August 1st,
2012
On
this date in 1819, Herman
Melville was born in New York City, one of eight children. His father
died when Herman was 12, forcing him to quit school and go to work to help
support his family. In 1839, Melville became a cabin boy, and sailed the South
Seas, later joining the U.S. Navy. He was shipwrecked among the Typee cannibals,
and dramatically rescued. These and other exploits inspired the fictionalized
account Typee (1846) and its
sequel, Omoo (1847). These first
two books were Melville's most popular writings during his lifetime. Moby-Dick (with its famous first line,
"Call me Ishmael," 1851), now his most celebrated work, was a literary and
financial disappointment at the time. The book is a multi-layered, allegorical
tale about whaling and one man's obsession. "I have written a wicked book and
feel as spotless as the lamb," Melville wrote his friend and neighbor Nathaniel
Hawthorne, to whom the book was dedicated. Hawthorne wrote of Melville: "He can
neither believe, nor be comfortable in his unbelief; and he is too honest and
courageous not to try to do one or the other. If he were a religious man, he
would be truly one of the most truly religious and reverential; he has a very
high and noble nature, and better worth immortality than most of us." (Quoted in
Why
Read Moby Dick?
by Nathaniel Philbrick) Melville, the prototypical struggling artist, obtained a
steady income in 1862, when he was appointed customs inspector on the New York
City docks, where he worked for many years. Raised Calvinist, Melville became a
member of the Church of All Souls (Unitarian), New York City. His writing was
full of questioning, anguished doubt, and explorations of "good and
evil." D.
1891.
—
Quote 1
from Herman Melville, "Mardi" (1849) in The
Writings of Herman Melville, Vol. 3, edited by Harrison Hayford,
Hershel Parker and G. Thomas Tanselle, 1970. Quote 2 from Moby Dick, quoted in
Why Read Moby
Dick? by Nathaniel
Philbrick.
Compiled
by Annie Laurie Gaylor
|
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
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