Clássicos
Billy Budd is Herman Melville's profound and moving final novella, a masterwork of moral inquiry set against the strict world of an eighteenth-century naval warship. Written in Melville's later years and published posthumously, the story stands as one of the most powerful meditations on innocence, justice, and authority in American literature.
The narrative follows Billy Budd, a young sailor whose natural goodness, physical beauty, and openhearted nature make him beloved by his shipmates. Billy's simplicity and sincerity, however, leave him vulnerable in a world governed by rigid hierarchy and unforgiving law. His presence awakens deep resentment in John Claggart, the ship's master-at-arms, whose cold intellect and moral corruption stand in stark contrast to Billy's unreflective purity.
When Claggart falsely accuses Billy of mutiny, a tragic confrontation ensues—one that forces Captain Edward Fairfax Vere to confront an agonizing moral dilemma. Torn between personal compassion and his duty to uphold naval law, Vere must choose between conscience and command. His decision exposes the harsh realities of institutional justice and the human cost of absolute obedience.
Melville's spare yet philosophical prose transforms this simple narrative into a timeless tragedy. The sea becomes a closed moral universe where good and evil collide, and where mercy struggles to survive under the weight of authority and discipline.
Poignant, philosophical, and deeply unsettling, Billy Budd remains a haunting reflection on the limits of justice and the vulnerability of innocence. It is an essential work of American literature that continues to challenge readers with its moral complexity and tragic power.
© 2026 CLXBX (Ebook): 9781391921150
Data de lançamento
Ebook: 7 de fevereiro de 2026