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- English
- Moby Dick By Herman Melville
-
- The Characters and Plot
- There are numerous characters in Moby Dick, but only a few of them
- have any impact on the story. A common sailor named Ishmael is the
- narrator. The book, however, focuses on Captain Ahab, the one-legged
- commander of the whaling ship Pequod. Ahab has sworn to kill the
- gigantic whale Moby Dick, who took away his leg. Starbuck is the
- first mate of the Pequod. Queequeg, Tashtego, and Daggoo are the
- three harpooners.
- The story begins with Ishmael becoming restless. He decides to go
- out to sea on a whaling ship. In the port of New Bedford, he meets
- and shares a room with a harpooner named Queequeg. The two of them
- become close friends, and agree to ship out together.
- The day after they reach Nantucket, Ishmael begins searching for a
- whaling ship preparing to leave harbor. Out of three ships ready to
- leave, he chooses the Pequod. The owners of the ship, Captains Peleg
- and Bildad are excited to hear of Queequeg from Ishmael and gladly
- let him join the crew. They are told the captain of the ship is
- named Ahab. Peleg and Bildad say that he is a good man, but because
- of some strange illness, he is confined to his cabin.
- On Christmas day, and with Ahab still in his cabin, the Pequod sets
- sail in the Atlantic. As the weather begins to warm up (several
- months after leaving port), Ahab is finally seen on deck. The
- strangest thing about Ahab is his leg. Instead of flesh and bone, he
- has a white ivory peg leg.
- As the weeks wear on, Ahab starts to become friendlier. One day, he
- calls the crew before him. He tells them that the sole mission of
- the Pequod is to kill Moby Dick. Moby Dick is a gigantic sperm whale
- with a crooked jaw and a deformed forehead. He has never been
- defeated, and has attacked and sunk entire ships. Ahab admits he
- hates Moby Dick for taking his leg away, and wants revenge. The crew
- agree to this challenge, and swear to hunt him down. The only who is
- not excited about hunting down Moby Dick is first-mate Starbuck.
- For many months, the Pequod sails South, through the Atlantic,
- around the Cape of Good Hope (the southern tip of Africa), and into
- the Indian Ocean. Along the way, they kill and drain the spermaceti
- oil from every sperm whale they encounter. Each time they meet
- another ship, Ahab begins the conversation with ôHast seen the White
- Whale?ö.
- Finally, after entering the Japanese sea, the Pequod encounters a
- whaling ship named the Enderby. The EnderbyÆs captain had just
- recently lost his arm to Moby Dick. Ahab becomes so excited at the
- news that he breaks his ivory leg. The shipÆs carpenter builds him a
- new one.
- Once reaching the waters around the equator, the Pequod meets
- another whaling ship, the Rachel. They had seen Moby Dick, and had
- become separated from one of the whaling boats during the battle.
- Ahab refuses to help them look for the missing men.
- At last, Moby Dick is spotted by Ahab. In the first day of
- fighting, the whale is harpooned many times, but escapes after
- smashing AhabÆs boat. On the second day, the whale is harpooned
- again, but still escapes. On the third day, AhabÆs harpoon pierces
- the whale, but the rope catches him by the neck and Moby Dick drags
- him to the bottom of the sea. An angry Moby Dick rams and sinks the
- Pequod. Only Ishmael survives, and he is rescued by the Rachel.
- My Response
- Moby Dick was not the novel I expected. I was under the impression
- that it would be about seafaring and the whale Moby Dick. Instead,
- Moby Dick is a story about Captain AhabÆs obsession. There is very
- little in the story about the revenge itself, just about AhabÆs
- monomania. Out of 465 pages, only forty-two of them deal with the
- actual battle between Ahab and Moby Dick.
- The novel places very little emphasis on actual seafaring. Ishmael
- never even steps on a boat until page seventy-four. Even when the
- ship finally leaves port, the mention of anything involving sailing
- or the life of sailors is kept to an absolute minimum.
- There is, however, plenty of emphasis is on whaling, the anatomy of
- whales, and their behavior. The book goes into great detail
- describing the whalers of Nantucket, and gives in-depth explanations
- of the different types of whales, quoting several outside sources in
- the process. The narrator mentions the awesome size of the sperm
- whale, and how few books even try to describe it. He also shows
- great respect for people who go whaling, and describes the
- camaraderie that forms between them. This is an annoying
- inconsistency in the novel, since Ishmael (the narrator) tells the
- reader that he has never been on a whaling ship before, and has never
- seen a live whale.
- The first twenty-three chapters focus on IshmaelÆs thoughts and
- actions. He introduces the reader to whaling and describes the
- Pequod. After the ship sets sail, he seems to vanish from the story.
- At certain intervals, however, he plays minor roles, and it is
- Ishmael that survives to tell the story.
- From chapter twenty-four onward, the novel is almost completely
- about Ahab hunting for Moby Dick. He has the blacksmith construct a
- special harpoon, made from the finest iron, and soaked in the blood
- of the three harpooners. The forging of the harpoon is somewhat
- ironic, since the rope attached to that same harpoon is what drags
- Ahab to the bottom of the sea.
- Despite AhabÆs apparent madness, he still seemed able to reason
- clearly. He carefully and methodically located the region of the sea
- that Moby Dick is most likely to be in (an almost impossible task,
- considering the size of the EarthÆs Oceans). When he first set sail,
- AhabÆs original plan was to hunt only Moby Dick and ignore other
- whales. Once he realizes that his men will abandon him if they do
- not make some sort of a profit while at sea, he encourages them to
- hunt other whales and boosts the morale of the crew.
- Ahab is definitely the hero of Moby Dick, but he is a tragic hero.
- Everyone in the novel who knew Ahab prior to losing his leg
- considered him to be a great man, and one of the finest captains
- ever. After the loss of his leg during the first battle with Moby
- Dick, AhabÆs tragic flaw appeared. He was obsessed. He wanted
- revenge, and nothing else. Ahab considered Moby Dick to be the
- embodiment of all that is evil. This monomania is what sent the
- Pequod halfway around the world to the Pacific Ocean, where Ahab (and
- almost everyone else on the Pequod) died.
- Ahab becomes focused on his one view of the whale. AhabÆs preceives
- the whale as the embodiment of evil. The whaleÆs white color lends
- an ambiguity to the image of the whale as evil.
- The great White Whale, Moby Dick, symbolizes many different things.
- The first thing it represents is AhabÆs anger. The whaleÆs body is
- deformed, as is AhabÆs. The whale is driven by animalistic rage,
- mirroring the anger in Ahab. Ahab thinks Moby Dick is a monster, but
- it is really Ahab who has become the monster. The whale serves as a
- scapegoat for AhabÆs miserable existence.
- Another thing Moby Dick can represent an unreachable goal. He is a
- legendary whale, and the object of a wild and exciting chase through
- three oceans. And, despite the efforts of the Pequod, they never
- defeated him. The whale was a goal that no one could achieve, but
- people still destroyed themselves trying.
- One odd thing about the novel is that despite all the pain, death
- and destruction Moby Dick has caused, I do not consider the whale to
- be evil or monstrous. In fact, I was almost happy to see the whale
- turn on his hunters and destroy them. I cannot fully appreciate all
- the feeling about whales that the novel attempts to create.
- When Moby Dick was written, whales were thought of as dumb brutes.
- They were found in large enough numbers that people hunted them
- endlessly, and never worried about killing them all. Whaling was an
- admired profession. People needed whale oil for their lamps.
- Spermaceti oil was used to make perfume and other cosmetics.
- In todayÆs society, things are radically different. Whales are
- thought to be just as intelligent--if not more intelligent--than
- humans. Some scientists believe they have a complex language,
- something not mentioned in the book at all. Whales are an endangered
- species, almost hunted to extinction. In fact, many countries have
- outlawed whaling. Most people consider whaling to be cruel and
- inhumane. The Japanese are despised worldwide for continuing to hunt
- them. Television programs portray them in a positive light. Whale
- are mammals that nurse their young and breathe air, just like human
- beings. They are not giant fish. TodayÆs children are taught to
- respect whales, and are taken to aquariums to be educated about them.
- After the invention of the electric light bulb, whale oil lamps were
- no longer used. Modern cosmetic products contain no spermaceti oil.
- Their manufacturers proudly make claims that no animals were harmed
- while making the cosmetics.
- The real ôdumb brutesö in the novel are not the whales, but the
- whalers. They are uneducated about the true nature of their prey.
- In a sense, Moby Dick was simply exacting revenge for the centuries
- of pain and death mankind has inflicted on whales.
- In the time of Herman Mellville, manÆs dominance over nature was
- idealized. Today, we are taught to respect and preserve our
- environment. This different frame of reference makes it very
- difficult to appreciate the symbolism in this novel. The main focus
- of the novel, however, is on obsession and its destructiveness.
- One of the most important elements in a great literary work is
- universality. The main idea of the novel (destructive obsession) is
- universal, even though the symbolism is not. Moby Dick was clearly a
- great novel, although it was nothing like what I expected.
-