Billy Budd and Other Stories Quotes
Billy Budd and Other Stories
by
Herman Melville4,822 ratings, 3.56 average rating, 313 reviews
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Billy Budd and Other Stories Quotes
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“Passion, and passion in its profoundest, is not a thing demanding a palatial stage whereon to play its part. Down among the groundlings, among the beggars and rakers of the garbage, profound passion is enacted. And the circumstances that provoke it, however trivial or mean, are no measure of its power. In the present instance the stage is a scrubbed gun deck, and one of the external provocations a man-of-war's-man's spilled soup.”
― Billy Budd and Other Stories
― Billy Budd and Other Stories
“A mantrap may be under his ruddy-tipped daisies.”
― Billy Budd And Other Stories: Short Story
― Billy Budd And Other Stories: Short Story
“In certain matters, some sailors even in mature life remain unsophisticated enough. But a young seafarer of the disposition of our athletic foretopman is much of a child-man. And yet a child’s utter innocence is but its blank ignorance, and the innocence more or less wanes as intelligence waxes. But in Billy Budd intelligence, such as it was, had advanced while yet his simplemindedness remained for the most part unaffected.”
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
“In this particular Billy was a striking instance that the arch interferer, the envious marplot of Eden, still has more or less to do with every human consignment to this planet of Earth. In every case, one way or another he is sure to slip in his little card, as much as to remind us—I too have a hand here. The”
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
“For what can more partake of the mysterious than an antipathy spontaneous and profound such as is evoked in certain exceptional mortals by the mere aspect of some other mortal, however harmless he may be, if not called forth by this very harmlessness itself?”
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
“Such events cannot be ignored, but there is a considerate way of historically treating them. If a well-constituted individual refrains from blazoning aught amiss or calamitous in his family, a nation in the like circumstance may without reproach be equally discreet. Though”
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
“His duty he always faithfully did; but duty is sometimes a dry obligation, and he was for irrigating its aridity, whensoever possible, with a fertilizing decoction of strong waters.”
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
“If in some cases a bit of a nautical Murat in setting forth his person ashore, the Handsome Sailor of the period in question evinced nothing of the dandified Billy-be-Dam, an amusing character all but extinct now, but occasionally to be encountered, and in a form yet more amusing than the original, at the tiller of the boats on the tempestuous Erie Canal or, more likely, vaporing in the groggeries along the towpath.”
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
― Billy Budd, Sailor and Other Stories
“He loved books, never going to sea without a newly replenished library, compact but of the best.”
― Billy Budd and Other Stories
― Billy Budd and Other Stories
“Marvel not that having been made acquainted with the young sailor's essential innocence (an irruption of heretic thought hard to suppress) the worthy man lifted not a finger to avert the doom of such a martyr to martial discipline. So to do would not only have been as idle as invoking the desert, but would also have been an audacious transgression of the bounds of his function, one as exactly prescribed to him by military law as that of the boatswain or any other naval officer. Bluntly put, a chaplain is the minister of the Prince of Peace serving in the host of the God of War -- Mars. As such, he is as incongruous as a musket would be on the altar at Christmas. Why then is he there? Because he indirectly subserves the purpose attested by the cannon; because too he lends the sanction of the religion of the meek to that which practically is the abrogation of everything but brute Force.”
― Billy Budd and Other Stories
― Billy Budd and Other Stories
