The August 13, 1852 letter was reprinted in the 1929 New England Quarterly article by S. E. Morison, Melville's "Agatha" letter to Hawthorne. Early, essential scholarship in print also includes the 1946 article in ELH by Harrison Hayford on The Significance of Melville's "Agatha" Letters; and Patricia Lacy's 1956 essay in The University of Texas Studies in English on The Agatha Theme in Melville's Stories. Some landmarks of more recent scholarship are the Historical Note by Merton Sealts in the Northwestern-Newberry edition of Melville's Piazza Tales and Other Prose Pieces, 1839-1860; the 1990 article in American Literature by Hershel Parker, Herman Melville's The Isle of the Cross: A Survey and a Chronology; and the 1991 re-examination by Basem L. Ra'ad, "The Encantadas" and "The Isle of the Cross": Melvillean Dubieties, 1853-54.
In print, transcripts of all three "Agatha" letters are available in the 1993 Northwestern-Newberry edition of Melville's Correspondence. Online, transcribed with other of Melville's Letters to Hawthorne at the venerable Life and Works of Herman Melville website.
The second of Melville's three "Agatha" letters has survived in the Berg Collection at The New York Public Library. Dated October 25, 1852, this letter is digitized and available online From The New York Public Library Digital Collections.
From The New York Public Library Digital Collections |
Herman Melville, letter to Nathaniel Hawthorne - October 25, 1852 From The New York Public Library Digital Collections |
Herman Melville, letter to Nathaniel Hawthorne - October 25, 1852 From The New York Public Library Digital Collections |
Herman Melville, letter to Nathaniel Hawthorne - October 25, 1852 From The New York Public Library Digital Collections |
Herman Melville, letter to Nathaniel Hawthorne - October 25, 1852 From The New York Public Library Digital Collections |
Introducing the undated letter (which must have been written between the 3rd and 13th of December 1852), Julian Hawthorne reports that Melville personally told him, "it was a tragic story, and that Hawthorne had not seemed to take to it."
From The New York Public Library Digital Collections |
The "third" letter to which you refer is also at Houghton Library at Harvard University.
ReplyDeleteHarvard has the original now? Or do you mean the copy from Julian Hawthorne's book, as described in the Container List?
Delete(174) Melville, Herman, 1819-1891. Ms.L.(copy) to Nathaniel Hawthorne; [n.p., 1853][2]p. Copied from Julian Hawthorne 's Nathaniel Hawthorne and his wife, v.l, p. 475.
http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou00338