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Clarel - Part I (of IV) - "Art is the objectification of feeling" - cover

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Clarel - Part I (of IV) - "Art is the objectification of feeling"

Herman Melville

Verlag: Portable Poetry

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Beschreibung

Part I – (of IV) Jerusalem 
BY A SPONTANEOUS ACT, NOT VERY LONG AGO, MY KINSMAN, THE LATE PETER GANESEVOORT, OF ALBANY. N. Y., IN A PERSONAL INTERVIEW PROVIDED FOR THE PUBLICATION OF THIS POEM, KNOWN TO HIM BY REPORT, AS EXISTING IN MANUSCRIPT.  
JUSTLY AND AFFECTIONATELY THE PRINTED BOOK IS INSCRIBED IN HIS NAME 
 
Herman Melville was born in New York City on August 1st, 1819, the third of eight children. 
At the age of 7 Melville contracted scarlet fever which was to permanently diminish his eyesight. 
At this time Melville was described as being "very backwards in speech and somewhat slow in comprehension." 
His father died when he was 12 leaving the family in very straitened times. Just 14 Melville took a job in a bank paying $150 a year that he obtained via his uncle, Peter Gansevoort, who was one of the directors of the New York State Bank. 
After a failed stint as a surveyor he signed on to go to sea and travelled across the Atlantic to Liverpool and then on further voyages to the Pacific on adventures which would soon become the architecture of his novels.  Whilst travelling he joined a mutiny, was jailed, fell in love with a South Pacific beauty and became known as a figure of opposition to the coercion of native Hawaiians to the Christian religion. 
He drew from these experiences in his books Typee, Omoo, and White-Jacket. These were published as novels, the first initially in London in 1846. 
By 1851 his masterpiece, Moby Dick, was ready to be published.  It is perhaps, and certainly at the time, one of the most ambitious novels ever written.   However, it never sold out its initial print run of 3,000 and Melville’s earnings on this masterpiece were a mere $556.37. 
In succeeding years his reputation waned and he found life increasingly difficult.  His family was growing, now four children, and a stable income was essential. 
With his finances in a disappointing state Melville took the advice of friends that a change in career was called for.  For many others public lecturing had proved very rewarding.  From late 1857 to 1860, Melville embarked upon three lecture tours, where he spoke mainly on Roman statuary and sightseeing in Rome. 
In 1876 he was at last able to publish privately his 16,000 line epic poem Clarel. It was to no avail.  The book had an initial printing of 350 copies, but sales failed miserably. 
On December 31st, 1885 Melville was at last able to retire.  His wife had inherited several small legacies and provide them with a reasonable income. 
Herman Melville, novelist, poet, short story writer and essayist, died at his home on September 28rh 1891 from cardiovascular disease. 
 
Index of Contents 
Part I - Jerusalem 
Canto I - The Hostel 
Canto II - Abdon 
Canto III - The Sepulchre 
Canto IV - Of the Crusaders 
Canto V - Clarel 
Canto VI - Tribes and Sects 
Canto VII - Beyond the Walls 
Canto VIII - The Votary 
Canto IX - Saint and Student 
Canto X - Rambles 
Canto XI - Lower Gihon 
Canto XII - Celio 
Canto XIII - The Arch 
Canto XIV - In the Glen 
Canto XV - Under the Minaret 
Canto XVI - The Wall of the Wail 
Canto XVII - Nathan 
Canto XVIII - Night 
Canto XIX - The Fulfillment 
Canto XX - Vale of Ashes 
Canto XXI - By Places 
Canto XXII - Hermitage 
Canto XXIII - The Close 
Canto XXIV - The Gibe 
Canto XXV - Huts 
Canto XXVI - The Gate of Zion 
Canto XXVII - Matron and Maid 
Canto XXVIII - Tomb and Fountain 
Canto XXIX - The Recluse 
Canto XXX - The Site of the Passion 
Canto XXXI - Rolfe 
Canto XXXII - Of Rama 
Canto XXXIII - By the Stone 
Canto XXXIV - The Tarry 
Canto XXXV - Arculf and Adamnan 
Canto XXXVI - The Tower 
Canto XXXVII - A Sketch 
Canto XXXVIII - The Sparrow 
Canto XXXIX - Clarel and Ruth 
Canto XL - The Mounds 
Canto XLI - On the Wall 
Canto XLII - Tidings 
Canto XLIII - A Procession 
Canto XLIV - The Start 
Herman Melville – A Short Biography 
Herman Melville – A Concise Bibliography
Verfügbar seit: 12.03.2018.

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