on the differences between absolute and relative virtue by one Plotinus Plinlimmon. In the city, Pierre counts on the hospitality of his friend and cousin Glendinning Stanley, but is surprised when Glen refuses to recognize him. The trio (Pierre, Isabel, and Delly) find rooms in a former church converted to apartments, the Church of the Apostles, now populated by impecunious artists, writers, spiritualists, and philosophers, including the mysterious Plinlimmon. Pierre attempts to earn money by writing a book, encouraged by his juvenile successes as a writer.

He learns that his mother has died and has left the Saddle Meadows estate to Glen Stanley, who is now engaged to marry Lucy Tartan. Suddenly, however, Lucy shows up at the Apostles, determined to share Pierre’s life and lot, despite his apparent marriage to Isabel, and Pierre and the three women live there together as best they can, while their scant money runs out. Pierre’s writing does not go well—the darker truths he has come to recognize cannot be reconciled with the light and innocent literature the market seeks. Unable to write, he has a vision in a trance of an earth-bound stone giant Enceladus and his assault on the heavenly Mount of Titans. Beset by debts, by fears of the threats of Glen Stanley and Lucy’s brother, by the rejection of his book by its contracted publishers, by fears of his own incestuous passion for Isabel, and finally by doubts of the truth of Isabel’s story, Pierre guns down Glen Stanley at rush hour on Broadway, and is taken to jail in The Tombs. There Isabel and Lucy visit him, and Lucy dies of shock when Isabel addresses Pierre as her brother. Pierre then seizes upon the secret poison vial that Isabel carries and drinks it, and Isabel finishes the remainder, leaving three corpses as the novel ends.

Critical Reception

The novel might be described as a parody of Gothic melodrama, and it includes many elements and themes found in contemporary popular fiction. Its emotions and gestures are exaggerated, and its language is particularly dense and opaque, even for Melville. Moreover, its suggestions that virtue and vice, good and evil, are at times indistinguishable and that “young America” might harbor some deadly inherited sin leading to murderous retribution were extremely unpalatable to a contemporary audience. With the publication of this book it was suggested, even within his family, that Melville had gone somewhat mad.

This opinion was held by most critics, even during the revival of interest in the 1920s, and some critics since have concurred that the book was a mistake. Nonetheless, the work contains some of Melville’s most concentrated and accomplished writing, and it is his most direct treatment of the literary life and the process of literary creation.

Hershel Parker has argued that the passages concerning Pierre’s career as an author were added at a late stage, in response to the negative critical reception of Moby-Dick; and he has edited and published a version of the novel (the “Kraken” edition, illustrated by Maurice Sendak) that elides those parts, which he argues detract from its overall unity.

Other Melvillians, however, have found in Pierre a dark masterpiece that repays multiple re-readings by unfolding unexpected moral and philosophical depths. It was the first of Melville’s works that does not employ a first-person narration, and the relation of its narrator’s voice to Melville’s own thought is an unresolved question. The book certainly dares more than almost any other work of the nineteenth century, and it challenges the reader in ways suggestive of post-modern literature.

Moby-Dick

Main article: Moby-Dick

Billy Budd

Billy Budd, found unfinished among Melville's papers after his death, has had an ignominious editorial history, as poor transcription and misinterpretation of Melville's notes on the manuscript marred the first published editions of the text. For example, early versions gave the book's title as "Billy Budd, Foretopman," while it now seems clear that Melville intended "Billy Budd, Sailor"; some versions wrongly included a chapter that Melville had excised as a preface (the correct text has no preface); some versions fail to correct the name of the ship to Bellipotent from the Indomitable, as Melville called the boat in an earlier draft.

In 1962, Harrison Hayford and Merton M. Sealts, Jr. established what is now considered the correct text; it was published by the University of Chicago Press, and most editions printed since then follow the Hayford/Sealts text. Since the efforts of these two scholars, the full importance of Billy Budd as one of Melville's most exemplary works has begun to come to light.

Plot Summary

The plot follows Billy Budd, a seaman pressed into service aboard the HMS Bellipotent in the year 1797, when the British Navy was reeling from two major mutinies and was threatened by Napoleon's military ambitions. Billy, suffused with innocence, openness, and natural charisma, is adored by the crew, but for unexplained reasons arouses the antagonism of the ship's Master-at-Arms, John Claggart, who falsely accuses Billy of conspiracy to mutiny. When Claggart brings his charges to the Captain, the Hon. Edward Fairfax "Starry" Vere, Vere summons both Claggart and Billy to his cabin for a private confrontation. When, in Billy's and Vere's presence, Claggart makes his false charges, Billy is unable to find the words to respond, due to a speech impediment. Unable to express himself save with a blow, he lashes out seemingly involuntarily at Claggart, killing him with a single blow. Vere, an eminently thoughtful man whose name recalls the Latin words "veritas" (truth) and "vir" (man) as well as the English word "veer," then convenes a drumhead court-martial. He intervenes in the deliberations of the court-martial panel to convince them to convict Billy, despite the panel's and his belief in Billy's innocence before God. Vere claims to be following the letter of the Mutiny Act and the Articles of War, but recent scholarship suggests otherwise. At his insistence, the court-martial convicts Billy and sentences him to immediate death by hanging; Vere argues that any appearance of weakness in the officers and failure to enforce discipline could stir the already-turbulent waters of mutiny throughout the British fleet. Condemned to be hanged from the ship's yardarm at dawn the morning after the killing, Billy's final words are, "God bless Captain Vere!"

The story may have been based on events onboard USS Somers.

The novel has been adapted as a play, movie, and, famously, an opera by 20th century composer Benjamin Britten.

Interpretations

A story ultimately about good and evil, Billy Budd has often been interpreted allegorically, with Billy interpreted typologically as Christ or the Biblical Adam, with Claggart (compared to a snake several times in the text) figured as Satan. Vere is often associated with God the Father. This theory stems mainly from the characteristics attributed to each man. Billy is innocent, oft referenced to a "barbarian" or a "child," while Claggart is a representation of evil with a "depravity according to nature," a phrase Melville borrows from Plato. Vere, without a doubt the most conflicted character in the novel, is torn between his compassion for the "Handsome Sailor" and his martial adherence to the Articles of War.

Some critics have conceptualized Billy Budd as a historical novel that attempts to evaluate man's relation to the past. Harold Schechter is a professor who has written a number of books on infamous American serial killers. He has often pointed out that the author's description of Claggart could be considered to be a definition of a sociopath, although Melville was writing at a time before the word "sociopath" was used.

In her book Epistemology of the Closet, Eve Sedgwick posits that the interrelationships between Billy, Claggart and Captain Vere are representations of male homosexuality and the mechanisms of prohibition against it. She points out that Claggart's "natural depravity" which is defined as "depravity according to nature" and the accumulation of equivocal terms ("phenomenal", "mystery", etc.) used in the explanation of the fault in his character are an indication of his status as the central homosexual figure in the text. She also interprets the mutiny scare aboard the Bellipotent, the political circumstances that are at the center of the events of the story, as a portrayal of homophobia.

Thomas J. Scorza has written about the philosophical framework of the story and he understands the work as a comment on the historical feud between poets and philosophers. Melville, in this interpretation, is opposing the scientific, rational systems of thought, which Claggart's character represents, in favor of the more comprehensive poetic pursuit of knowledge embodied by Billy.

In the 1980s, Richard Weisberg of Yeshiva University's Benjamin Cardozo Law School advanced a reading of the novel based on his careful research into the history of the governing law. Based on his mining of statutory law and actual practice in the Royal Navy in the era in which the book takes place, Weisberg rejects the traditional reading of Captain Vere as a good man trapped by bad law and proposes instead that Vere deliberately distorted the applicable substantive and procedural law to bring about Billy's death. The most fully worked-out version of Weisberg's argument can be found in chapters 8 and 9 of his book The Failure of the Word: The Lawyer as Protagonist in Modern Fiction [orig. ed., 1984; expanded ed., 1989].

Bibliography

Novels

  • Typee: [1] 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 (1851)
  • Pierre: or, The Ambiguities (1852)
  • Israel Potter: His Fifty Years of Exile (1855)
  • The Confidence-Man: His Masquerade (1857)
  • Billy Budd, Sailor: An Inside Narrative (1924)


Short Stories

  • The Piazza Tales (1856)
    • "The Piazza" — the only story specifically written for the collection. (The other five had previously been published in Putnam's Monthly Magazine.)
    • "Bartleby the Scrivener" [2]
    • "Benito Cereno"
    • "The Lightning-Rod Man"
    • "The Encantadas, or Enchanted Isles"
    • "The Bell-Tower"


Poetry

  • Battle Pieces: And Aspects of the War (1866)
  • Clarel: A Poem and Pilgrimage in the Holy Land (poems) (1876)
  • John Marr and Other Sailors (1888)
  • Timoleon (1891) Online edition

Uncollected

  • Fragments from a Writing Desk, No. 1 (Published in Democratic Press, and Lansingburgh Advertiser, May 4 1839)
  • Fragments from a Writing Desk, No. 2 (Published in Democratic Press, and Lansingburgh Advertiser, May 18 1839)
  • Etchings of a Whaling Cruise (Published in New York Literary World, March 6 1847)
  • Authentic Anecdotes of "Old Zack" (Published in Yankee Doodle, II, weekly (September 4 excepted) from July 24 to September 11 1847)
  • Mr Parkman's Tour (Published in New York Literary World, March 31 1849)
  • Cooper's New Novel (Published in New York Literary World, April 28 1849)
  • A Thought on Book-Binding (Published in New York Literary World, March 16 1850)
  • Hawthorne and His Mosses (Published in New York Literary World, August 17 and August 24 1850)
  • Cock-A-Doodle-Doo! (Published in Harper's New Monthly Magazine, December 1853)
  • Poor Man's Pudding and Rich Man's Crumbs (Published in Harper's New Monthly Magazine, June 1854)
  • The Happy Failure (Published in Harper's New Monthly Magazine, July 1854)
  • The Fiddler (Published in Harper's New Monthly Magazine, September 1854)
  • The Paradise of Bachelors and the Tartarus of Maids (Published in Harper's New Monthly Magazine, April 1855)
  • Jimmy Rose (Published in Harper's New Monthly Magazine, November 1855)
  • The 'Gees (Published in Harper's New Monthly Magazine, March 1856)
  • I and My Chimney (Published in Putnam's Monthly Magazine, March 1856)
  • The Apple-Tree Table (Published in Putnam's Monthly Magazine, May 1856)
  • Uncollected Prose (1856)
  • The Two Temples (unpublished in Melville's lifetime)

External links

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