Whaler "Essex". In the heart of the sea
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This text is a true description of the wreck of the whaler Essex and the subsequent suffering of twenty people who found themselves on three weak whaleboats in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. The Essex was torpedoed by a whale in 1819, and a book about it was written by a surviving first mate named Owen Chase. The Wreck of the Whaler, or rather the proposed account of it, served as one of the two main sources of inspiration for Herman Melville's Moby Dick (the other being Reynolds' 1839 "Piss Dick, or the White Whale of the Pacific"). True, while Melville’s narrative ends with a whale attack on the ship, in the description of the wreck of the Essex, everything, in fact, just begins with the attack. Chase's book is almost entirely devoted to wanderings on the ocean... The narrative of the shipwreck, most extreme and distressing, of the whaler "Essex" from Nantucket, which was attacked and finally destroyed in the Pacific Ocean by a large spermaceti whale, with a story of the unparalleled suffering of the captain and crew in for twenty-three days at sea in open boats in the years 1819 and 1820.
Data sheet
- Name of the Author
- Оуэн Чейз
- Language
- Russian