NOTE.
INTRODUCTION
By
Arthur StedmanOF
the trinity of American authors whose births made the year 1819 a
notable one in our literary history,—Lowell, Whitman, and
Melville,—it is interesting to observe that the two latter were
both descended, on the fathers’ and mothers’ sides respectively,
from have families of British New England and Dutch New York
extraction. Whitman and Van Velsor, Melville and Gansevoort, were the
several combinations which produced these men; and it is easy to
trace in the life and character of each author the qualities derived
from his joint ancestry. Here, however, the resemblance ceases, for
Whitman’s forebears, while worthy country people of good descent,
were not prominent in public or private life. Melville, on the other
hand, was of distinctly patrician birth, his paternal and maternal
grandfathers having been leading characters in the Revolutionary War;
their descendants still maintaining a dignified social position.Allan
Melville, great-grandfather of Herman Melville, removed from Scotland
to America in 1748, and established himself as a merchant in Boston.
His son, Major Thomas Melville, was a leader in the famous ‘Boston
Tea Party’ of 1773 and afterwards became an officer in the
Continental Army. He is reported to have been a Conservative in all
matters except his opposition to unjust taxation, and he wore the
old-fashioned cocked hat and knee-breeches until his death, in 1832,
thus becoming the original of Doctor Holmes’s poem, ‘The Last
Leaf’. Major Melville’s son Allan, the father of Herman, was an
importing merchant,—first in Boston, and later in New York. He was
a man of much culture, and was an extensive traveller for his time.
He married Maria Gansevoort, daughter of General Peter Gansevoort,
best known as ‘the hero of Fort Stanwix.’ This fort was situated
on the present site of Rome, N.Y.; and there Gansevoort, with a small
body of men, held in check reinforcements on their way to join
Burgoyne, until the disastrous ending of the latter’s campaign of
1777 was insured. The Gansevoorts, it should be said, were at that
time and subsequently residents of Albany, N.Y.Herman
Melville was born in New York on August 1,1819, and received his
early education in that city. There he imbibed his first love of
adventure, listening, as he says in ‘Redburn,’ while his father
‘of winter evenings, by the well-remembered sea-coal fire in old
Greenwich Street, used to tell my brother and me of the monstrous
waves at sea, mountain high, of the masts bending like twigs, and all
about Havre and Liverpool.’ The death of his father in reduced
circumstances necessitated the removal of his mother and the family
of eight brothers and sisters to the village of Lansingburg, on the
Hudson River. There Herman remained until 1835, when he attended the
Albany Classical School for some months. Dr. Charles E. West, the
well-known Brooklyn educator, was then in charge of the school, and
remembers the lad’s deftness in English composition, and his
struggles with mathematics.The
following year was passed at Pittsfield, Mass., where he engaged in
work on his uncle’s farm, long known as the ‘Van Schaack place.’
This uncle was Thomas Melville, president of the Berkshire
Agricultural Society, and a successful gentleman farmer.Herman’s
roving disposition, and a desire to support himself independently of
family assistance, soon led him to ship as cabin boy in a New York
vessel bound for Liverpool. He made the voyage, visited London, and
returned in the same ship. ‘Redburn: His First Voyage,’ published
in 1849, is partly founded on the experiences of this trip, which was
undertaken with the full consent of his relatives, and which seems to
have satisfied his nautical ambition for a time. As told in the book,
Melville met with more than the usual hardships of a sailor-boy’s
first venture. It does not seem difficult in ‘Redburn’ to
separate the author’s actual experiences from those invented by
him, this being the case in some of his other writings.A
good part of the succeeding three years, from 1837 to 1840, was
occupied with school-teaching. While so engaged at Greenbush, now
East Albany, N.Y., he received the munificent salary of ‘six
dollars a quarter and board.’ He taught for one term at Pittsfield,
Mass., ‘boarding around’ with the families of his pupils, in true
American fashion, and easily suppressing, on one memorable occasion,
the efforts of his larger scholars to inaugurate a rebellion by
physical force.I
fancy that it was the reading of Richard Henry Dana’s ‘Two Years
Before the Mast’ which revived the spirit of adventure in
Melville’s breast. That book was published in 1840, and was at once
talked of everywhere. Melville must have read it at the time, mindful
of his own experience as a sailor. At any rate, he once more signed a
ship’s articles, and on January 1, 1841, sailed from New Bedford
harbour in the whaler Acushnet, bound for the Pacific Ocean and the
sperm fishery. He has left very little direct information as to the
events of this eighteen months’ cruise, although his whaling
romance, ‘Moby Dick; or, the Whale,’ probably gives many pictures
of life on board the Acushnet. In the present volume he confines
himself to a general account of the captain’s bad treatment of the
crew, and of his non-fulfilment of agreements. Under these
considerations, Melville decided to abandon the vessel on reaching
the Marquesas Islands; and the narrative of ‘Typee’ begins at
this point. However, he always recognised the immense influence the
voyage had had upon his career, and in regard to its results has said
in ‘Moby Dick,’—
‘If
I shall ever deserve any real repute in that small but high hushed
world which I might not be unreasonably ambitious of; if hereafter I
shall do anything that on the whole a man might rather have done than
to have left undone... then here I prospectively ascribe all the
honour and the glory to whaling; for a whale-ship was my Yale College
and my Harvard.’The
record, then, of Melville’s escape from the Dolly, otherwise the
Acushnet, the sojourn of his companion Toby and himself in the Typee
Valley on the island of Nukuheva, Toby’s mysterious disappearance,
and Melville’s own escape, is fully given in the succeeding pages;
and rash indeed would he be who would enter into a descriptive
contest with these inimitable pictures of aboriginal life in the
‘Happy Valley.’ So great an interest has always centred in the
character of Toby, whose actual existence has been questioned, that I
am glad to be able to declare him an authentic personage, by name
Richard T. Greene. He was enabled to discover himself again to Mr.
Melville through the publication of the present volume, and their
acquaintance was renewed, lasting for quite a long period. I have
seen his portrait,—a rare old daguerrotype,—and some of his
letters to our author. One of his children was named for the latter,
but Mr. Melville lost trace of him in recent years.With
the author’s rescue from what Dr. T. M. Coan has styled his
‘anxious paradise,’ ‘Typee’ ends, and its sequel, ‘Omoo,’
begins. Here, again, it seems wisest to leave the remaining
adventures in the South Seas to the reader’s own discovery, simply
stating that, after a sojourn at the Society Islands, Melville
shipped for Honolulu. There he remained for four months, employed as
a clerk. He joined the crew of the American frigate United States,
which reached Boston, stopping on the way at one of the Peruvian
ports, in October of 1844. Once more was a narrative of his
experiences to be preserved in ‘White Jacket; or, the World in a
Man-of-War.’ Thus, of Melville’s four most important books,
three, ‘Typee,’ ‘Omoo,’ and ‘White-Jacket,’ are directly
auto biographical, and ‘Moby Dick’ is partially so; while the
less important ‘Redburn’ is between the two classes in this
respect. Melville’s other prose works, as will be shown, were, with
some exceptions, unsuccessful efforts at creative romance.Whether
our author entered on his whaling adventures in the South Seas with a
determination to make them available for literary purposes, may never
be certainly known. There was no such elaborate announcement or
advance preparation as in some later cases. I am inclined to believe
that the literary prospect was an after-thought, and that this
insured a freshness and enthusiasm of style not otherwise to be
attained. Returning to his mother’s home at Lansingburg, Melville
soon began the writing of ‘Typee,’ which was completed by the
autumn of 1845. Shortly after this his older brother, Gansevoort
Melville, sailed for England as secretary of legation to Ambassador
McLane, and the manuscript was intrusted to Gansevoort for submission
to John Murray. Its immediate acceptance and publication followed in
1846. ‘Typee’ was dedicated to Chief Justice Lemuel Shaw of
Massachusetts, an old friendship between the author’s family and
that of Justice Shaw having been renewed about this time. Mr.
Melville became engaged to Miss Elizabeth Shaw, the only daughter of
the Chief Justice, and their marriage followed on August 4, 1847, in
Boston.The
wanderings of our nautical Othello were thus brought to a conclusion.
Mr. and Mrs. Melville resided in New York City until 1850, when they
purchased a farmhouse at Pittsfield, their farm adjoining that
formerly owned by Mr. Melville’s uncle, which had been inherited by
the latter’s son. The new place was named ‘Arrow Head,’ from
the numerous Indian antiquities found in the neighbourhood. The house
was so situated as to command an uninterrupted view of Greylock
Mountain and the adjacent hills. Here Melville remained for thirteen
years, occupied with his writing, and managing his farm. An article
in Putnam’s Monthly entitled ‘I and My Chimney,’ another called
‘October Mountain,’ and the introduction to the ‘Piazza Tales,’
present faithful pictures of Arrow Head and its surroundings. In a
letter to Nathaniel Hawthorne, given in ‘Nathaniel Hawthorne and
His Wife,’ his daily life is set forth. The letter is dated June 1,
1851.
‘Since
you have been here I have been building some shanties of houses
(connected with the old one), and likewise some shanties of chapters
and essays. I have been ploughing and sowing and raising and printing
and praying, and now begin to come out upon a less bristling time,
and to enjoy the calm prospect of things from a fair piazza at the
north of the old farmhouse here. Not entirely yet, though, am I
without something to be urgent with. The ‘Whale’ is only half
through the press; for, wearied with the long delays of the printers,
and disgusted with the heat and dust of the Babylonish brick-kiln of
New York, I came back to the country to feel the grass, and end the
book reclining on it, if I may.’Mr.
Hawthorne, who was then living in the red cottage at Lenox, had a
week at Arrow Head with his daughter Una the previous spring. It is
recorded that the friends ‘spent most of the time in the barn,
bathing in the early spring sunshine, which streamed through the open
doors, and talking philosophy.’ According to Mr. J. E. A. Smith’s
volume on the Berkshire Hills, these gentlemen, both reserved in
nature, though near neighbours and often in the same company, were
inclined to be shy of each other, partly, perhaps, through the
knowledge that Melville had written a very appreciative review of
‘Mosses from an Old Manse’ for the New York Literary World,
edited by their mutual friends, the Duyckincks. ‘But one day,’
writes Mr. Smith, ‘it chanced that when they were out on a picnic
excursion, the two were compelled by a thundershower to take shelter
in a narrow recess of the rocks of Monument Mountain. Two hours of
this enforced intercourse settled the matter. They learned so much of
each other’s character,... that the most intimate friendship for
the future was inevitable.’ A passage in Hawthorne’s ‘Wonder
Book’ is noteworthy as describing the number of literary neighbours
in Berkshire:—
‘For
my part, I wish I had Pegasus here at this moment,’ said the
student. ‘I would mount him forthwith, and gallop about the country
within a circumference of a few miles, making literary calls on my
brother authors. Dr. Dewey would be within ray reach, at the foot of
the Taconic. In Stockbridge, yonder, is Mr. James [G. P. R. James],
conspicuous to all the world on his mountain-pile of history and
romance. Longfellow, I believe, is not yet at the Oxbow, else the
winged horse would neigh at him. But here in Lenox I should find our
most truthful novelist [Miss Sedgwick], who has made the scenery and
life of Berkshire all her own. On the hither side of Pittsfield sits
Herman Melville, shaping out the gigantic conception of his ‘White
Whale,’ while the gigantic shadow of Greylock looms upon him from
his study window. Another bound of my flying steed would bring me to
the door of Holmes, whom I mention last, because Pegasus would
certainly unseat me the next minute, and claim the poet as his
rider.’While
at Pittsfield, Mr. Melville was induced to enter the lecture field.
From 1857 to 1860 he filled many engagements in the lyceums, chiefly
speaking of his adventures in the South Seas. He lectured in cities
as widely apart as Montreal, Chicago, Baltimore, and San Francisco,
sailing to the last-named place in 1860, by way of Cape Horn, on the
Meteor, commanded, by his younger brother, Captain Thomas Melville,
afterward governor of the ‘Sailor’s Snug Harbor’ at Staten
Island, N.Y. Besides his voyage to San Francisco, he had, in 1849 and
1856, visited England, the Continent, and the Holy Land, partly to
superintend the publication of English editions of his works, and
partly for recreation.A
pronounced feature of Melville’s character was his unwillingness to
speak of himself, his adventures, or his writings in conversation. He
was, however, able to overcome this reluctance on the lecture
platform. Our author’s tendency to philosophical discussion is
strikingly set forth in a letter from Dr. Titus Munson Coan to the
latter’s mother, written while a student at Williams College over
thirty years ago, and fortunately preserved by her. Dr. Coan enjoyed
the friendship and confidence of Mr. Melville during most of his
residence in New York. The letter reads:—
‘I
have made my first literary pilgrimage, a call upon Herman Melville,
the renowned author of ‘Typee,’ etc. He lives in a spacious
farmhouse about two miles from Pittsfield, a weary walk through the
dust. But it as well repaid. I introduced myself as a
Hawaiian-American, and soon found myself in full tide of talk, or
rather of monologue. But he would not repeat the experiences of which
I had been reading with rapture in his books. In vain I sought to
hear of Typee and those paradise islands, but he preferred to pour
forth his philosophy and his theories of life. The shade of Aristotle
arose like a cold mist between myself and Fayaway. We have quite
enough of deep philosophy at Williams College, and I confess I was
disappointed in this trend of the talk. But what a talk it was!
Melville is transformed from a Marquesan to a gypsy student, the
gypsy element still remaining strong within him. And this
contradiction gives him the air of one who has suffered from
opposition, both literary and social. With his liberal views, he is
apparently considered by the good people of Pittsfield as little
better than a cannibal or a ‘beach-comber.’ His attitude seemed
to me something like that of Ishmael; but perhaps I judged hastily. I
managed to draw him out very freely on everything but the Marquesas
Islands, and when I left him he was in full tide of discourse on all
things sacred and profane. But he seems to put away the objective
side of his life, and to shut himself up in this cold north as a
cloistered thinker.’I
have been told by Dr. Coan that his father, the Rev. Titus Coan, of
the Hawaiian Islands, personally visited the Marquesas group, found
the Typee Valley, and verified in all respects the statements made in
‘Typee.’ It is known that Mr. Melville from early manhood
indulged deeply in philosophical studies, and his fondness for
discussing such matters is pointed out by Hawthorne also, in the
‘English Note Books.’ This habit increased as he advanced in
years, if possible.The
chief event of the residence in Pittsfield was the completion and
publication of ‘Moby Dick; or, the Whale,’ in 1851. How many
young men have been drawn to sea by this book is a question of
interest. Meeting with Mr. Charles Henry Webb (‘John Paul’) the
day after Mr. Melville’s death, I asked him if he were not familiar
with that author’s writings. He replied that ‘Moby Dick’ was
responsible for his three years of life before the mast when a lad,
and added that while ‘gamming’ on board another vessel he had
once fallen in with a member of the boat’s crew which rescued
Melville from his friendly imprisonment among the Typees.While
at Pittsfield, besides his own family, Mr. Melville’s mother and
sisters resided with him. As his four children grew up he found it
necessary to obtain for them better facilities for study than the
village school afforded; and so, several years after, the household
was broken up, and he removed with his wife and children to the New
York house that was afterwards his home. This house belonged to his
brother Allan, and was exchanged for the estate at Pittsfield. In
December, 1866, he was appointed by Mr. H. A. Smyth, a former
travelling companion in Europe, a district officer in the New York
Custom House. He held the position until 1886, preferring it to
in-door clerical work, and then resigned, the duties becoming too
arduous for his failing strength.In
addition to his philosophical studies, Mr. Melville was much
interested in all matters relating to the fine arts, and devoted most
of his leisure hours to the two subjects. A notable collection of
etchings and engravings from the old masters was gradually made by
him, those from Claude’s paintings being a specialty. After he
retired from the Custom House, his tall, stalwart figure could be
seen almost daily tramping through the Fort George district or
Central Park, his roving inclination leading him to obtain as much
out-door life as possible. His evenings were spent at home with his
books, his pictures, and his family, and usually with them alone;
for, in spite of the melodramatic declarations of various English
gentlemen, Melville’s seclusion in his latter years, and in fact
throughout his life, was a matter of personal choice. More and more,
as he grew older, he avoided every action on his part, and on the
part of his family, that might tend to keep his name and writings
before the public. A few friends felt at liberty to visit the
recluse, and were kindly welcomed, but he himself sought no one. His
favorite companions were his grandchildren, with whom he delighted to
pass his time, and his devoted wife, who was a constant assistant and
adviser in his literary work, chiefly done at this period for his own
amusement. To her he addressed his last little poem, the touching
‘Return of the Sire de Nesle.’ Various efforts were made by the
New York literary colony to draw him from his retirement, but without
success. It has been suggested that he might have accepted a magazine
editorship, but this is doubtful, as he could not bear business
details or routine work of any sort. His brother Allan was a New York
lawyer, and until his death, in 1872, managed Melville’s affairs
with ability, particularly the literary accounts.During
these later years he took great pleasure in a friendly correspondence
with Mr. W. Clark Russell. Mr. Russell had taken many occasions to
mention Melville’s sea-tales, his interest in them, and his
indebtedness to them. The latter felt impelled to write Mr. Russell
in regard to one of his newly published novels, and received in
answer the following letter:July
21, 1886.MY
DEAR Mr. MELVILLE, Your letter has given me a very great and singular
pleasure. Your delightful books carry the imagination into a maritime
period so remote that, often as you have been in my mind, I could
never satisfy myself that you were still amongst the living. I am
glad, indeed, to learn from Mr. Toft that you are still hale and
hearty, and I do most heartily wish you many years yet of health and
vigour.Your
books I have in the American edition. I have ‘Typee, ‘Omoo,’
‘Redburn,’ and that noble piece ‘Moby Dick.’ These are all I
have been able to obtain. There have been many editions of your works
in this country, particularly the lovely South Sea sketches; but the
editions are not equal to those of the American publishers. Your
reputation here is very great. It is hard to meet a man whose opinion
as a reader is worth leaving who does not speak of your works in such
terms as he might hesitate to employ, with all his patriotism, toward
many renowned English writers.Dana
is, indeed, great. There is nothing in literature more remarkable
than the impression produced by Dana’s portraiture of the homely
inner life of a little brig’s forecastle.I
beg that you will accept my thanks for the kindly spirit in which you
have read my books. I wish it were in my power to cross the Atlantic,
for you assuredly would be the first whom it would be my happiness to
visit.The
condition of my right hand obliges me to dictate this to my son; but
painful as it is to me to hold a pen, I cannot suffer this letter to
reach the hands of a man of so admirable genitis as Herman Melville
without begging him to believe me to be, with my own hand, his most
respectful and hearty admirer, W. Clark Russell.It
should be noted here that Melville’s increased reputation in
England at the period of this letter was chiefly owing to a series of
articles on his work written by Mr. Russell. I am sorry to say that
few English papers made more than a passing reference to Melville’s
death. The American press discussed his life and work in numerous and
lengthy reviews. At the same time, there always has been a steady
sale of his books in England, and some of them never have been out of
print in that country since the publication of ‘Typee.’ One
result of this friendship between the two authors was the dedication
of new volumes to each other in highly complimentary terms—Mr.
Melville’s ‘John Marr and Other Sailors,’ of which twenty-five
copies only were printed, on the one hand, and Mr. Russell’s ‘An
Ocean Tragedy,’ on the other, of which many thousand have been
printed, not to mention unnumbered pirated copies.Beside
Hawthorne, Mr. Richard Henry Stoddard, of American writers, specially
knew and appreciated Herman Melville. Mr. Stoddard was connected with
the New York dock department at the time of Mr. Melville’s
appointment to a custom-house position, and they at once became
acquainted. For a good many years, during the period in which our
author remained in seclusion, much that appeared in print in America
concerning Melville came from the pen of Mr. Stoddard. Nevertheless,
the sailor author’s presence in New York was well known to the
literary guild. He was invited to join in all new movements, but as
often felt obliged to excuse himself from doing so. The present
writer lived for some time within a short distance of his house, but
found no opportunity to meet him until it became necessary to obtain
his portrait for an anthology in course of publication. The interview
was brief, and the interviewer could not help feeling although
treated with pleasant courtesy, that more important matters were in
hand than the perpetuation of a romancer’s countenance to future
generations; but a friendly family acquaintance grew up from the
incident, and will remain an abiding memory.Mr.
Melville died at his home in New York City early on the morning of
September 28, 1891. His serious illness had lasted a number of
months, so that the end came as a release. True to his ruling
passion, philosophy had claimed him to the last, a set of
Schopenhauer’s works receiving his attention when able to study;
but this was varied with readings in the ‘Mermaid Series’ of old
plays, in which he took much pleasure. His library, in addition to
numerous works on philosophy and the fine arts, was composed of
standard books of all classes, including, of course, a proportion of
nautical literature. Especially interesting are fifteen or twenty
first editions of Hawthorne’s books inscribed to Mr. and Mrs.
Melville by the author and his wife.The
immediate acceptance of ‘Typee’ by John Murray was followed by an
arrangement with the London agent of an American publisher, for its
simultaneous publication in the United States. I understand that
Murray did not then publish fiction. At any rate, the book was
accepted by him on the assurance of Gansevoort Melville that it
contained nothing not actually experienced by his brother. Murray
brought it out early in 1846, in his Colonial and Home Library, as ‘A
Narrative of a Four Months’ Residence among the Natives of a Valley
of the Marquesas Islands; or, a Peep at Polynesian Life,’ or, more
briefly, ‘Melville’s Marquesas Islands.’ It was issued in
America with the author’s own title, ‘Typee,’ and in the
outward shape of a work of fiction. Mr. Melville found himself famous
at once. Many discussions were carried on as to the genuineness of
the author’s name and the reality of the events portrayed, but
English and American critics alike recognised the book’s importance
as a contribution to literature.Melville,
in a letter to Hawthorne, speaks of himself as having no development
at all until his twenty-fifth year, the time of his return from the
Pacific; but surely the process of development must have been well
advanced to permit of so virile and artistic a creation as ‘Typee.’
While the narrative does not always run smoothly, yet the style for
the most part is graceful and alluring, so that we pass from one
scene of Pacific enchantment to another quite oblivious of the vast
amount of descriptive detail which is being poured out upon us. It is
the varying fortune of the hero which engrosses our attention. We
follow his adventures with breathless interest, or luxuriate with him
in the leafy bowers of the ‘Happy Valley,’ surrounded by joyous
children of nature. When all is ended, we then for the first time
realise that we know these people and their ways as if we too had
dwelt among them.I
do not believe that ‘Typee’ will ever lose its position as a
classic of American Literature. The pioneer in South Sea romance—for
the mechanical descriptions of earlier voyagers are not worthy of
comparison—this book has as yet met with no superior, even in
French literature; nor has it met with a rival in any other language
than the French. The character of ‘Fayaway,’ and, no less,
William S. Mayo’s ‘Kaloolah,’ the enchanting dreams of many a
youthful heart, will retain their charm; and this in spite of endless
variations by modern explorers in the same domain. A faint type of
both characters may be found in the Surinam Yarico of Captain John
Gabriel Stedman, whose ‘Narrative of a Five Years’ Expedition’
appeared in 1796.
‘Typee,’
as written, contained passages reflecting with considerable severity
on the methods pursued by missionaries in the South Seas. The
manuscript was printed in a complete form in England, and created
much discussion on this account, Melville being accused of
bitterness; but he asserted his lack of prejudice. The passages
referred to were omitted in the first and all subsequent American
editions. They have been restored in the present issue, which is
complete save for a few paragraphs excluded by written direction of
the author. I have, with the consent of his family, changed the long
and cumbersome sub-title of the book, calling it a ‘Real-Romance of
the South Seas,’ as best expressing its nature.The
success of his first volume encouraged Melville to proceed in his
work, and ‘Omoo,’ the sequel to ‘Typee,’ appeared in England
and America in 1847. Here we leave, for the most part, the dreamy
pictures of island life, and find ourselves sharing the extremely
realistic discomforts of a Sydney whaler in the early forties. The
rebellious crew’s experiences in the Society Islands are quite as
realistic as events on board ship and very entertaining, while the
whimsical character, Dr. Long Ghost, next to Captain Ahab in ‘Moby
Dick,’ is Melville’s most striking delineation. The errors of the
South Sea missions are pointed out with even more force than in
‘Typee,’ and it is a fact that both these books have ever since
been of the greatest value to outgoing missionaries on account of the
exact information contained in them with respect to the islanders.Melville’s
power in describing and investing with romance scenes and incidents
witnessed and participated in by himself, and his frequent failure of
success as an inventor of characters and situations, were early
pointed out by his critics. More recently Mr. Henry S. Salt has drawn
the same distinction very carefully in an excellent article
contributed to the Scottish Art Review. In a prefatory note to
‘Mardi’ (1849), Melville declares that, as his former books have
been received as romance instead of reality, he will now try his hand
at pure fiction. ‘Mardi’ may be called a splendid failure. It
must have been soon after the completion of ‘Omoo’ that Melville
began to study the writings of Sir Thomas Browne. Heretofore our
author’s style was rough in places, but marvellously simple and
direct. ‘Mardi’ is burdened with an over-rich diction, which
Melville never entirely outgrew. The scene of this romance, which
opens well, is laid in the South Seas, but everything soon becomes
overdrawn and fantastical, and the thread of the story loses itself
in a mystical allegory.
‘Redburn,’
already mentioned, succeeded ‘Mardi’ in the same year, and was a
partial return to the author’s earlier style. In ‘White-Jacket;
or, the World in a Man-of-War’ (1850), Melville almost regained it.
This book has no equal as a picture of life aboard a sailing
man-of-war, the lights and shadows of naval existence being well
contrasted.With
‘Moby Dick; or, the Whale’ (1851), Melville reached the topmost
notch of his fame. The book represents, to a certain extent, the
conflict between the author’s earlier and later methods of
composition, but the gigantic conception of the ‘White Whale,’ as
Hawthorne expressed it, permeates the whole work, and lifts it bodily
into the highest domain of romance. ‘Moby Dick’ contains an
immense amount of information concerning the habits of the whale and
the methods of its capture, but this is characteristically introduced
in a way not to interfere with the narrative. The chapter entitled
‘Stubb Kills a Whale’ ranks with the choicest examples of
descriptive literature.
‘Moby
Dick’ appeared, and Melville enjoyed to the full the enhanced
reputation it brought him. He did not, however, take warning from
‘Mardi,’ but allowed himself to plunge more deeply into the sea
of philosophy and fantasy.
‘Pierre;
or, the Ambiguities’ (1852) was published, and there ensued a long
series of hostile criticisms, ending with a severe, though impartial,
article by Fitz-James O’Brien in Putnam’s Monthly. About the same
time the whole stock of the author’s books was destroyed by fire,
keeping them out of print at a critical moment; and public interest,
which until then had been on the increase, gradually began to
diminish.After
this Mr. Melville contributed several short stories to Putnam’s
Monthly and Harper’s Magazine. Those in the former periodical were
collected in a volume as Piazza Tales (1856); and of these ‘Benito
Cereno’ and ‘The Bell Tower’ are equal to his best previous
efforts.
‘Israel
Potter: His Fifty Years of Exile’ (1855), first printed as a serial
in Putnam’s, is an historical romance of the American Revolution,
based on the hero’s own account of his adventures, as given in a
little volume picked up by Mr. Melville at a book-stall. The story is
well told, but the book is hardly worthy of the author of ‘Typee.’
‘The Confidence Man’ (1857), his last serious effort in prose
fiction, does not seem to require criticism.Mr.
Melville’s pen had rested for nearly ten years, when it was again
taken up to celebrate the events of the Civil War. ‘Battle Pieces
and Aspects of the War’ appeared in 1866. Most of these poems
originated, according to the author, in an impulse imparted by the
fall of Richmond; but they have as subjects all the chief incidents
of the struggle. The best of them are ‘The Stone Fleet,’ ‘In
the Prison Pen,’ ‘The College Colonel,’ ‘The March to the
Sea,’ ‘Running the Batteries,’ and ‘Sheridan at Cedar Creek.’
Some of these had a wide circulation in the press, and were preserved
in various anthologies. ‘Clarel, a Poem and Pilgrimage in the Holy
Land’ (1876), is a long mystical poem requiring, as some one has
said, a dictionary, a cyclopaedia, and a copy of the Bible for its
elucidation. In the two privately printed volumes, the arrangement of
which occupied Mr. Melville during his last illness, there are
several fine lyrics. The titles of these books are, ‘John Marr and
Other Sailors’ (1888), and ‘Timoleon’ (1891).There
is no question that Mr. Melville’s absorption in philosophical
studies was quite as responsible as the failure of his later books
for his cessation from literary productiveness. That he sometimes
realised the situation will be seen by a passage in ‘Moby Dick’:—
‘Didn’t
I tell you so?’ said Flask. ‘Yes, you’ll soon see this right
whale’s head hoisted up opposite that parmacetti’s.’
‘In
good time Flask’s saying proved true. As before, the Pequod steeply
leaned over towards the sperm whale’s head, now, by the
counterpoise of both heads, she regained her own keel, though sorely
strained, you may well believe. So, when on one side you hoist in
Locke’s head, you go over that way; but now, on the other side,
hoist in Kant’s and you come back again; but in very poor plight.
Thus, some minds forever keep trimming boat. Oh, ye foolish! throw
all these thunderheads overboard, and then you will float right and
light.’Mr.
Melville would have been more than mortal if he had been indifferent
to his loss of popularity. Yet he seemed contented to preserve an
entirely independent attitude, and to trust to the verdict of the
future. The smallest amount of activity would have kept him before
the public; but his reserve would not permit this. That reinstatement
of his reputation cannot be doubted.In
the editing of this reissue of ‘Melville’s Works,’ I have been
much indebted to the scholarly aid of Dr. Titus Munson Coan, whose
familiarity with the languages of the Pacific has enabled me to
harmonise the spelling of foreign words in ‘Typee’ and ‘Omoo,’
though without changing the phonetic method of printing adopted by
Mr. Melville. Dr. Coan has also been most helpful with suggestions in
other directions. Finally, the delicate fancy of La Fargehas
supplemented the immortal pen-portrait of the Typee maiden with a
speaking impersonation of her beauty.
CHAPTER ONE
THE
SEA—LONGINGS FOR SHORE—A LAND-SICK SHIP—DESTINATION OF THE
VOYAGERS—THE MARQUESAS—ADVENTURE OF A MISSIONARY’S WIFE AMONG
THE SAVAGES—CHARACTERISTIC ANECDOTE OF THE QUEEN OF NUKUHEVASix
months at sea! Yes, reader, as I live, six months out of sight of
land; cruising after the sperm-whale beneath the scorching sun of the
Line, and tossed on the billows of the wide-rolling Pacific—the sky
above, the sea around, and nothing else! Weeks and weeks ago our
fresh provisions were all exhausted. There is not a sweet potato
left; not a single yam. Those glorious bunches of bananas, which once
decorated our stern and quarter-deck, have, alas, disappeared! and
the delicious oranges which hung suspended from our tops and
stays—they, too, are gone! Yes, they are all departed, and there is
nothing left us but salt-horse and sea-biscuit. Oh! ye state-room
sailors, who make so much ado about a fourteen-days’ passage across
the Atlantic; who so pathetically relate the privations and hardships
of the sea, where, after a day of breakfasting, lunching, dining off
five courses, chatting, playing whist, and drinking champagne-punch,
it was your hard lot to be shut up in little cabinets of mahogany and
maple, and sleep for ten hours, with nothing to disturb you but
‘those good-for-nothing tars, shouting and tramping overhead’,—what
would ye say to our six months out of sight of land?Oh!
for a refreshing glimpse of one blade of grass—for a snuff at the
fragrance of a handful of the loamy earth! Is there nothing fresh
around us? Is there no green thing to be seen? Yes, the inside of our
bulwarks is painted green; but what a vile and sickly hue it is, as
if nothing bearing even the semblance of verdure could flourish this
weary way from land. Even the bark that once clung to the wood we use
for fuel has been gnawed off and devoured by the captain’s pig; and
so long ago, too, that the pig himself has in turn been devoured.There
is but one solitary tenant in the chicken-coop, once a gay and dapper
young cock, bearing him so bravely among the coy hens.But
look at him now; there he stands, moping all the day long on that
everlasting one leg of his. He turns with disgust from the mouldy
corn before him, and the brackish water in his little trough. He
mourns no doubt his lost companions, literally snatched from him one
by one, and never seen again. But his days of mourning will be few
for Mungo, our black cook, told me yesterday that the word had at
last gone forth, and poor Pedro’s fate was sealed. His attenuated
body will be laid out upon the captain’s table next Sunday, and
long before night will be buried with all the usual ceremonies
beneath that worthy individual’s vest. Who would believe that there
could be any one so cruel as to long for the decapitation of the
luckless Pedro; yet the sailors pray every minute, selfish fellows,
that the miserable fowl may be brought to his end. They say the
captain will never point the ship for the land so long as he has in
anticipation a mess of fresh meat. This unhappy bird can alone
furnish it; and when he is once devoured, the captain will come to
his senses. I wish thee no harm, Pedro; but as thou art doomed,
sooner or later, to meet the fate of all thy race; and if putting a
period to thy existence is to be the signal for our deliverance,
why—truth to speak—I wish thy throat cut this very moment; for,
oh! how I wish to see the living earth again! The old ship herself
longs to look out upon the land from her hawse-holes once more, and
Jack Lewis said right the other day when the captain found fault with
his steering.
‘Why
d’ye see, Captain Vangs,’ says bold Jack, ‘I’m as good a
helmsman as ever put hand to spoke; but none of us can steer the old
lady now. We can’t keep her full and bye, sir; watch her ever so
close, she will fall off and then, sir, when I put the helm down so
gently, and try like to coax her to the work, she won’t take it
kindly, but will fall round off again; and it’s all because she
knows the land is under the lee, sir, and she won’t go any more to
windward.’ Aye, and why should she, Jack? didn’t every one of her
stout timbers grow on shore, and hasn’t she sensibilities; as well
as we?Poor
old ship! Her very looks denote her desires! how deplorably she
appears! The paint on her sides, burnt up by the scorching sun, is
puffed out and cracked. See the weeds she trails along with her, and
what an unsightly bunch of those horrid barnacles has formed about
her stern-piece; and every time she rises on a sea, she shows her
copper torn away, or hanging in jagged strips.Poor
old ship! I say again: for six months she has been rolling and
pitching about, never for one moment at rest. But courage, old lass,
I hope to see thee soon within a biscuit’s toss of the merry land,
riding snugly at anchor in some green cove, and sheltered from the
boisterous winds.. . . . . .
‘Hurra,
my lads! It’s a settled thing; next week we shape our course to the
Marquesas!’ The Marquesas! What strange visions of outlandish
things does the very name spirit up! Naked houris—cannibal
banquets—groves of cocoanut—coral reefs—tattooed chiefs—and
bamboo temples; sunny valleys planted with bread-fruit-trees—carved
canoes dancing on the flashing blue waters—savage woodlands guarded
by horrible idols—HEATHENISH RITES AND HUMAN SACRIFICES.Such
were the strangely jumbled anticipations that haunted me during our
passage from the cruising ground. I felt an irresistible curiosity to
see those islands which the olden voyagers had so glowingly
described.The
group for which we were now steering (although among the earliest of
European discoveries in the South Seas, having been first visited in
the year 1595) still continues to be tenanted by beings as strange
and barbarous as ever. The missionaries sent on a heavenly errand,
had sailed by their lovely shores, and had abandoned them to their
idols of wood and stone. How interesting the circumstances under
which they were discovered! In the watery path of Mendanna, cruising
in quest of some region of gold, these isles had sprung up like a
scene of enchantment, and for a moment the Spaniard believed his
bright dream was realized.In
honour of the Marquess de Mendoza, then viceroy of Peru—under whose
auspices the navigator sailed—he bestowed upon them the name which
denoted the rank of his patron, and gave to the world on his return a
vague and magnificent account of their beauty. But these islands,
undisturbed for years, relapsed into their previous obscurity; and it
is only recently that anything has been known concerning them. Once
in the course of a half century, to be sure, some adventurous rover
would break in upon their peaceful repose, and astonished at the
unusual scene, would be almost tempted to claim the merit of a new
discovery.Of
this interesting group, but little account has ever been given, if we
except the slight mention made of them in the sketches of South-Sea
voyages. Cook, in his repeated circumnavigations of the globe, barely
touched at their shores; and all that we know about them is from a
few general narratives.Among
these, there are two that claim particular notice. Porter’s
‘Journal of the Cruise of the U.S. frigate Essex, in the Pacific,
during the late War’, is said to contain some interesting
particulars concerning the islanders. This is a work, however, which
I have never happened to meet with; and Stewart, the chaplain of the
American sloop of war Vincennes, has likewise devoted a portion of
his book, entitled ‘A Visit to the South Seas’, to the same
subject.Within
the last few, years American and English vessels engaged in the
extensive whale fisheries of the Pacific have occasionally, when
short of provisions, put into the commodious harbour which there is
in one of the islands; but a fear of the natives, founded on the
recollection of the dreadful fate which many white men have received
at their hands, has deterred their crews from intermixing with the
population sufficiently to gain any insight into their peculiar
customs and manners.The
Protestant Missions appear to have despaired of reclaiming these
islands from heathenism. The usage they have in every case received
from the natives has been such as to intimidate the boldest of their
number. Ellis, in his ‘Polynesian Researches’, gives some
interesting accounts of the abortive attempts made by the ‘’Tahiti
Mission’’ to establish a branch Mission upon certain islands of
the group. A short time before my visit to the Marquesas, a somewhat
amusing incident took place in connection with these efforts, which I
cannot avoid relating.An
intrepid missionary, undaunted by the ill-success that had attended
all previous endeavours to conciliate the savages, and believing much
in the efficacy of female influence, introduced among them his young
and beautiful wife, the first white woman who had ever visited their
shores. The islanders at first gazed in mute admiration at so unusual
a prodigy, and seemed inclined to regard it as some new divinity. But
after a short time, becoming familiar with its charming aspect, and
jealous of the folds which encircled its form, they sought to pierce
the sacred veil of calico in which it was enshrined, and in the
gratification of their curiosity so far overstepped the limits of
good breeding, as deeply to offend the lady’s sense of decorum. Her
sex once ascertained, their idolatry was changed into contempt and
there was no end to the contumely showered upon her by the savages,
who were exasperated at the deception which they conceived had been
practised upon them. To the horror of her affectionate spouse, she
was stripped of her garments, and given to understand that she could
no longer carry on her deceits with impunity. The gentle dame was not
sufficiently evangelical to endure this, and, fearful of further
improprieties, she forced her husband to relinquish his undertaking,
and together they returned to Tahiti.Not
thus shy of exhibiting her charms was the Island Queen herself, the
beauteous wife of Movianna, the king of Nukuheva. Between two and
three years after the adventures recorded in this volume, I chanced,
while aboard of a man-of-war to touch at these islands. The French
had then held possession of the Marquesas some time, and already
prided themselves upon the beneficial effects of their jurisdiction,
as discernible in the deportment of the natives. To be sure, in one
of their efforts at reform they had slaughtered about a hundred and
fifty of them at Whitihoo—but let that pass. At the time I mention,
the French squadron was rendezvousing in the bay of Nukuheva, and
during an interview between one of their captains and our worthy
Commodore, it was suggested by the former, that we, as the flag-ship
of the American squadron, should receive, in state, a visit from the
royal pair. The French officer likewise represented, with evident
satisfaction, that under their tuition the king and queen had imbibed
proper notions of their elevated station, and on all ceremonious
occasions conducted themselves with suitable dignity. Accordingly,
preparations were made to give their majesties a reception on board
in a style corresponding with their rank.One
bright afternoon, a gig, gaily bedizened with streamers, was observed
to shove off from the side of one of the French frigates, and pull
directly for our gangway. In the stern sheets reclined Mowanna and
his consort. As they approached, we paid them all the honours due to
royalty;—manning our yards, firing a salute, and making a
prodigious hubbub.They
ascended the accommodation ladder, were greeted by the Commodore, hat
in hand, and passing along the quarter-deck, the marine guard
presented arms, while the band struck up ‘The King of the Cannibal
Islands’. So far all went well. The French officers grimaced and
smiled in exceedingly high spirits, wonderfully pleased with the
discreet manner in which these distinguished personages behaved
themselves.Their
appearance was certainly calculated to produce an effect. His majesty
was arrayed in a magnificent military uniform, stiff with gold lace
and embroidery, while his shaven crown was concealed by a huge
chapeau bras, waving with ostrich plumes. There was one slight
blemish, however, in his appearance. A broad patch of tattooing
stretched completely across his face, in a line with his eyes, making
him look as if he wore a huge pair of goggles; and royalty in goggles
suggested some ludicrous ideas. But it was in the adornment of the
fair person of his dark-complexioned spouse that the tailors of the
fleet had evinced the gaiety of their national taste. She was habited
in a gaudy tissue of scarlet cloth, trimmed with yellow silk, which,
descending a little below the knees, exposed to view her bare legs,
embellished with spiral tattooing, and somewhat resembling two
miniature Trajan’s columns. Upon her head was a fanciful turban of
purple velvet, figured with silver sprigs, and surmounted by a tuft
of variegated feathers.The
ship’s company, crowding into the gangway to view the sight, soon
arrested her majesty’s attention. She singled out from their number
an old salt, whose bare arms and feet, and exposed breast, were
covered with as many inscriptions in India ink as the lid of an
Egyptian sarcophagus. Notwithstanding all the sly hints and
remonstrances of the French officers, she immediately approached the
man, and pulling further open the bosom of his duck frock, and
rolling up the leg of his wide trousers, she gazed with admiration at
the bright blue and vermilion pricking thus disclosed to view. She
hung over the fellow, caressing him, and expressing her delight in a
variety of wild exclamations and gestures. The embarrassment of the
polite Gauls at such an unlooked-for occurrence may be easily
imagined, but picture their consternation, when all at once the royal
lady, eager to display the hieroglyphics on her own sweet form, bent
forward for a moment, and turning sharply round, threw up the skirt
of her mantle and revealed a sight from which the aghast Frenchmen
retreated precipitately, and tumbling into their boats, fled the
scene of so shocking a catastrophe.
CHAPTER TWO
PASSAGE FROM THE CRUISING GROUND TO THE MARQUESAS—SLEEPY
TIMES ABOARD SHIP—SOUTH SEA SCENERY—LAND HO—THE FRENCH SQUADRON
DISCOVERED AT ANCHOR IN THE BAY OF NUKUHEVA—STRANGE PILOT—ESCORT OF
CANOES—A FLOTILLA OF COCOANUTS—SWIMMING VISITORS—THE DOLLY BOARDED
BY THEM—STATE OF AFFAIRS THAT ENSUE
I CAN never forget the eighteen
or twenty days during which the light trade-winds were silently
sweeping us towards the islands. In pursuit of the sperm whale, we
had been cruising on the line some twenty degrees to the westward
of the Gallipagos; and all that we had to do, when our course was
determined on, was to square in the yards and keep the vessel
before the breeze, and then the good ship and the steady gale did
the rest between them. The man at the wheel never vexed the old
lady with any superfluous steering, but comfortably adjusting his
limbs at the tiller, would doze away by the hour. True to her work,
the Dolly headed to her course, and like one of those characters
who always do best when let alone, she jogged on her way like a
veteran old sea-pacer as she was.
What a delightful, lazy,
languid time we had whilst we were thus gliding along! There was
nothing to be done; a circumstance that happily suited our
disinclination to do anything. We abandoned the fore-peak
altogether, and spreading an awning over the forecastle, slept,
ate, and lounged under it the live-long day. Every one seemed to be
under the influence of some narcotic. Even the officers aft, whose
duty required them never to be seated while keeping a deck watch,
vainly endeavoured to keep on their pins; and were obliged
invariably to compromise the matter by leaning up against the
bulwarks, and gazing abstractedly over the side. Reading was out of
the question; take a book in your hand, and you were asleep in an
instant.
Although I could not avoid
yielding in a great measure to the general languor, still at times
I contrived to shake off the spell, and to appreciate the beauty of
the scene around me. The sky presented a clear expanse of the most
delicate blue, except along the skirts of the horizon, where you
might see a thin drapery of pale clouds which never varied their
form or colour. The long, measured, dirge-like well of the Pacific
came rolling along, with its surface broken by little tiny waves,
sparkling in the sunshine. Every now and then a shoal of flying
fish, scared from the water under the bows, would leap into the
air, and fall the next moment like a shower of silver into the sea.
Then you would see the superb albicore, with his glittering sides,
sailing aloft, and often describing an arc in his descent,
disappear on the surface of the water. Far off, the lofty jet of
the whale might be seen, and nearer at hand the prowling shark,
that villainous footpad of the seas, would come skulking along,
and, at a wary distance, regard us with his evil eye. At times,
some shapeless monster of the deep, floating on the surface, would,
as we approached, sink slowly into the blue waters, and fade away
from the sight. But the most impressive feature of the scene was
the almost unbroken silence that reigned over sky and water.
Scarcely a sound could be heard but the occasional breathing of the
grampus, and the rippling at the cut-water.
As we drew nearer the land, I
hailed with delight the appearance of innumerable sea-fowl.
Screaming and whirling in spiral tracks, they would accompany the
vessel, and at times alight on our yards and stays. That
piratical-looking fellow, appropriately named the
man-of-war’s-hawk, with his blood-red bill and raven plumage, would
come sweeping round us in gradually diminishing circles, till you
could distinctly mark the strange flashings of his eye; and then,
as if satisfied with his observation, would sail up into the air
and disappear from the view. Soon, other evidences of our vicinity
to the land were apparent, and it was not long before the glad
announcement of its being in sight was heard from aloft,—given with
that peculiar prolongation of sound that a sailor loves—‘Land
ho!’
The captain, darting on deck
from the cabin, bawled lustily for his spy-glass; the mate in still
louder accents hailed the masthead with a tremendous ‘where-away?’
The black cook thrust his woolly head from the galley, and
Boatswain, the dog, leaped up between the knight-heads, and barked
most furiously. Land ho! Aye, there it was. A hardly perceptible
blue irregular outline, indicating the bold contour of the lofty
heights of Nukuheva.
This island, although generally
called one of the Marquesas, is by some navigators considered as
forming one of a distinct cluster, comprising the islands of
Ruhooka, Ropo, and Nukuheva; upon which three the appellation of
the Washington Group has been bestowed. They form a triangle, and
lie within the parallels of 8 degrees 38” and 9 degrees 32” South
latitude and 139 degrees 20” and 140 degrees 10” West longitude
from Greenwich. With how little propriety they are to be regarded
as forming a separate group will be at once apparent, when it is
considered that they lie in the immediate vicinity of the other
islands, that is to say, less than a degree to the northwest of
them; that their inhabitants speak the Marquesan dialect, and that
their laws, religion, and general customs are identical. The only
reason why they were ever thus arbitrarily distinguished may be
attributed to the singular fact, that their existence was
altogether unknown to the world until the year 1791, when they were
discovered by Captain Ingraham, of Boston, Massachusetts, nearly
two centuries after the discovery of the adjacent islands by the
agent of the Spanish Viceroy. Notwithstanding this, I shall follow
the example of most voyagers, and treat of them as forming part and
parcel of Marquesas.
Nukuheva is the most important
of these islands, being the only one at which ships are much in the
habit of touching, and is celebrated as being the place where the
adventurous Captain Porter refitted his ships during the late war
between England and the United States, and whence he sallied out
upon the large whaling fleet then sailing under the enemy’s flag in
the surrounding seas. This island is about twenty miles in length
and nearly as many in breadth. It has three good harbours on its
coast; the largest and best of which is called by the people living
in its vicinity ‘Taiohae’, and by Captain Porter was denominated
Massachusetts Bay. Among the adverse tribes dwelling about the
shores of the other bays, and by all voyagers, it is generally
known by the name bestowed upon the island itself—Nukuheva. Its
inhabitants have become somewhat corrupted, owing to their recent
commerce with Europeans, but so far as regards their peculiar
customs and general mode of life, they retain their original
primitive character, remaining very nearly in the same state of
nature in which they were first beheld by white men. The hostile
clans, residing in the more remote sections of the island, and very
seldom holding any communication with foreigners, are in every
respect unchanged from their earliest known condition.
In the bay of Nukuheva was the
anchorage we desired to reach. We had perceived the loom of the
mountains about sunset; so that after running all night with a very
light breeze, we found ourselves close in with the island the next
morning, but as the bay we sought lay on its farther side, we were
obliged to sail some distance along the shore, catching, as we
proceeded, short glimpses of blooming valleys, deep glens,
waterfalls, and waving groves hidden here and there by projecting
and rocky headlands, every moment opening to the view some new and
startling scene of beauty.
Those who for the first time
visit the South Sea, generally are surprised at the appearance of
the islands when beheld from the sea. From the vague accounts we
sometimes have of their beauty, many people are apt to picture to
themselves enamelled and softly swelling plains, shaded over with
delicious groves, and watered by purling brooks, and the entire
country but little elevated above the surrounding ocean. The
reality is very different; bold rock-bound coasts, with the surf
beating high against the lofty cliffs, and broken here and there
into deep inlets, which open to the view thickly-wooded valleys,
separated by the spurs of mountains clothed with tufted grass, and
sweeping down towards the sea from an elevated and furrowed
interior, form the principal features of these islands.
Towards noon we drew abreast
the entrance go the harbour, and at last we slowly swept by the
intervening promontory, and entered the bay of Nukuheva. No
description can do justice to its beauty; but that beauty was lost
to me then, and I saw nothing but the tri-coloured flag of France
trailing over the stern of six vessels, whose black hulls and
bristling broadsides proclaimed their warlike character. There they
were, floating in that lovely bay, the green eminences of the shore
looking down so tranquilly upon them, as if rebuking the sternness
of their aspect. To my eye nothing could be more out of keeping
than the presence of these vessels; but we soon learnt what brought
them there. The whole group of islands had just been taken
possession of by Rear-Admiral Du Petit Thouars, in the name of the
invincible French nation.
This item of information was
imparted to us by a most extraordinary individual, a genuine
South-Sea vagabond, who came alongside of us in a whale-boat as
soon as we entered the bay, and, by the aid of some benevolent
persons at the gangway, was assisted on board, for our visitor was
in that interesting stage of intoxication when a man is amiable and
helpless. Although he was utterly unable to stand erect or to
navigate his body across the deck, he still magnanimously proffered
his services to pilot the ship to a good and secure anchorage. Our
captain, however, rather distrusted his ability in this respect,
and refused to recognize his claim to the character he assumed; but
our gentleman was determined to play his part, for, by dint of much
scrambling, he succeeded in getting into the weather-quarter boat,
where he steadied himself by holding on to a shroud, and then
commenced issuing his commands with amazing volubility and very
peculiar gestures. Of course no one obeyed his orders; but as it
was impossible to quiet him, we swept by the ships of the squadron
with this strange fellow performing his antics in full view of all
the French officers.
We afterwards learned that our
eccentric friend had been a lieutenant in the English navy; but
having disgraced his flag by some criminal conduct in one of the
principal ports on the main, he had deserted his ship, and spent
many years wandering among the islands of the Pacific, until
accidentally being at Nukuheva when the French took possession of
the place, he had been appointed pilot of the harbour by the newly
constituted authorities.