Quotes from book
Benito Cereno

Benito Cereno

Benito Cereno is a novella by Herman Melville, a fictionalized account about the revolt on a Spanish slave ship captained by Don Benito Cereno, first published in three installments in Putnam's Monthly in 1855. The tale, slightly revised, was included in his short story collection The Piazza Tales that appeared in May 1856. According to scholar Merton M. Sealts Jr., the story is "an oblique comment on those prevailing attitudes toward blacks and slavery in the United States that would ultimately precipitate civil war between North and South". The famous question of what had cast such a shadow upon Cereno was used by American author Ralph Ellison as an epigraph to his 1952 novel Invisible Man, excluding Cereno's answer, "The negro." Over time, Melville's story has been "increasingly recognized as among his greatest achievements".In 1799 off the coast of Chile, captain Amasa Delano of the American sealer and merchant ship Bachelor's Delight visits the San Dominick, a Spanish slave ship apparently in distress. After learning from its captain Benito Cereno that a storm has taken many crewmembers and provisions, Delano offers to help out. He notices that Cereno acts awkwardly passive for a captain and the slaves display remarkably inappropriate behavior, and though this piques his suspicion he ultimately decides he is being paranoid. When he leaves the San Dominick and captain Cereno jumps after him, he finally discovers that the slaves have taken command of the ship, and forced the surviving crew to act as usual. Employing a third-person narrator who reports Delano's point of view without any correction, the story has become a famous example of unreliable narration.


Herman Melville photo

“In armies, navies, cities, or families, in nature herself, nothing more relaxes good order than misery.”

Benito Cereno, Putnam's Monthly ( October 1855 http://books.google.com/books?id=TlYAAAAAYAAJ&q=%22In+armies+navies+cities+or+families+in+nature+herself+nothing+more+relaxes+good+order+than+misery%22&pg=PA356#v=onepage)

Similar authors

Herman Melville photo
Herman Melville 144
American novelist, short story writer, essayist, and poet 1818–1891
Léon Bloy photo
Léon Bloy 22
French writer, poet and essayist
Robert Louis Stevenson photo
Robert Louis Stevenson 118
Scottish novelist, poet, essayist, and travel writer
Ambrose Bierce photo
Ambrose Bierce 204
American editorialist, journalist, short story writer, fabu…
Ivan Turgenev photo
Ivan Turgenev 7
Russian writer
Ralph Waldo Emerson photo
Ralph Waldo Emerson 727
American philosopher, essayist, and poet
Walt Whitman photo
Walt Whitman 181
American poet, essayist and journalist
Gustave Flaubert photo
Gustave Flaubert 98
French writer (1821–1880)
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley photo
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley 94
English novelist, short story writer, dramatist, essayist, …
Guy De Maupassant photo
Guy De Maupassant 59
French writer