Herman Melville
Date of Birth | : | 01 Aug, 1819 |
Date of Death | : | 28 Sep, 1891 |
Place of Birth | : | New York, United States |
Profession | : | Novelist |
Nationality | : | American |
Herman Melville was an American novelist, short-story writer, and poet, best known for his novels of the sea, including his masterpiece, Moby Dick (1851).
Heritage and youth
Melville’s heritage and youthful experiences were perhaps crucial in forming the conflicts underlying his artistic vision. He was the third child of Allan and Maria Gansevoort Melvill, in a family that was to grow to four boys and four girls. His forebears had been among the Scottish and Dutch settlers of New York and had taken leading roles in the American Revolution and in the fiercely competitive commercial and political life of the new country. One grandfather, Maj. Thomas Melvill, was a member of the Boston Tea Party in 1773 and was subsequently a New York importer. The other, Gen. Peter Gansevoort, was a friend of James Fenimore Cooper and famous for leading the defense of Fort Stanwix, in upstate New York, against the British.
In 1826 Allan Melvill wrote of his son as being “backward in speech and somewhat slow in comprehension . . . of a docile and amiable disposition.” In that same year, scarlet fever left the boy with permanently weakened eyesight, but he attended Male High School. When the family import business collapsed in 1830, the family returned to Albany, where Herman enrolled briefly in Albany Academy. Allan Melvill died in 1832, leaving his family in desperate straits. The eldest son, Gansevoort, assumed responsibility for the family and took over his father’s felt and fur business. Herman joined him after two years as a bank clerk and some months working on the farm of his uncle, Thomas Melvill, in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. About this time, Herman’s branch of the family altered the spelling of its name. Though finances were precarious, Herman attended Albany Classical School in 1835 and became an active member of a local debating society. A teaching job in Pittsfield made him unhappy, however, and after three months he returned to Albany.
Quotes
He knows himself, and all that's in him, who knows adversity.
It is better to fail in originality, than to succeed in imitation. He who has never failed somewhere, that man can not be great. Failure is the true test of greatness.
The Past is the textbook of tyrants; the Future is the Bible of the Free.
He who has never failed somewhere, that man can not be great.
The sweetest joys of life grow in the very jaws of its perils.
Time is made up of various ages; and each thinks its own a novelty.
Truth uncompromisingly told will always have its ragged edges.
You know nothing till you know all; which is the reason we never know any thing.
I am a man who, from his youth upwards, has been filled with a profound conviction that the easiest way of life is the best.
A thing may be incredible and still be true; sometimes it is incredible because it is true.