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Herman Melville [1819-1891] USA
Ranked #315 in the top 380 poets

Herman Melville was born in New York City into an established merchant family. His father died when Melville was 12. An attack  of scarlet fever in 1826 left Melville with permanently weakened eyesight. He attended Albany (N.Y.) Classical School in 1835. He left the school with a love of literature, devouring Shakespeare as well as historical, anthropological, and technical works. From the age of 12, he worked as a clerk, teacher, and farmhand. In search of adventures, he shipped out in 1839 as a cabin boy on the whaler "Achushnet". He later joined the US Navy, and started his year long voyages on ships. During these years he was a clerk and bookkeeper in a general store Typee was first published in Britain, like most of his works. Its sequel, Omoo (1847), was based on his experiences in Polynesian Islands and like its predecessor it gained a huge success. Throughout his career Melville enjoyed a rather higher estimation in Britain than in America. His older brother Gansevoort held a government position in London, and helped to launch Melville`s career. From his third book, Mardi and a Voyage Thither (1849), Melville started to experience the unpredictable turns of popular acclaim.

In 1847 Melville married Elisabeth Shaw, daughter of the chief justice of Massachusetts. After three yeas in New York, he bought a farm, "Arrowhead", near Nathaniel Hawthorne`s home at Pittsfield, Massachusetts, and became friends with him for some time. Melville had almost completed Moby-Dick when Hawthorne encouraged him to change it from a story full of details about whaling, into an allegorical novel.

Inspired by the achievement of Hawthore, Melville wrote his masterpiece, Moby-Dick. When the novel was published, it did not bring him the fame he had acquired in the 1840s.

Pierre(1852), a Gothic romance and psychological study based on the author`s childhood, was a financial and critical disaster. Melville`s stories in Putnam`s Monthly Magazine reflected the despair and the contempt for human hypocrisy and materialism. Among the stories were `The Scrivener` (1853), `The Encantadas` (1854) and Benito Cereno` (1855).

The Confidence Man (1857), Melville`s last novel, was a harsh satire of American life set on a Mississippi River steamboat. After 1857 he wrote only poetry. To recover from a breakdown, he undertook a long journey to Europe and the Holy Land. Clarel (1876), a long poem about religious crisis, was based on this trip, and reflected his  view of God. Subsequent works were privately printed and distributed among a very small circle of acquintances.

After unsuccessfull lecture tours in 1857-60, Melville lived in Washington, D.C. (1861-62). He moved to New York, where he was appointed customs inspector on the New York docks. This work secured him a regular income. Melville`s later works include Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War (1865), privately printed John Marr and the Other Sailors (1888), and Timoleon (1891). Melville`s death on September 28, 1891, in New York, was noted with only one obituary notice. His unfinished work, Billy Budd, Foretopman, remained unpublished until 1924.

Dark romanticism, Philosophy

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1608-1674
ENG
John Milton
→ influenced Herman Melville
1788-1824
ENG
George Gordon Byron
→ influenced Herman Melville
1809-1849
USA
Edgar Allan Poe
→ influenced Herman Melville
1564-1616
ENG
William Shakespeare
← influenced by Herman Melville
1911-1972
USA
Kenneth Patchen
← influenced by Herman Melville
1917-1977
USA
Robert Lowell
← influenced by Herman Melville
1926-1997
USA
Allen Ginsberg
← influenced by Herman Melville


WorkLangRating
The Martyr
eng
19
Shiloh - A Requiem
eng
17
A Utilitarian View Of The Monitor`s Fight
eng
1
Old Counsel
eng
1
Pipe Song
eng
1
The Berg
eng
1
"Formerly A Slave"
eng
0
A Dirge For McPherson
eng
0
A Meditation
eng
0
A Requiem
eng
0
America
eng
0
An Uninscribed Monument on One of the Battle-Fields of the Wilderness
eng
0
Art
eng
0
Aurora Borealis
eng
0
Ball`s Bluff: A Reverie
eng
0
Bridegroom Dick
eng
0
Chattanooga
eng
0
Commemorative Of A Naval Victory
eng
0
Crossing The Tropics
eng
0
Dirge
eng
0
Dupont’s Round Fight (November, 1861)
eng
0
Epilogue
eng
0
Far Off-Shore
eng
0
Fragments Of A Lost Gnostic Poem Of The Twelfth Century
eng
0
From The Conflict Of Convictions
eng
0
Gettysburg
eng
0
Gold
eng
0
Gold In The Mountain
eng
0
Greek Architecture
eng
0
Healed Of My Hurt
eng
0
Herba Santa
eng
0
Immolated
eng
0
In The Prison Pen
eng
0
Inscription
eng
0
Invocation
eng
0
Jack Roy
eng
0
John Marr And Other Sailors
eng
0
Lines Traced Under An Image Of Amor Threatening
eng
0
Lone Founts
eng
0
L`Envoi
eng
0
Malvern Hill
eng
0
Marlena
eng
0
Memorials On The Slain At Chickamauga
eng
0
Misgivings
eng
0
Monody
eng
0
Off Cape Colonna
eng
0
On The Grave Of A Young Cavalry Officer Killed In The Valley Of Virginia
eng
0
On The Photograph Of A Corps Commander
eng
0
On The Slain Collegians
eng
0
Pebbles
eng
0
Rebel Color-Bearers At Shiloh
eng
0
Shelley`s Vision
eng
0
Sheridan At Cedar Creek
eng
0
Song Of Yoomy
eng
0
Stonewall Jackson
eng
0
Stonewall Jackson (Ascribed To A Virginian)
eng
0
The Aeolian Harp
eng
0
The Age Of The Antonines
eng
0
The Apparition: A Retrospect
eng
0
The Bench Of Boors
eng
0
The College Colonel
eng
0
The Eagle of the Blue
eng
0
The Enthusiast
eng
0
The Enviable Isles
eng
0
The Figure-Head
eng
0
The Fortitude Of The North
eng
0
The Good Craft _Snow Bird_
eng
0
The Haglets
eng
0
The House-Top
eng
0
The Land Of Love
eng
0
The Maldive Shark
eng
0
The Man-O-War Hawk
eng
0
The March Into Viriginia
eng
0
The Marchioness Of Brinvilliers
eng
0
The Mound By The Lake
eng
0
The New Zealot To The Sun
eng
0
The Night March
eng
0
The Portent
eng
0
The Ravaged Villa
eng
0
The Released Rebel Prisoner
eng
0
The Scout Toward Aldie
eng
0
The Stone Fleet
eng
0
The Swamp Angel
eng
0
The Temeraire
eng
0
The Tuft Of Kelp
eng
0
The Victor Of Antietam
eng
0
To Ned
eng
0
To The Master Of The _Meteor_
eng
0
Tom Deadlight
eng
0
We Fish
eng
0

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