Capturing a sperm whale by Scott Norsworthy
Re-presenting the animated 1823 description by Henry J. Pickering aka "Thomas H. Bennett"
Read on Substack
Capturing a sperm whale by Scott Norsworthy
Re-presenting the animated 1823 description by Henry J. Pickering aka "Thomas H. Bennett"
Read on Substack
This item is reprinted on page 498 in Herman Melville: The Contemporary Reviews, edited by Brian Higgins and Hershel Parker (Cambridge University Press, 1995; paperback 2009).
The Confidence Man His Masquerade By Herman Melville New York, Dix, Edwards & Co. For sale by M O Hall.
Mr Melville is a writer of no ordinary talent. His former works were read with an interest that sharpened the appetite for almost anything his pen might indite. Though the "Confidence Man" is a book exhibiting close observations of human nature and a judicious and careful estimate of human virtues and frailties, we cannot accord to it the interest possessed by his less pretentious stories. It differs materially in manner from his other books, and lacks in geniality. Its philosophy is of a character that perhaps calls for too much exertion to fully enjoy, and the agents used in presenting it are of a class that seem to forbid an acquaintance.--
However, many would regard the book more favorably, and undoubtedly award to it high praise.
-- Newburyport, Massachusetts Daily Herald, April 22, 1857; now accessible with newly added titles on NewspaperArchive.
Also available in Digital Archives of the Newburyport Public Library:
The Newburyport Daily Herald was then edited by George J. L. Colby and Joseph B. Morss. According to his obituary in the Boston Globe (December 1, 1890), Colby once was employed "in the Salem custom house with Nathaniel Hawthorne." The 1890 obit identifies Colby as "principal editorial writer" for the Daily Herald "down to 1869."
The Piazza Tales. By Herman Melville. New York Dix & Edwards. For sale by Moulton & Clark.
Mr Melville is a writer who never fails in giving his readers a good entertainment. In the present instance he has given us a series of magical sketches, which bear the marks of a skilful pencil. Among the pleasant characters in this group, the two first are most pleasing to us; and particularly do we admire that of Bartleby, so incomprehensibly mysterious, and so indefatigable in his attachments. The old Conveyancer has our gratitude for his forbearance, which so fully developed the characteristics of the scriviner. We know of no pleasanter way of spending a few hours, than in devoting them to a perusal of The Piazza Tales.
-- Newburyport MA Daily Herald, June 2, 1856.
By "characters" the reviewer means something like "sketches," taking the word character in the old fashioned sense of
An account, description, or representation of any thing, exhibiting its qualities and the circumstances affecting it. -- Webster's American Dictionary of the English Language.
The "old Conveyancer" is the narrator of Bartleby, the "elderly" lawyer employed in better days as "a conveyancer and title hunter, and drawer-up of recondite documents of all sorts."