Author Topic: The True-Life Horror That Inspired Moby-Dick  (Read 418 times)

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The True-Life Horror That Inspired Moby-Dick
« on: January 02, 2018, 04:35:15 pm »

The True-Life Horror That Inspired Moby-Dick
The whaler Essex was indeed sunk by a whale—and that’s only the beginning
By Gilbert King
smithsonian.com
March 1, 2013
 

In July of 1852, a 32-year-old novelist named Herman Melville had high hopes for his new novel, Moby-Dick; or, The Whale, despite the book’s mixed reviews and tepid sales. That month he took a steamer to Nantucket for his first visit to the Massachusetts island, home port of his novel’s mythic protagonist, Captain Ahab, and his ship, the Pequod. Like a tourist, Melville met local dignitaries, dined out and took in the sights of the village he had previously only imagined.
 

And on his last day on Nantucket he met the broken-down 60-year-old man who had captained the Essex, the ship that had been attacked and sunk by a sperm whale in an 1820 incident that had inspired Melville’s novel. Captain George Pollard Jr. was just 29 years old when the Essex went down, and he survived and returned to Nantucket to captain a second whaling ship, Two Brothers. But when that ship wrecked on a coral reef two years later, the captain was marked as unlucky at sea—a “Jonah”—and no owner would trust a ship to him again. Pollard lived out his remaining years on land, as the village night watchman.

Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-true-life-horror-that-inspired-moby-dick-17576/#5fGG0o5x6JXTCPgu.99