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Herman Melville
- Language
- EN
- Format
- EPUB
- Size
- 773 KB
Description
Herman Melville's life and literary output are examined through the lens of Lewis Mumford, who offers a detailed biography of the American author. Born in 1819 and passing in 1891, Melville was a prolific writer whose works include the renowned novel Moby-Dick. The biography emphasizes Melville's personal experiences, ideas, and emotional landscape, drawing upon his letters, notebooks, and family recollections to construct a comprehensive account of his life. Mumford's analysis situates Melville within the context of 19th-century American literature and provides interpretations of his major works, particularly focusing on the themes and visions expressed therein.
Published in 1929, this work contributed to the revival of interest in Melville's writings during the early 20th century. It plays a significant role in reaffirming Melville's literary importance and explores connections between his works and subsequent literary developments. The biography also notes the gaps in Melville's personal history while highlighting the richness of his ideas and creative insights.
Published in 1929, this work contributed to the revival of interest in Melville's writings during the early 20th century. It plays a significant role in reaffirming Melville's literary importance and explores connections between his works and subsequent literary developments. The biography also notes the gaps in Melville's personal history while highlighting the richness of his ideas and creative insights.
From the opening pages
own writings, including his letters, some of which are still unpublished, and his notebooks. There are occasional blank spaces in Melville’s history, but the record is singularly complete in that part of Melville which most matters: his ideas, his feelings, his urges, his vision of life. I have verified and corrected these data by the use of every available piece of independent evidence; and I must express my hearty thanks to Mrs. Frances Thomas, Melville’s surviving daughter, for answering my written questions, and to his granddaughter, Mrs. Eleanor Melville Metcalf, for giving me the benefit of her own memories and family tradition, as well as her courtesy and hospitality in placing at my disposal Melville’s manuscripts. I am likewise indebted to Miss Caroline W. Stewart, an old friend of the Melville family, for her impressions of the Melville household during the later period of his life. These pages could not have been written without Mr. Raymond Weaver’s pioneer work on Melville. Mr. Weaver not merely brought to light much important data and cleared up relationships that concerned Melville’s objective life: he also, through Mrs. Metcalf, discovered Melville’s unpublished manuscripts and included them in a definitive edition of his work. For this, he has placed every admirer of Melville in his debt. In addition to acknowledging this great service, I must thank him for the scholarly generosity with which he gave me the benefit of his intimate knowledge of Melville’s remains, and his copies of Melville’s notebooks. Mr. Weaver’s generosity is equalled only by that of Dr. Henry A. Murray, Jr., who shared with me his knowledge of certain Melville letters otherwise inaccessible—an act of pure chivalry, since Dr. Murray is himself at work on a biography of Herman Melville. Such deeds sweeten one’s notions of human conduct: they give one not so much a feeling of gratitude as a renewed sense of human dignity, and I warmly place them on record. In describing Melville’s experience and his state of mind, I have taken the liberty of using his own language wherever possible; and I have done this so freely that, except where I have quoted whole passages, I have omitted quotation marks. In condensing and paraphrasing the notebooks of Melville’s travels, I have usually employed Melville’s own words; for it would be a vain biographer who did not make full
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