Nous utilisons des cookies et collectons des informations vous concernant pour améliorer votre expérience sur notre site;
nous utilisons des services tiers pour fournir des fonctionnalités de réseaux sociaux, pour personnaliser le contenu et les annonces, et pour garantir le bon fonctionnement du site Web.
Apprenez davantage sur vos données sur QuizzClub.
July of 1852, a 32-year-old novelist named Herman Melville had high hopes for his new novel, Moby-Dick; or, The Whale, despite the book’s mixed reviews and tepid sales. That month he took a steamer to Nantucket for his first visit to the Massachusetts island, home port of his novel’s mythic protagonist, Captain Ahab, and his ship, the Pequod. Like a tourist, Melville met local dignitaries, dined out and took in the sights of the village he had previously only imagined.
And on his last day on Nantucket he met the broken-down 60-year-old man who had captained the Essex, the ship that had been attacked and sunk by a sperm whale in an 1820 incident that had inspired Melville’s novel. Captain George Pollard Jr. was just 29 years old when the Essex went down, and he survived and returned to Nantucket to captain a second whaling ship, Two Brothers. But when that ship wrecked on a coral reef two years later, the captain was marked as unlucky at sea—a “Jonah”—and no owner would trust a ship to him again. Pollard lived out his remaining years on land, as the village night watchman.
Melville had written about Pollard briefly in Moby-Dick, and only with regard to the whale sinking his ship. During his visit, Melville later wrote, the two merely “exchanged some words.” But Melville knew Pollard’s ordeal at sea did not end with the sinking of the Essex, and he was not about to evoke the horrific memories that the captain surely carried with him. “To the islanders he was a nobody,” Melville wrote, “to me, the most impressive man, tho’ wholly unassuming, even humble—that I ever encountered.”
Pollard had told the full story to fellow captains over a dinner shortly after his rescue from the Essex ordeal, and to a missionary named George Bennet. To Bennet, the tale was like a confession. Certainly, it was grim: 92 days and sleepless nights at sea in a leaking boat with no food, his surviving crew going mad beneath the unforgiving sun, eventual cannibalism and the harrowing fate of two teenage boys, including Pollard’s first cousin, Owen Coffin. “But I can tell you no more—my head is on fire at the recollection,” Pollard told the missionary. “I hardly know what I say.”
Nous utilisons des cookies et collectons des informations vous concernant pour améliorer votre expérience sur notre site; nous utilisons des services tiers pour fournir des fonctionnalités de réseaux sociaux, pour personnaliser le contenu et les annonces, et pour garantir le bon fonctionnement du site Web.
Ces cookies contribuent à rendre le site utilisable en activant des fonctions en base.
Cookies de performance
Ces cookies nous permettent de regarder l'utilisation de notre site et aident à améliorer les performances.
Cookies de personnalisation
Ces cookies sont utilisés pour afficher du contenu et des publicités en fonction de vos intérêts.
Fonctionnalités autorisées
Fournir des options de connexion
Rappelez-vous quels quiz vous avez complétés
Assurez-vous que le site Web semble cohérent
Fournir des quiz et des articles pertinents
Vous permettre de partager des pages avec les réseaux sociaux
Aidez-nous à introduire de nouvelles fonctionnalités au site Web
Diffuser des publicités correspondantes à vos intérêts
Fonctionnalités interdites
NOUS RESPECTONS VOTRE CONFIDENTIALITÉ
Nous utilisons des cookies et collectons des informations vous concernant pour améliorer votre expérience sur notre site; nous utilisons des services tiers pour fournir des fonctionnalités de réseaux sociaux, pour personnaliser le contenu et les annonces, et pour garantir le bon fonctionnement du site Web.