
TheCambridge Introduction to Hermann Melville
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Published by: hmimi (Karma: 167.25) on 19 November 2013 | Views: 768 |
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During the holiday, an uncle gave Herman a copy of John Preston’s incongruously titled teachers’ manual, Every Man His Own Teacher, which supplied the mathematics exercises his students sorely needed. Melville observed that some of them had traveled through their arithmetic “with so great swiftness that they can not recognize objects in the road on a second journey: and are about as ignorant of them as though they had never passed that way before” (W, XIV, p. 8). Preston emphasized the nobility of teaching, an endeavor the literary genius typically disdained. The comparison between teaching andwriting had the opposite of its intended effect onMelville. Preston’s comments are enough to make any teacher with serious literary pretensions wonder what he is doing before a classroom full of unruly students. Melville had yet to display anything approaching literary genius, but the letter thanking his uncle reveals his predisposition toward the literary life and contains flashes of brilliance. Describing where he lived, Melville indulged his Romantic fancy, situating himself atop “the summit of as savage and lonely a mountain as ever I ascended. The scenery however is most splendid and unusual, – embracing an extent of country in the form of an Ampitheatre sweeping around for many miles and encircling a portion of your state in its compass” (W, XIV, p.
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Tags: Albany, family, fared, better, Overambitious, Melville, TheCambridge, Hermann |