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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
Resolve as one may to keep to the main road,” Melville wrote in Billy Budd, “some bypaths have an enticement not readily to be withstood. Beckoned by the genius of Nelson, knowingly, I am going to err in such a bypath.” With these words of caution to the reader who might object to the “literary sin” of digression, the author of Moby Dick launched into a spirited encomium upon the heroism of Lord Nelson, defending the Admiral against any “martial utilitarians” and “Benthamites of war” who might interpret his acts of “bravado” at Trafalgar which had resulted in his death to have been foolhardy and vain. For what reason, the question arises, did Melville feel that the eulogy on Nelson could justifiably be included in Billy Budd? What is the meaning of the attack upon Benthamites and utilitarians? This was no pot-boiler which required padding; surely his inclusion of the highly emotional defense of Nelson is significant for other reasons than that the chapter makes “more understandable Melville's hearty interest in martial exploits, sayings, and songs.”
1 Herman Melville, Billy Budd, ed. F. Barron Freeman (Cambridge, Mass., 1948), p. 154 n. Citations to Billy Budd in the text of this article are to this, the best critical edition so far available.
2 For this reason, Freeman suggests, the digressions on Nelson are “important” (p. 42).
3 Leon Howard, Herman Melville (Berkeley, 1951), p. 328.
4 Melville conjectures that this is what transpired while the Captain spoke with Billy privately in the cabin.
5 The scattered references to Billy Budd which follow are to Ch. iv, pp. 154-157, passim.
6 White Jacket (Boston, 1892), pp. 138, 139.
7 This article is peripheral to a study of the concept of “expediency” in American thought, undertaken with the aid of a grant from the American Council of Learned Societies.