Question:
Moby Dick book summery?
gtm18
2009-10-09 14:29:46 UTC
i need a summery on Moby Dick.
Six answers:
Anberlin92
2009-10-09 14:53:54 UTC
The story tells the adventures of the wandering sailor Ishmael and his voyage on the whaleship Pequod, commanded by Captain Ahab. Ishmael soon learns that Ahab seeks one specific whale, Moby Dick, a white sperm whale of tremendous size and ferocity. Comparatively few whaleships know of Moby Dick, and fewer yet have encountered him. In a previous encounter, the whale destroyed Ahab's boat and bit off his leg. Ahab intends to take revenge.



PLOT: (*Spoiler Alert*)

"Call me Ishmael," Moby-Dick begins, in one of the most recognizable opening lines in American, or indeed English-language, literature. The narrator, an observant young man setting out from Manhattan, has experience in the merchant marine but has recently decided his next voyage will be on a whaling ship. On a cold, gloomy night in December, he arrives at the Spouter-Inn in New Bedford, Massachusetts, and agrees to share a bed with a then-absent stranger. When his bunk mate, a heavily tattooed Polynesian harpooner named Queequeg, returns very late and discovers Ishmael beneath his covers, both men are alarmed, but the two quickly become close friends and decide to sail together from Nantucket, Massachusetts on a whaling voyage.



In Nantucket, the pair signs on with the Pequod, a whaling ship that is soon to leave port. The ship’s captain, Ahab, is nowhere to be seen; nevertheless, they are told of him – a "grand, ungodly, godlike man,"[15] according to one of the owners, who has "been in colleges as well as 'mong the cannibals." The two friends encounter a mysterious man named Elijah on the dock after they sign their papers and he hints at troubles to come with Ahab. The mystery grows on Christmas morning when Ishmael spots dark figures in the mist, apparently boarding the Pequod shortly before it sets sail that day.



The ship’s officers direct the early voyage while Ahab stays in his cabin. The chief mate is Starbuck, a serious, sincere Quaker and fine leader; second mate is Stubb, happy-go-lucky and cheerful and always smoking his pipe; the third mate is Flask, short and stout but thoroughly reliable. Each mate is responsible for a whaling boat, and each whaling boat of the Pequod has its own pagan harpooner assigned it. Some time after sailing, Ahab finally appears on the quarter-deck one morning, an imposing, frightening figure whose haunted visage sends shivers over the narrator. (A white scar, reportedly from a thunderbolt, runs down his face and it is hinted that it continues the length of his body.) One of his legs is missing from the knee down and has been replaced by a prosthesis fashioned from a sperm whale's jawbone.



Soon gathering the crewmen together, with a rousing speech Ahab secures their support for his single, secret purpose for this voyage: hunting down and killing Moby Dick, an old, very large sperm whale, with a snow-white hump and mottled skin, that crippled Ahab on his last whaling voyage. Only Starbuck shows any sign of resistance to the charismatic but monomaniacal captain. The first mate argues repeatedly that the ship’s purpose should be to hunt whales for their oil, with luck returning home profitably, safely, and quickly, but not to seek out and kill Moby Dick in particular – and especially not for revenge. Eventually even Starbuck acquiesces to Ahab's will, though harboring misgivings.



The mystery of the dark figures seen before the Pequod set sail is explained during the voyage's first lowering for whales. Ahab has secretly brought along his own boat crew, including a mysterious harpooneer named Fedallah, an inscrutable figure with a sinister influence over Ahab. Later, while watching one night over a captured whale carcass, Fedallah darkly prophecies to Ahab hints regarding their twin deaths.



The novel describes numerous "gams," social meetings of two ships on the open sea. Crews normally visit each other during a gam, captains on one vessel and chief mates on the other. Mail may be exchanged and the men talk of whale sightings or other news. For Ahab, however, there is but one relevant question to ask of another ship: “Hast seen the White Whale?” After meeting several other whaling ships, which have their own peculiar stories, the Pequod enters the Pacific Ocean. Queequeg becomes deathly ill and requests that a coffin be built for him by the ship’s carpenter. Just as everyone has given up hope, Queequeg changes his mind, deciding to live after all, and recovers quickly. His coffin becomes his sea chest, and is later caulked and pitched to replace the Pequod's life buoy.



Soon word is heard from other whalers of Moby Dick. The jolly Captain Boomer of the Samuel Enderby has lost an arm to the whale, and is stunned at Ahab's burning need for revenge. Next they meet the Rachel, which has seen Moby Dick very recently. As a result of the encounter, one of its boats is missing; the captain’s youngest son had been aboard. The Rachel's captain begs Ahab to aid in the search for the missing boat, but Ahab is
Mildred
2016-05-22 13:14:04 UTC
1
anonymous
2016-09-22 03:34:51 UTC
American writer, first-class-identified for his novels of the ocean and his masterpiece MOBY-DICK (1851), a whaling journey committed to Nathaniel Hawthorne. "I have written a depraved e-book and suppose as spotless because the lamb," Melville wrote to Hawthorne. The paintings used to be handiest identified as a masterpiece 30 years after Melville's loss of life. TYPEE (1846), a fictionalized journey narrative, used to be the writer's so much preferred e-book for the period of his lifetime. "All that the majority maddens and torments; all that stirs up the fewer of matters; all fact with malice in it; all that cracks the sinews and truffles the mind; all of the delicate demonisms of existence and idea; all evil, to loopy Ahab, had been visibly personified, and made just about assailable in Moby Dick. He piled upon the whale's white hump the sum of all of the standard rage and hate felt by means of his entire race from Adam down; after which, as though chest have been a mortar, he burst his sizzling middle's shell upon it." (from Moby-Dick). Moby-Dick will also be learn as an exciting sea tale, an exam of the clash among guy and nature – the wrestle among Ahab and the whale is open to many interpretations. It is a pioneer novel however the prairie is now sea, or an allegory at the Gold Rush, however now the gold is a whale. Jorge Luis Borges has obvious within the universe of Moby-Dick "a cosmos (a chaos) no longer handiest perceptibly malignant because the Gnostics had intuited, but additionally irrational, just like the cosmos within the hexameters of Lucretius." (from The Total Library, 1999) Clare Spark has hooked up in Hunting Captain Ahab (2001) one of a kind interpretations with replacing political surroundings – relying at the factor of view, Ahab has been considered as a Promethean hero or a forefather of the 20th-century totalitarian dictators. The director John Huston questions in his movie variant (1956) which one, Ahab or the whale, is the truly Monster. Ray Bradbury, with whom Huston wrote the screenplay, needed to battle with the Screen Writers' Guild over his credit. In Bradbury's variant, the whale is destructed....
Copyright © David
2009-10-09 14:33:13 UTC
Moby Dick is a huge whale that terrorizes the place. The hunter kills Moby Dick eventually.
Randolph
2016-06-26 05:20:14 UTC
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cobra
2009-10-09 14:48:58 UTC
Captain Ahab obsessed with killing the white whale who took his leg, dies in the end because he can't defeat the whale as it is metaphorically and literally more powerful than him.


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