Prof. Wineapple
Paper #2, Topic
#5
In Melville's Moby Dick our narrator, Ishmael,
has a unique view on the great white whale.
"...all these are but subtle deceits, not actually inherent in
substances, but only laid on from without; so that all deified Nature
absolutely paints like the harlot, whose allurement's cover nothing but the
charnel-house within..." By
examining his remarks, we can tell he is a very down-to-earth man; however,
Melville uses a common theme of "how do you know for sure". He is saying, many times throughout the
novel, that maybe nothing has any meaning.
Despite this, Ishmeal gives numerous examples of what white can mean
(i.e. the horror of an albino, or beauty of a white steed etc.) and proceeds to say Moby Dick is all of these
things, "Wonder ye then at the fiery hunt?" He is esentially asking us "if you lived
in a world where nothing had any meaning, and a great white whale was taunting
you to give chase, what would you do?"
My method of attacking the question, how would
the three main characters from Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter see the whiteness
of the whale?, is going to be a comparison to Melville's characters. The first comparison is between Hester Prynne
and Ishmael. Hester Prynne is a brave
lady who faces her sin, as seen in her ability to face severe ridicule on the
scaffold. Ishmael is a brave young man
who handles any conflict with a strong will, as seen in his agreement to sign
onto a whaling ship without knowing the captain. It is also seen in his ability to share a bed
with a stranger, and share in his religious activities, and to eventually make
a life long committment to the stranger.
Hester Prynne is a loving woman who never reveals the identity of her
lover to spare him, she puts someone else'e needs before her own. She accepts the consequences of the nature of
her sin. It is clear that Ishmael has
understanding and compassion, he too can live and accept the natural world. Hawthorne portrays Hester as a victim of many
thing, especially as a victim to Chillingworth's selfishness. Hester, while apologizing for not revealing
the identity of Chillingworth, says "I have striven to be true! Truth was the one virtue which I might have
held fast and did hold fast through all extremity...a lie is never good even
though death threatens on the other side."
Ishmael strives to be true also, he gave us a true meaning of what the
color white was, it was merely a cosmetic.
This is why I think that Hester would hold the same opinion as Ishmael
does. "It is all of these
things."
The second comparison is between Arthur
Dimmesdale and Starbuck. Arthur
Dimmesdale was an intelligent man who was passionate in his religion. Starbuck was also and intelligent man,
although it was a different kind of intelligence, he is wise enough to know
Ahab's obsession with Moby Dick is wrong and dangerous. He too is passionate in his work, he is a
realist who thinks that the primary concern of the ship should be to gather the
oils of the whales so the crew can gain wealth.
However intelligent, both men have tragic flaws. Dimmesdale's tragic flaw is that he cannot
admit to being Hester's lover, he conceals his sin, which makes it a more
severe sin. When Chiilingworth tries to
press him, he clearly tries justify his behavior. He allows Chiilingworth to make him feel
guilty to the point where he almost goes crazy.
After seven years, he overcomes his weakness and reveals he is Pearl's
father. Starbuck's tragic flaw is his
weakness to openly criticize his captain.
When Ahab announces his mission to the crew, Starbuck questions him by
saying "vengeance, on a dumb brute?"
When Ahab pursues his questioning he can do nothing but sigh "God
help me, God help all of us!"
However, it doesn't take him seven years to overcome his weakness, as it
does Dimmesdale. In chapter one hundred
and four, he confronts and challenges Ahabs ignorance regarding the oil
vats. Ahab pulls a gun and points it at
him, and Starbuck says "...let Ahab beware of Ahab." This is why I feel Starbuck and Arthur
Dimmesdale would ignore the whiteness of the whale and see it as a simple
brute.
The final comparison is one between Ahab and
Roger Chillingworth. These two are
almost perfect matches. Both are delayed
emergence characters who are physically deformed and at first portrayed as
victims. Ahab and Chillingworth both
appear calm and intelligent, completely hiding their anger, at least for a
while. Chillingworth commits two severe
sins, the first is against the nature of love.
He does so in marrying Hester while knowing he wasn't a suitable
husband. His second is subordination of
another human's heart. He is willing to
sacrifice another human to satisfy his own selfishness. Ahab also commits numerous sins. The first if these is his cheating of the nature
of trust in lying to the ship's owners about the goal on his mission. The second is his subordination of an entire
crew in his hunt for Moby Dick. He is
willing to sacrifice his entire crew to satisfy his desire for vengeance. Chiilingworth and Ahab both try to create a
scapegoat for destroying themselves, but they both should accept responsibility
for themselves. They both try and play a
god-like-role and end up as devils. That
is why they both would see the whale as purely a representation of all the evil
in the world.
"The Albino whale was all of these things,
wonder ye then at the fiery hunt?"
The whiteness is purely a cosmetic, but as it always is, no one thing
means anything definitely. The meaning
lies in the value an individual gives to that object.
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