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== 1857–1876: Poet == [[File:Herman Melville 1860.jpg|thumb|Melville in 1861]] To repair his faltering finances, Melville took up public lecturing from late 1857 to 1860. He embarked upon three lecture tours{{sfnp|Levine|2014|p=xvii|ps=none}} and spoke at [[lyceum]]s, chiefly on Roman statuary and sightseeing in Rome.{{sfnp|Kennedy|1977|ps=none}} Melville's lectures, which mocked the pseudo-intellectualism of lyceum culture, were panned by contemporary audiences.{{sfnp|Hutchins|2014|ps=none}} On May 30, 1860, Melville boarded the [[clipper]] ''Meteor'' for California, with his brother Thomas at the helm. After a shaky trip around Cape Horn, Melville returned to New York alone via Panama in November. Later that year, he submitted a poetry collection to a publisher but it was not accepted, and is now lost. In 1863, he bought his brother's house at 104 East 26th Street in New York City and moved there.{{sfnp|Levine|2014|pp=xvii–xviii|ps=none}}{{sfnp|Tick|1986|ps=none}} In 1864, Melville visited the Virginia battlefields of the [[American Civil War]].{{sfnp|Levine|2014|p=xviii|ps=none}} After the war, he published ''[[Battle Pieces and Aspects of the War]]'' (1866), a collection of 72 poems that has been described as "a polyphonic verse journal of the conflict".{{sfnp|Milder|1988|p=[https://archive.org/details/columbialiterary00bant <!-- quote=Battle-Pieces. --> 442]|ps=none}} The work did not do well commercially—of the print run of 1,260 copies, 300 were sent as review copies, and 551 copies were sold—and reviewers did not realize that Melville had purposely avoided the ostentatious diction and fine writing that were in fashion, choosing to be concise and spare.{{sfnp|Parker|2002|pp=624 and 608|ps= none}} In 1866, Melville became a customs inspector for New York City. He held the post for 19 years and had a reputation for honesty in a notoriously corrupt institution.{{sfnp|Leyda|1969|p=730|ps=: "quietly declining offers of money for special services, quietly returning money which has been thrust into his pockets"}} (Unbeknownst to Melville, his position was sometimes protected by future American president [[Chester A. Arthur]], then a customs official who admired Melville's writing but never spoke to him.{{sfnp|Olsen-Smith|2015|p=xviii|ps=none}}) During these years, Melville suffered from nervous exhaustion, physical pain, and frustration, and would sometimes, in the words of Robertson-Lorant, behave like the "tyrannical captains he had portrayed in his novels", perhaps even beating his wife Lizzie when he came home after drinking.{{sfnp|Robertson-Lorant|1996|pp=534|ps=none}} In 1867 Malcolm, the Melvilles' older son, died in his bedroom at home at the age of 18 from a self-inflicted gun shot, perhaps intentional, perhaps accidental.{{sfnp|Shneidman|1976|ps=none}} In May 1867, Lizzie's brother Sam, who shared his family's fear for Melville's sanity, tried to arrange for her to leave Melville. Lizzie was to visit her family in Boston and assert to a court that her husband was insane. But Lizzie, whether to avoid the social shame divorce carried at the time or because she still loved her husband, refused to go along with the plan.{{sfnp|Robertson-Lorant|1996|pp=505–507|ps=none}} Though Melville's professional writing career had ended, he remained dedicated to his writing. He spent years on what Milder called "his autumnal masterpiece" ''[[Clarel|Clarel: A Poem and a Pilgrimage]]'' (1876), an 18,000-line epic poem inspired by his 1856 trip to the Holy Land.{{sfnp|Milder|1988|p=443|ps=none}} It is among the longest single poems in American literature. The title character is a young American student of divinity who travels to Jerusalem to renew his faith. One of the central characters, Rolfe, is similar to Melville in his younger days, a seeker and adventurer, while the reclusive Vine is loosely based on Hawthorne, who had died twelve years before.{{sfnp|Milder|1988|p=443|ps=none}} Publication of 350 copies was funded with a bequest from his uncle in 1876, but sales failed miserably and the unsold copies were burned when Melville was unable to buy them at cost. Critic [[Lewis Mumford]] found an unread copy in the New York Public Library in 1925 "with its pages uncut".{{sfnp|Delbanco|2005|p=287|ps=none}}
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