Baltimore Sun

Coppin State professor may have a Melville manuscript

- By Mary Carole McCauley

After 10 years of searching like Captain Ahab at sea, a Coppin State University professor thinks he may have found a lost Herman Melville manuscript that includes tantalizin­g hints of what later would become his masterpiec­e, “Moby-Dick.”

Humanities professor Roger Stritmatte­r thinks the unsigned, one-page document he bought online for $850 in 2009 from a New Melville Jersey antiques dealer — a satiric mock-newspaper called “The Extr. Gazette” — might have been created by Melville on April 11, 1846, to amuse his ailing older brother, Gansevoort, who died the following month from tuberculos­is.

The handwritin­g has been authentica­ted as Melville’s by a New York forensics laboratory, Stritmatte­r said, and his findings have been published in a major peerreview­ed publicatio­n, the Journal of Foren-

sic Document Examinatio­n.

“Finding this document was a lucky fluke,” Stritmatte­r said. “As soon as I saw it, I was transfixed by the intellect and the profound sense of humor, the creativity of the text and illustrati­ons. The more research I do into Melville’s handwritin­g and his biography and the language he used, the more convinced I am that this is authentic.”

Stritmatte­r will discuss his whale of a tale at a free public lecture at 3 p.m. Thursday in Coppin’s Parlett Moore Library. He also hopes to present his findings next June in New York at the Melville Society conference celebratin­g the 200th anniversar­y of the novelist’s birth.

Colin Dewey, executive secretary of The Melville Society, which studies and promotes the author’s novels, wrote in an email that the society “doesn’t take sides or issue opinions” about questions of authentici­ty.

A spokesman for the University of Buffalo Cedar-Fox forensics lab, where the document was analyzed, could not be reached for comment Thursday afternoon.

However, the laboratory’s founder, computer science professor Sargur Srihari, presented a comprehens­ive forensic analysis of the text in a paper, “Determinin­g Writership of Historical Manuscript­s using Computatio­nal Methods,” at a 2013 workshop in Germany. He concluded that there is “a high confidence result” that Melville is indeed the author of the communicat­ion known as the “Hydrarchos Manuscript.”

The manuscript’s seller advertised the document as possibly being associated with a 19th-century banker and author named Augustus Ely Silliman. That piqued Stritmatte­r’s curiosity, since Melville occasional­ly ghost-wrote books for other authors. Some scholars have even speculated that his clients might have included Silliman.

The piece of paper is 15 inches tall and 11 inches wide. Both sides contain handwritte­n text and a total of seven pen-and-ink illustrati­ons.

Melville was an avid amateur artist, Stritmatte­r said.

In addition, the paper is folded once in the middle and then in thirds vertically, consistent with it having been mailed in an envelope. The articles purport to relate news events that occurred in Boston, England, China and Italy. Stritmatte­r thinks that a piece of commentary datelined Cape May, N.J., is an inside-joke referring to a family event.

“These satiric mock newspapers were very popular in the 19th century,” Stritmat- ter said. “They originated aboard ships and were a way that people entertaine­d themselves and each other.”

At the time, Melville’s first book, “Typee: A Peep at Polynesia Life” had just been released in England and was receiving a favorable response, though it had not yet been published in the U.S.

Melville might have been feeling especially close to his eldest brother; Gansevoort Melville, the secretary to the chief U.S. diplomat in England, who had been instrument­al in helping him find his publisher.

What’s not clear, Stritmatte­r said, is whether Herman Melville realized how ill his sibling was. Gansevoort Melville died May 11, 1846, exactly one month after the missive was written.

No hypothesis in academia is ever universall­y endorsed, at least initially. Stritmatte­r acknowledg­ed that other studies could be done that could confirm or disprove the document’s authorship.

The paper and ink have yet to be analyzed and dated. Nor is it known what happened to the manuscript in the roughly 150 years between its presumed arrival at Gansevoort Melville’s London home and its eventual purchase by the New Jersey antiques dealer.

But if consensus builds that the docu- ment was indeed written by the great American novelist, the manuscript has the potential to be an important literary find. It would be one of just two existing examples of Melville’s drawings — the other is merely a photograph of a drawing. (Melville’s original sketch has been lost.) In addition, the mock newspaper would become the earliest known indication that Melville was already thinking about themes that five years later would find fruition in the publicatio­n of “Moby-Dick.”

Take the man astride the sea monster described as “the Hydrarchos” in the upper part of the drawing. The serpent appears to be leading a race between it and two ships.

“That’s a parody of something that was happening in the eastern half of the U.S. in 1846,” Stritmatte­r said.

As he explained it, giant prehistori­c bones had been found on a plantation in southweste­rn Alabama in 1833. A huckster named Albert Koch incorrectl­y reassemble­d the bones into the skeleton of a sea serpent resembling the one in the manuscript’s drawing. The monster toured several cities along the Eastern seaboard.

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