From the New York
Evening Express, March 18, 1865 (the evening
edition of the
Express, then published at 13 and 15 Park Row by James Brooks and Erastus Brooks). Found at
Fulton History.
|
New York Evening Express - March 18, 1865 |
This
is the title of the last story that Hermann Melville wrote. It was
originally published in Putnam's Magazine, and is now re-issued in a
single graceful volume by Peterson & Brothers, of Philadelphia. It
is the story of one of the Revolutionary fathers,-- Israel Potter. It is
written with a faithfulness to nature not often met with in a purely
fictitious narrative. The adventures are real enough to belong to
history, yet romantic enough to enchant us as in a fable.
The Refugee is the pirated 1865 edition of
Israel Potter (New York: G. P. Putnam & Co., 1855).
Melville disavowed it in a letter to the editor of the New York
World, published on January 28, 1876. Zachary Turpin first located Melville's epistolary "Protest" in the New York
World, as discussed in his March 2017
Leviathan article,
Melville's Letter to the World.
The Google-digitized copy of
The Refugee from Harvard is accessible online courtesy of
HathiTrust Digital Library.
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