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CHAPTER II — A Calm

Author: Herman Melville 2026-04-27 18:15:35

Next day there was a calm, which added not a little to my impatience of the ship. And, furthermore, by certain nameless associations revived in me my old impressions upon first witnessing as a landsman this phenomenon of the sea. Those impressions may merit a page.

To a landsman a calm is no joke. It not only revolutionizes his abdomen, but unsettles his mind; tempts him to recant his belief in the eternal fitness of things; in short, almost makes an infidel of him.

At first he is taken by surprise, never having dreamt of a state of existence where existence itself seems suspended. He shakes himself in his coat, to see whether it be empty or no. He closes his eyes, to test the reality of the glassy expanse. He fetches a deep breath, by way of experiment, and for the sake of witnessing the effect. If a reader of books, Priestley on Necessity occurs to him; and he believes in that old Sir Anthony Absolute to the very last chapter. His faith in Malte Brun, however, begins to fail; for the geography, which from boyhood he had implicitly confided in, always assured him, that though expatiating all over the globe, the sea was at least margined by land. That over against America, for example, was Asia. But it is a calm, and he grows madly skeptical.

To his alarmed fancy, parallels and meridians become emphatically what they are merely designated as being: imaginary lines drawn round the earth's surface.

The log assures him that he is in such a place; but the log is a liar; for no place, nor any thing possessed of a local angularity, is to be lighted upon in the watery waste.

At length horrible doubts overtake him as to the captain's competency to navigate his ship. The ignoramus must have lost his way, and drifted into the outer confines of creation, the region of the everlasting lull, introductory to a positive vacuity.

Thoughts of eternity thicken. He begins to feel anxious concerning his soul.

The stillness of the calm is awful. His voice begins to grow strange and portentous. He feels it in him like something swallowed too big for the esophagus. It keeps up a sort of involuntary interior humming in him, like a live beetle. His cranium is a dome full of reverberations. The hollows of his very bones are as whispering galleries. He is afraid to speak loud, lest he be stunned; like the man in the bass drum.

But more than all else is the consciousness of his utter helplessness. Succor or sympathy there is none. Penitence for embarking avails not. The final satisfaction of despairing may not be his with a relish. Vain the idea of idling out the calm. He may sleep if he can, or purposely delude himself into a crazy fancy, that he is merely at leisure. All this he may compass; but he may not lounge; for to lounge is to be idle; to be idle implies an absence of any thing to do; whereas there is a calm to be endured: enough to attend to, Heaven knows.

His physical organization, obviously intended for locomotion, becomes a fixture; for where the calm leaves him, there he remains. Even his undoubted vested rights, comprised in his glorious liberty of volition, become as naught. For of what use? He wills to go: to get away from the calm: as ashore he would avoid the plague. But he can not; and how foolish to revolve expedients. It is more hopeless than a bad marriage in a land where there is no Doctors' Commons. He has taken the ship to wife, for better or for worse, for calm or for gale; and she is not to be shuffled off. With yards akimbo, she says unto him scornfully, as the old beldam said to the little dwarf:—"Help yourself"

And all this, and more than this, is a calm.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Chapter 1 Free Chapter 2 Free Chapter 3 Free Chapter 4 VIP Chapter 5 VIP Chapter 6 VIP Chapter 7 VIP Chapter 8 VIP Chapter 9 VIP Chapter 10 VIP Chapter 11 VIP Chapter 12 VIP Chapter 13 VIP Chapter 14 VIP Chapter 15 VIP Chapter 16 VIP Chapter 17 VIP Chapter 18 VIP Chapter 19 VIP Chapter 20 VIP Chapter 21 VIP Chapter 22 VIP Chapter 23 VIP Chapter 24 VIP Chapter 25 VIP Chapter 26 VIP Chapter 27 VIP Chapter 28 VIP Chapter 29 VIP Chapter 30 VIP Chapter 31 VIP Chapter 32 VIP Chapter 33 VIP Chapter 34 VIP Chapter 35 VIP Chapter 36 VIP Chapter 37 VIP Chapter 38 VIP Chapter 39 VIP Chapter 40 VIP Chapter 41 VIP Chapter 42 VIP Chapter 43 VIP Chapter 44 VIP Chapter 45 VIP Chapter 46 VIP Chapter 47 VIP Chapter 48 VIP Chapter 49 VIP Chapter 50 VIP Chapter 51 VIP Chapter 52 VIP Chapter 53 VIP Chapter 54 VIP Chapter 55 VIP Chapter 56 VIP Chapter 57 VIP Chapter 58 VIP Chapter 59 VIP Chapter 60 VIP Chapter 61 VIP Chapter 62 VIP Chapter 63 VIP Chapter 64 VIP Chapter 65 VIP Chapter 66 VIP Chapter 67 VIP Chapter 68 VIP Chapter 69 VIP Chapter 70 VIP Chapter 71 VIP Chapter 72 VIP Chapter 73 VIP Chapter 74 VIP Chapter 75 VIP Chapter 76 VIP Chapter 77 VIP Chapter 78 VIP Chapter 79 VIP Chapter 80 VIP Chapter 81 VIP Chapter 82 VIP Chapter 83 VIP Chapter 84 VIP Chapter 85 VIP Chapter 86 VIP Chapter 87 VIP Chapter 88 VIP Chapter 89 VIP Chapter 90 VIP Chapter 91 VIP Chapter 92 VIP Chapter 93 VIP Chapter 94 VIP Chapter 95 VIP Chapter 96 VIP Chapter 97 VIP Chapter 98 VIP Chapter 99 VIP Chapter 100 VIP Chapter 101 VIP Chapter 102 VIP Chapter 103 VIP Chapter 104 VIP

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