Not P but Moby-Dick (7)

Ian Livingston igrlivingston at gmail.com
Sat Sep 2 01:05:08 UTC 2023


Again I see a pun. The paragraph prior to the passage you cite here dwells on Stubb’s apparent ease, reconciliation, if you will, with laboring in close proximity to death. To set that image against the clerks peddling fascination with and distraction from the fear of death common among citizens such as themselves wasting time yearning after and resenting their lives rather than living, like Stubb, in the fervor of the moment, Melville gives grinning Stubb a truly fire breathing character. 

Thus the (morose) “grave peddlers” offer for sale the gravity of want and fear of life and death, and Stubb grins over his pipe at them. 

All very existentialist, really. Again I find myself wondering if there’s a trail to be found between Kierkegaard and Melville. 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Sep 1, 2023, at 4:09 PM, Mike Jing <gravitys.rainbow.cn at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> The following excerpt is from Chapter 27:
> 
> What, perhaps, with other things, made Stubb such an easygoing, unfearing
> man, so cheerily trudging off with the burden of life in a world full of
> grave peddlers, all bowed to the ground with their packs; what helped to
> bring about that almost impious good-humor of his; that thing must have
> been his pipe.
> 
> Several of the previous translations interpreted "grave peddlers" as
> "peddlers of graves", which I feel is wrong.  I think the word "grave" here
> means "serious, not mirthful or jocular," is that correct?
> --
> Pynchon-L: https://waste.org/mailman/listinfo/pynchon-l


More information about the Pynchon-l mailing list