000 03942cam a22004213u 4500
001 76513
003 UtSlPG
005 20260610134754.0
006 m
007 cr n
008 260607r20251924utu|||||o|||||||||||||| d
010 _a24029693
040 _aUtSlPG
041 7 _aen
_2iso639-1
050 4 _aPS
100 1 _aMelville, Herman,
_d1819-1891
245 1 0 _aBilly Budd
264 1 _aSalt Lake City, UT :
_bProject Gutenberg,
_c2025
300 _a1 online resource :
_bmultiple file formats
336 _atext
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _acomputer
_bc
_2rdamedia
338 _aonline resource
_bcr
_2rdacarrier
490 1 _aThe works of Herman Melville, standard edition, volume XIII
500 _aRelease date is 2025-07-16
505 0 _aBilly Budd, foretopman -- Other prose pieces: Daniel Orme. Hawthorne and his mosses, by a Virginian spending a July in Vermont. Cock-a-doodle-doo! or The crowing of the noble Cock Beneventano. The two temples. Poor man's pudding and rich man's crumbs. The happy failure, a story of the river Hudson. The fiddler. The paradise of bachelors and the tartarus of maids. Jimmy Rose. The 'Gees. I and my chimney. The apple-tree table, or original spiritual manifestations. Under the rose. The marquis de Grandvin. Portrait of a gentleman. To Major John Gentian, dean of the Burgundy club. Jack Gentian. Major Gentian and Colonel J. Bunkum. The Cincinnati. Fragment. Fragments from a writing-desk.
508 _aChris Hapka and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
520 _a"Billy Budd : and other prose pieces" by Herman Melville is a collection of prose pieces written in the late 19th century. Anchored by the short nautical novel Billy Budd, Foretopman, it centers on an innocent young sailor drawn into a moral conflict aboard a British warship during the age of mutiny, with the enigmatic master-at-arms John Claggart and the austere Captain Vere shaping his fate. Surrounding sketches and essays deepen Melville’s late-career preoccupations, but the signature tale probes innocence, authority, and latent malevolence at sea. The opening of the volume frames the title narrative: an editorial note and preface place the story in 1797 amid the Spithead and Nore mutinies, then introduce the archetype of the “Handsome Sailor” before focusing on Billy Budd, a foundling foretopman impressed from the merchantman Rights-of-Man into H.M.S. Indomitable. We meet Captain “Starry” Vere, an intellectual, self-contained commander, and the ship’s master-at-arms, John Claggart, whose covert antipathy toward Billy grows behind a courteous front. Early incidents show Billy’s natural goodness and naiveté—his effect as a peacemaker, his awe at shipboard discipline, and his failure to suspect malice—even as an old sailor (the Dansker) warns him that “Jemmy Legs” is “down on” him. Tension builds through small episodes: a soup-spilling scene with Claggart’s ambiguous compliment, petty harassments, and a secret nighttime approach by an afterguardsman hinting at a seditious “gang” and offering guineas—an overture Billy angrily rejects—while Claggart’s alternating smiles and hostile flashes suggest a deepening, mysterious enmity. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
534 _pOriginally published:
_cEdinburgh: Constable and Company Ltd, 1924
653 _aSea stories
653 _aShip captains -- Fiction
653 _aExecutions and executioners -- Fiction
653 _aSailors -- Fiction
653 _aImpressment -- Fiction
700 1 _aWeaver, Raymond M.
_q(Raymond Melbourne),
_d1888-1948
830 0 _aThe works of Herman Melville, standard edition, volume XIII
856 4 _uhttps://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015077951914
856 4 0 _uhttps://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76513
999 _c117238
_d117238