Ask
most critics and scholars to name THE
Great American Novel and a fist fight will break out between the champions
of Huckleberry
Finn on one hand and Moby Dick on the other. Both are widely read and appreciated today. Mark
Twain’s novel was an immediate critical and popular success. Herman
Melville’s, alas, was not.
On
November 14, 1851 Moby-Dick; or The Whale was published in New York by Harper and Brothers.
It sank like the Pequod.
Melville was then a 32 year old writer and former
sailor. He had been writing sea tales,
encouraged by his friends including another novelist, Nathaniel Hawthorne for some time.
Drawing on his own experiences on a Nantucket
whaler, and two actual events, Melville had been working furiously on the
manuscript for some time hoping to match the success of his earlier novels Typee and Omoo. In 1820 the whaler Essex was rammed and sunk by a huge sperm whale. The surviving First Mate had written a popular
account of the incident and the survival of just eight men of the crew. The second were reoccurring reports of an
enormous white bull sperm whale named Mocha
Dick because he was frequently spotted off of the Chilean island of Mocha. The whale was covered
in harpoons and lines, evidence that it had survived many brushes with
hunters.
Melville
wove rich detail of whaling lore, rousing adventure, and deep religious
symbolism into his massive novel. He
dreamed that its success would support his wife and children. He was off to a good start when a prestigious
London publisher, Richard Bentley picked up the book. But Bentley feared that his readers would
recoil at the violence and gore of the story.
His three volume edition published as The Whale was expurgated
and left out the critical epilogue,
without which the plot made no sense. The
London critics were brutal.
The
single volume American edition was
published only a few weeks later, but American critics and readers waited to
see the reaction in Britain. The English
notices poisoned the American reaction.
Championed
by Hawthorne and a few others, the book survived past hand to hand by a couple
of generations of literary bohemians while
it was forgotten by mainstream readers and the general public. Disappointed and heartbroken, Melville
struggled on for decades before dying in 1891 at the age of 71 in almost total
obscurity. After his death Harper
republished Typee, Omoo, and Moby Dick causing a minor stir
among some serious readers.
But it was not until 1921 when Raymond Weaver’s critical biography, Herman Melville: Man, Mariner and Mystic was published did Melville begin to receive
serious attention. In 1924 his novella Billy Budd, which Melville had
never been able to place, was finally published. It was a sensation. Publishers rushed to reissue Melville’s
work. His earlier novels had at least a
minor reputation, but no one expected much for his dense, 650 page whaling
epic. But now critics were ready to look
at it with fresh, awe struck eyes.
Among the literary heavy weights who extolled
Melville in the 1920’s were Carl Van Doren, D. H. Lawrence, and Lewis Mumford. By 1945 the Melville Society was formed to provide a forum for scholarly
investigation of the writer’s work.
In
the 1950’s John Huston’s film
starring Gregory Peck as Captain Ahab and several inexpensive
paperback editions of the novel helped make Moby
Dick a popular as well as highbrow success.
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