CHAPTER
100. Leg and Arm.
The
Pequod, of Nantucket, Meets the Samuel Enderby, of London.
So
cried Ahab, once more hailing a ship showing English colours, bearing down
under the stern. Trumpet to mouth, the old man was standing in his hoisted
quarter-boat, his ivory leg plainly revealed to the stranger captain, who was
carelessly reclining in his own boat's bow. He was a darkly-tanned, burly,
good-natured, fine-looking man, of sixty or thereabouts, dressed in a spacious
roundabout, that hung round him in festoons of blue pilot-cloth; and one empty
arm of this jacket streamed behind him like the broidered arm of a hussar's
surcoat.
“Hast
seen the White Whale?”
“See
you this?” and withdrawing it from the folds that had hidden it, he held up a
white arm of sperm whale bone, terminating in a wooden head like a mallet.
“Man
my boat!” cried Ahab, impetuously, and tossing about the oars near him—“Stand
by to lower!”
In
less than a minute, without quitting his little craft, he and his crew were
dropped to the water, and were soon alongside of the stranger. But here a
curious difficulty presented itself. In the excitement of the moment, Ahab had
forgotten that since the loss of his leg he had never once stepped on board of
any vessel at sea but his own, and then it was always by an ingenious and very
handy mechanical contrivance peculiar to the Pequod, and a thing not to be
rigged and shipped in any other vessel at a moment's warning. Now, it is no
very easy matter for anybody—except those who are almost hourly used to it,
like whalemen—to clamber up a ship's side from a boat on the open sea; for the
great swells now lift the boat high up towards the bulwarks, and then
instantaneously drop it half way down to the kelson. So, deprived of one leg, and
the strange ship of course being altogether unsupplied with the kindly
invention, Ahab now found himself abjectly reduced to a clumsy landsman again;
hopelessly eyeing the uncertain changeful height he could hardly hope to
attain.
It
has before been hinted, perhaps, that every little untoward circumstance that
befell him, and which indirectly sprang from his luckless mishap, almost
invariably irritated or exasperated Ahab. And in the present instance, all this
was heightened by the sight of the two officers of the strange ship, leaning
over the side, by the perpendicular ladder of nailed cleets there, and swinging
towards him a pair of tastefully-ornamented man-ropes; for at first they did
not seem to bethink them that a one-legged man must be too much of a cripple to
use their sea bannisters. But this awkwardness only lasted a minute, because
the strange captain, observing at a glance how affairs stood, cried out, “I
see, I see!—avast heaving there! Jump, boys, and swing over the
cutting-tackle.”
As
good luck would have it, they had had a whale alongside a day or two previous,
and the great tackles were still aloft, and the massive curved blubber-hook,
now clean and dry, was still attached to the end. This was quickly lowered to
Ahab, who at once comprehending it all, slid his solitary thigh into the curve
of the hook (it was like sitting in the fluke of an anchor, or the crotch of an
apple tree), and then giving the word, held himself fast, and at the same time
also helped to hoist his own weight, by pulling hand-over-hand upon one of the
running parts of the tackle. Soon he was carefully swung inside the high
bulwarks, and gently landed upon the capstan head. With his ivory arm frankly
thrust forth in welcome, the other captain advanced, and Ahab, putting out his
ivory leg, and crossing the ivory arm (like two sword-fish blades) cried out in
his walrus way, “Aye, aye, hearty! let us shake bones together!—an arm and a
leg!—an arm that never can shrink, d'ye see; and a leg that never can run.
Where did'st thou see the White Whale?—how long ago?”
“The
White Whale,” said the Englishman, pointing his ivory arm towards the East, and
taking a rueful sight along it, as if it had been a telescope; “there I saw
him, on the Line, last season.”
“And
he took that arm off, did he?” asked Ahab, now sliding down from the capstan,
and resting on the Englishman's shoulder, as he did so.
“Aye,
he was the cause of it, at least; and that leg, too?”
“Spin
me the yarn,” said Ahab; “how was it?”
“It
was the first time in my life that I ever cruised on the Line,” began the
Englishman. “I was ignorant of the White Whale at that time. Well, one day we
lowered for a pod of four or five whales, and my boat fastened to one of them;
a regular circus horse he was, too, that went milling and milling round so,
that my boat's crew could only trim dish, by sitting all their sterns on the
outer gunwale. Presently up breaches from the bottom of the sea a bouncing
great whale, with a milky-white head and hump, all crows' feet and wrinkles.”
“It
was he, it was he!” cried Ahab, suddenly letting out his suspended breath.
“And
harpoons sticking in near his starboard fin.”
“Aye,
aye—they were mine—my irons,” cried Ahab, exultingly—“but on!”
“Give
me a chance, then,” said the Englishman, good-humoredly. “Well, this old
great-grandfather, with the white head and hump, runs all afoam into the pod,
and goes to snapping furiously at my fast-line!”
“Aye,
I see!—wanted to part it; free the fast-fish—an old trick—I know him.”
“How
it was exactly,” continued the one-armed commander, “I do not know; but in
biting the line, it got foul of his teeth, caught there somehow; but we didn't
know it then; so that when we afterwards pulled on the line, bounce we came
plump on to his hump! instead of the other whale's; that went off to windward,
all fluking. Seeing how matters stood, and what a noble great whale it was—the
noblest and biggest I ever saw, sir, in my life—I resolved to capture him,
spite of the boiling rage he seemed to be in. And thinking the hap-hazard line
would get loose, or the tooth it was tangled to might draw (for I have a devil
of a boat's crew for a pull on a whale-line); seeing all this, I say, I jumped
into my first mate's boat—Mr. Mounttop's here (by the way, Captain—Mounttop;
Mounttop—the captain);—as I was saying, I jumped into Mounttop's boat, which,
d'ye see, was gunwale and gunwale with mine, then; and snatching the first
harpoon, let this old great-grandfather have it. But, Lord, look you,
sir—hearts and souls alive, man—the next instant, in a jiff, I was blind as a
bat—both eyes out—all befogged and bedeadened with black foam—the whale's tail
looming straight up out of it, perpendicular in the air, like a marble steeple.
No use sterning all, then; but as I was groping at midday, with a blinding sun,
all crown-jewels; as I was groping, I say, after the second iron, to toss it
overboard—down comes the tail like a Lima tower, cutting my boat in two,
leaving each half in splinters; and, flukes first, the white hump backed
through the wreck, as though it was all chips. We all struck out. To escape his
terrible flailings, I seized hold of my harpoon-pole sticking in him, and for a
moment clung to that like a sucking fish. But a combing sea dashed me off, and
at the same instant, the fish, taking one good dart forwards, went down like a
flash; and the barb of that cursed second iron towing along near me caught me
here” (clapping his hand just below his shoulder); “yes, caught me just here, I
say, and bore me down to Hell's flames, I was thinking; when, when, all of a
sudden, thank the good God, the barb ript its way along the flesh—clear along
the whole length of my arm—came out nigh my wrist, and up I floated;—and that
gentleman there will tell you the rest (by the way, captain—Dr. Bunger, ship's
surgeon: Bunger, my lad,—the captain). Now, Bunger boy, spin your part of the
yarn.”
The
professional gentleman thus familiarly pointed out, had been all the time
standing near them, with nothing specific visible, to denote his gentlemanly
rank on board. His face was an exceedingly round but sober one; he was dressed
in a faded blue woollen frock or shirt, and patched trowsers; and had thus far
been dividing his attention between a marlingspike he held in one hand, and a
pill-box held in the other, occasionally casting a critical glance at the ivory
limbs of the two crippled captains. But, at his superior's introduction of him
to Ahab, he politely bowed, and straightway went on to do his captain's
bidding.
“It
was a shocking bad wound,” began the whale-surgeon; “and, taking my advice,
Captain Boomer here, stood our old Sammy—”
“Samuel
Enderby is the name of my ship,” interrupted the one-armed captain, addressing
Ahab; “go on, boy.”
“Stood
our old Sammy off to the northward, to get out of the blazing hot weather there
on the Line. But it was no use—I did all I could; sat up with him nights; was
very severe with him in the matter of diet—”
“Oh,
very severe!” chimed in the patient himself; then suddenly altering his voice,
“Drinking hot rum toddies with me every night, till he couldn't see to put on
the bandages; and sending me to bed, half seas over, about three o'clock in the
morning. Oh, ye stars! he sat up with me indeed, and was very severe in my
diet. Oh! a great watcher, and very dietetically severe, is Dr. Bunger.
(Bunger, you dog, laugh out! why don't ye? You know you're a precious jolly
rascal.) But, heave ahead, boy, I'd rather be killed by you than kept alive by
any other man.”
“My
captain, you must have ere this perceived, respected sir”—said the
imperturbable godly-looking Bunger, slightly bowing to Ahab—“is apt to be
facetious at times; he spins us many clever things of that sort. But I may as
well say—en passant, as the French remark—that I myself—that is to say, Jack
Bunger, late of the reverend clergy—am a strict total abstinence man; I never
drink—”
“Water!”
cried the captain; “he never drinks it; it's a sort of fits to him; fresh water
throws him into the hydrophobia; but go on—go on with the arm story.”
“Yes,
I may as well,” said the surgeon, coolly. “I was about observing, sir, before
Captain Boomer's facetious interruption, that spite of my best and severest
endeavors, the wound kept getting worse and worse; the truth was, sir, it was
as ugly gaping wound as surgeon ever saw; more than two feet and several inches
long. I measured it with the lead line. In short, it grew black; I knew what
was threatened, and off it came. But I had no hand in shipping that ivory arm
there; that thing is against all rule”—pointing at it with the
marlingspike—“that is the captain's work, not mine; he ordered the carpenter to
make it; he had that club-hammer there put to the end, to knock some one's
brains out with, I suppose, as he tried mine once. He flies into diabolical
passions sometimes. Do ye see this dent, sir”—removing his hat, and brushing
aside his hair, and exposing a bowl-like cavity in his skull, but which bore
not the slightest scarry trace, or any token of ever having been a wound—“Well,
the captain there will tell you how that came here; he knows.”
“No,
I don't,” said the captain, “but his mother did; he was born with it. Oh, you
solemn rogue, you—you Bunger! was there ever such another Bunger in the watery
world? Bunger, when you die, you ought to die in pickle, you dog; you should be
preserved to future ages, you rascal.”
“What
became of the White Whale?” now cried Ahab, who thus far had been impatiently
listening to this by-play between the two Englishmen.
“Oh!”
cried the one-armed captain, “oh, yes! Well; after he sounded, we didn't see
him again for some time; in fact, as I before hinted, I didn't then know what
whale it was that had served me such a trick, till some time afterwards, when
coming back to the Line, we heard about Moby Dick—as some call him—and then I
knew it was he.”
“Did'st
thou cross his wake again?”
“Twice.”
“But
could not fasten?”
“Didn't
want to try to: ain't one limb enough? What should I do without this other arm?
And I'm thinking Moby Dick doesn't bite so much as he swallows.”
“Well,
then,” interrupted Bunger, “give him your left arm for bait to get the right.
Do you know, gentlemen”—very gravely and mathematically bowing to each Captain
in succession—“Do you know, gentlemen, that the digestive organs of the whale
are so inscrutably constructed by Divine Providence, that it is quite
impossible for him to completely digest even a man's arm? And he knows it too.
So that what you take for the White Whale's malice is only his awkwardness. For
he never means to swallow a single limb; he only thinks to terrify by feints.
But sometimes he is like the old juggling fellow, formerly a patient of mine in
Ceylon, that making believe swallow jack-knives, once upon a time let one drop
into him in good earnest, and there it stayed for a twelvemonth or more; when I
gave him an emetic, and he heaved it up in small tacks, d'ye see. No possible
way for him to digest that jack-knife, and fully incorporate it into his
general bodily system. Yes, Captain Boomer, if you are quick enough about it,
and have a mind to pawn one arm for the sake of the privilege of giving decent
burial to the other, why in that case the arm is yours; only let the whale have
another chance at you shortly, that's all.”
“No,
thank ye, Bunger,” said the English Captain, “he's welcome to the arm he has,
since I can't help it, and didn't know him then; but not to another one. No
more White Whales for me; I've lowered for him once, and that has satisfied me.
There would be great glory in killing him, I know that; and there is a
ship-load of precious sperm in him, but, hark ye, he's best let alone; don't
you think so, Captain?”—glancing at the ivory leg.
“He
is. But he will still be hunted, for all that. What is best let alone, that
accursed thing is not always what least allures. He's all a magnet! How long
since thou saw'st him last? Which way heading?”
“Bless
my soul, and curse the foul fiend's,” cried Bunger, stoopingly walking round
Ahab, and like a dog, strangely snuffing; “this man's blood—bring the
thermometer!—it's at the boiling point!—his pulse makes these planks
beat!—sir!”—taking a lancet from his pocket, and drawing near to Ahab's arm.
“Avast!”
roared Ahab, dashing him against the bulwarks—“Man the boat! Which way
heading?”
“Good
God!” cried the English Captain, to whom the question was put. “What's the
matter? He was heading east, I think.—Is your Captain crazy?” whispering
Fedallah.
But
Fedallah, putting a finger on his lip, slid over the bulwarks to take the
boat's steering oar, and Ahab, swinging the cutting-tackle towards him,
commanded the ship's sailors to stand by to lower.
In
a moment he was standing in the boat's stern, and the Manilla men were
springing to their oars. In vain the English Captain hailed him. With back to
the stranger ship, and face set like a flint to his own, Ahab stood upright
till alongside of the Pequod.
CHAPTER
101. The Decanter.
Ere
the English ship fades from sight, be it set down here, that she hailed from
London, and was named after the late Samuel Enderby, merchant of that city, the
original of the famous whaling house of Enderby & Sons; a house which in my
poor whaleman's opinion, comes not far behind the united royal houses of the
Tudors and Bourbons, in point of real historical interest. How long, prior to
the year of our Lord 1775, this great whaling house was in existence, my numerous
fish-documents do not make plain; but in that year (1775) it fitted out the
first English ships that ever regularly hunted the Sperm Whale; though for some
score of years previous (ever since 1726) our valiant Coffins and Maceys of
Nantucket and the Vineyard had in large fleets pursued that Leviathan, but only
in the North and South Atlantic: not elsewhere. Be it distinctly recorded here,
that the Nantucketers were the first among mankind to harpoon with civilized
steel the great Sperm Whale; and that for half a century they were the only
people of the whole globe who so harpooned him.
In
1778, a fine ship, the Amelia, fitted out for the express purpose, and at the
sole charge of the vigorous Enderbys, boldly rounded Cape Horn, and was the
first among the nations to lower a whale-boat of any sort in the great South
Sea. The voyage was a skilful and lucky one; and returning to her berth with
her hold full of the precious sperm, the Amelia's example was soon followed by
other ships, English and American, and thus the vast Sperm Whale grounds of the
Pacific were thrown open. But not content with this good deed, the
indefatigable house again bestirred itself: Samuel and all his Sons—how many,
their mother only knows—and under their immediate auspices, and partly, I
think, at their expense, the British government was induced to send the
sloop-of-war Rattler on a whaling voyage of discovery into the South Sea.
Commanded by a naval Post-Captain, the Rattler made a rattling voyage of it,
and did some service; how much does not appear. But this is not all. In 1819,
the same house fitted out a discovery whale ship of their own, to go on a
tasting cruise to the remote waters of Japan. That ship—well called the
“Syren”—made a noble experimental cruise; and it was thus that the great
Japanese Whaling Ground first became generally known. The Syren in this famous
voyage was commanded by a Captain Coffin, a Nantucketer.
All
honor to the Enderbies, therefore, whose house, I think, exists to the present
day; though doubtless the original Samuel must long ago have slipped his cable
for the great South Sea of the other world.
The
ship named after him was worthy of the honor, being a very fast sailer and a
noble craft every way. I boarded her once at midnight somewhere off the
Patagonian coast, and drank good flip down in the forecastle. It was a fine gam
we had, and they were all trumps—every soul on board. A short life to them, and
a jolly death. And that fine gam I had—long, very long after old Ahab touched
her planks with his ivory heel—it minds me of the noble, solid, Saxon
hospitality of that ship; and may my parson forget me, and the devil remember
me, if I ever lose sight of it. Flip? Did I say we had flip? Yes, and we
flipped it at the rate of ten gallons the hour; and when the squall came (for
it's squally off there by Patagonia), and all hands—visitors and all—were
called to reef topsails, we were so top-heavy that we had to swing each other
aloft in bowlines; and we ignorantly furled the skirts of our jackets into the
sails, so that we hung there, reefed fast in the howling gale, a warning
example to all drunken tars. However, the masts did not go overboard; and by
and by we scrambled down, so sober, that we had to pass the flip again, though
the savage salt spray bursting down the forecastle scuttle, rather too much
diluted and pickled it to my taste.
The
beef was fine—tough, but with body in it. They said it was bull-beef; others,
that it was dromedary beef; but I do not know, for certain, how that was. They
had dumplings too; small, but substantial, symmetrically globular, and
indestructible dumplings. I fancied that you could feel them, and roll them
about in you after they were swallowed. If you stooped over too far forward,
you risked their pitching out of you like billiard-balls. The bread—but that
couldn't be helped; besides, it was an anti-scorbutic; in short, the bread
contained the only fresh fare they had. But the forecastle was not very light,
and it was very easy to step over into a dark corner when you ate it. But all
in all, taking her from truck to helm, considering the dimensions of the cook's
boilers, including his own live parchment boilers; fore and aft, I say, the
Samuel Enderby was a jolly ship; of good fare and plenty; fine flip and strong;
crack fellows all, and capital from boot heels to hat-band.
But
why was it, think ye, that the Samuel Enderby, and some other English whalers I
know of—not all though—were such famous, hospitable ships; that passed round
the beef, and the bread, and the can, and the joke; and were not soon weary of
eating, and drinking, and laughing? I will tell you. The abounding good cheer
of these English whalers is matter for historical research. Nor have I been at
all sparing of historical whale research, when it has seemed needed.
The
English were preceded in the whale fishery by the Hollanders, Zealanders, and
Danes; from whom they derived many terms still extant in the fishery; and what
is yet more, their fat old fashions, touching plenty to eat and drink. For, as
a general thing, the English merchant-ship scrimps her crew; but not so the
English whaler. Hence, in the English, this thing of whaling good cheer is not
normal and natural, but incidental and particular; and, therefore, must have
some special origin, which is here pointed out, and will be still further
elucidated.
During
my researches in the Leviathanic histories, I stumbled upon an ancient Dutch
volume, which, by the musty whaling smell of it, I knew must be about whalers.
The title was, “Dan Coopman,” wherefore I concluded that this must be the
invaluable memoirs of some Amsterdam cooper in the fishery, as every whale ship
must carry its cooper. I was reinforced in this opinion by seeing that it was
the production of one “Fitz Swackhammer.” But my friend Dr. Snodhead, a very
learned man, professor of Low Dutch and High German in the college of Santa
Claus and St. Pott's, to whom I handed the work for translation, giving him a
box of sperm candles for his trouble—this same Dr. Snodhead, so soon as he spied
the book, assured me that “Dan Coopman” did not mean “The Cooper,” but “The
Merchant.” In short, this ancient and learned Low Dutch book treated of the
commerce of Holland; and, among other subjects, contained a very interesting
account of its whale fishery. And in this chapter it was, headed, “Smeer,” or
“Fat,” that I found a long detailed list of the outfits for the larders and
cellars of 180 sail of Dutch whalemen; from which list, as translated by Dr.
Snodhead, I transcribe the following:
400,000
lbs. of beef. 60,000 lbs. Friesland pork. 150,000 lbs. of stock fish. 550,000
lbs. of biscuit. 72,000 lbs. of soft bread. 2,800 firkins of butter. 20,000
lbs. Texel & Leyden cheese. 144,000 lbs. cheese (probably an inferior
article). 550 ankers of Geneva. 10,800 barrels of beer.
Most
statistical tables are parchingly dry in the reading; not so in the present
case, however, where the reader is flooded with whole pipes, barrels, quarts,
and gills of good gin and good cheer.
At
the time, I devoted three days to the studious digesting of all this beer,
beef, and bread, during which many profound thoughts were incidentally
suggested to me, capable of a transcendental and Platonic application; and,
furthermore, I compiled supplementary tables of my own, touching the probable
quantity of stock-fish, etc., consumed by every Low Dutch harpooneer in that
ancient Greenland and Spitzbergen whale fishery. In the first place, the amount
of butter, and Texel and Leyden cheese consumed, seems amazing. I impute it,
though, to their naturally unctuous natures, being rendered still more unctuous
by the nature of their vocation, and especially by their pursuing their game in
those frigid Polar Seas, on the very coasts of that Esquimaux country where the
convivial natives pledge each other in bumpers of train oil.
The
quantity of beer, too, is very large, 10,800 barrels. Now, as those polar
fisheries could only be prosecuted in the short summer of that climate, so that
the whole cruise of one of these Dutch whalemen, including the short voyage to
and from the Spitzbergen sea, did not much exceed three months, say, and
reckoning 30 men to each of their fleet of 180 sail, we have 5,400 Low Dutch
seamen in all; therefore, I say, we have precisely two barrels of beer per man,
for a twelve weeks' allowance, exclusive of his fair proportion of that 550
ankers of gin. Now, whether these gin and beer harpooneers, so fuddled as one
might fancy them to have been, were the right sort of men to stand up in a boat's
head, and take good aim at flying whales; this would seem somewhat improbable.
Yet they did aim at them, and hit them too. But this was very far North, be it
remembered, where beer agrees well with the constitution; upon the Equator, in
our southern fishery, beer would be apt to make the harpooneer sleepy at the
mast-head and boozy in his boat; and grievous loss might ensue to Nantucket and
New Bedford.
But
no more; enough has been said to show that the old Dutch whalers of two or
three centuries ago were high livers; and that the English whalers have not
neglected so excellent an example. For, say they, when cruising in an empty
ship, if you can get nothing better out of the world, get a good dinner out of
it, at least. And this empties the decanter.
CHAPTER
102. A Bower in the Arsacides.
Hitherto,
in descriptively treating of the Sperm Whale, I have chiefly dwelt upon the
marvels of his outer aspect; or separately and in detail upon some few interior
structural features. But to a large and thorough sweeping comprehension of him,
it behooves me now to unbutton him still further, and untagging the points of
his hose, unbuckling his garters, and casting loose the hooks and the eyes of
the joints of his innermost bones, set him before you in his ultimatum; that is
to say, in his unconditional skeleton.
But
how now, Ishmael? How is it, that you, a mere oarsman in the fishery, pretend
to know aught about the subterranean parts of the whale? Did erudite Stubb,
mounted upon your capstan, deliver lectures on the anatomy of the Cetacea; and
by help of the windlass, hold up a specimen rib for exhibition? Explain
thyself, Ishmael. Can you land a full-grown whale on your deck for examination,
as a cook dishes a roast-pig? Surely not. A veritable witness have you hitherto
been, Ishmael; but have a care how you seize the privilege of Jonah alone; the
privilege of discoursing upon the joists and beams; the rafters, ridge-pole,
sleepers, and under-pinnings, making up the frame-work of leviathan; and belike
of the tallow-vats, dairy-rooms, butteries, and cheeseries in his bowels.
I
confess, that since Jonah, few whalemen have penetrated very far beneath the
skin of the adult whale; nevertheless, I have been blessed with an opportunity
to dissect him in miniature. In a ship I belonged to, a small cub Sperm Whale
was once bodily hoisted to the deck for his poke or bag, to make sheaths for
the barbs of the harpoons, and for the heads of the lances. Think you I let
that chance go, without using my boat-hatchet and jack-knife, and breaking the
seal and reading all the contents of that young cub?
And
as for my exact knowledge of the bones of the leviathan in their gigantic, full
grown development, for that rare knowledge I am indebted to my late royal
friend Tranquo, king of Tranque, one of the Arsacides. For being at Tranque,
years ago, when attached to the trading-ship Dey of Algiers, I was invited to
spend part of the Arsacidean holidays with the lord of Tranque, at his retired
palm villa at Pupella; a sea-side glen not very far distant from what our
sailors called Bamboo-Town, his capital.
Among
many other fine qualities, my royal friend Tranquo, being gifted with a devout
love for all matters of barbaric vertù, had brought together in Pupella
whatever rare things the more ingenious of his people could invent; chiefly
carved woods of wonderful devices, chiselled shells, inlaid spears, costly
paddles, aromatic canoes; and all these distributed among whatever natural
wonders, the wonder-freighted, tribute-rendering waves had cast upon his
shores.
Chief
among these latter was a great Sperm Whale, which, after an unusually long
raging gale, had been found dead and stranded, with his head against a
cocoa-nut tree, whose plumage-like, tufted droopings seemed his verdant jet.
When the vast body had at last been stripped of its fathom-deep enfoldings, and
the bones become dust dry in the sun, then the skeleton was carefully
transported up the Pupella glen, where a grand temple of lordly palms now
sheltered it.
The
ribs were hung with trophies; the vertebræ were carved with Arsacidean annals,
in strange hieroglyphics; in the skull, the priests kept up an unextinguished
aromatic flame, so that the mystic head again sent forth its vapory spout;
while, suspended from a bough, the terrific lower jaw vibrated over all the
devotees, like the hair-hung sword that so affrighted Damocles.
It
was a wondrous sight. The wood was green as mosses of the Icy Glen; the trees
stood high and haughty, feeling their living sap; the industrious earth beneath
was as a weaver's loom, with a gorgeous carpet on it, whereof the ground-vine
tendrils formed the warp and woof, and the living flowers the figures. All the
trees, with all their laden branches; all the shrubs, and ferns, and grasses;
the message-carrying air; all these unceasingly were active. Through the
lacings of the leaves, the great sun seemed a flying shuttle weaving the
unwearied verdure. Oh, busy weaver! unseen weaver!—pause!—one word!—whither
flows the fabric? what palace may it deck? wherefore all these ceaseless
toilings? Speak, weaver!—stay thy hand!—but one single word with thee! Nay—the
shuttle flies—the figures float from forth the loom; the freshet-rushing carpet
for ever slides away. The weaver-god, he weaves; and by that weaving is he
deafened, that he hears no mortal voice; and by that humming, we, too, who look
on the loom are deafened; and only when we escape it shall we hear the thousand
voices that speak through it. For even so it is in all material factories. The
spoken words that are inaudible among the flying spindles; those same words are
plainly heard without the walls, bursting from the opened casements. Thereby
have villainies been detected. Ah, mortal! then, be heedful; for so, in all
this din of the great world's loom, thy subtlest thinkings may be overheard
afar.
Now,
amid the green, life-restless loom of that Arsacidean wood, the great, white,
worshipped skeleton lay lounging—a gigantic idler! Yet, as the ever-woven
verdant warp and woof intermixed and hummed around him, the mighty idler seemed
the cunning weaver; himself all woven over with the vines; every month assuming
greener, fresher verdure; but himself a skeleton. Life folded Death; Death
trellised Life; the grim god wived with youthful Life, and begat him
curly-headed glories.
Now,
when with royal Tranquo I visited this wondrous whale, and saw the skull an
altar, and the artificial smoke ascending from where the real jet had issued, I
marvelled that the king should regard a chapel as an object of vertù. He
laughed. But more I marvelled that the priests should swear that smoky jet of
his was genuine. To and fro I paced before this skeleton—brushed the vines
aside—broke through the ribs—and with a ball of Arsacidean twine, wandered,
eddied long amid its many winding, shaded colonnades and arbours. But soon my
line was out; and following it back, I emerged from the opening where I
entered. I saw no living thing within; naught was there but bones.
Cutting
me a green measuring-rod, I once more dived within the skeleton. From their
arrow-slit in the skull, the priests perceived me taking the altitude of the
final rib, “How now!” they shouted; “Dar'st thou measure this our god! That's
for us.” “Aye, priests—well, how long do ye make him, then?” But hereupon a
fierce contest rose among them, concerning feet and inches; they cracked each
other's sconces with their yard-sticks—the great skull echoed—and seizing that
lucky chance, I quickly concluded my own admeasurements.
These
admeasurements I now propose to set before you. But first, be it recorded,
that, in this matter, I am not free to utter any fancied measurement I please.
Because there are skeleton authorities you can refer to, to test my accuracy.
There is a Leviathanic Museum, they tell me, in Hull, England, one of the
whaling ports of that country, where they have some fine specimens of fin-backs
and other whales. Likewise, I have heard that in the museum of Manchester, in
New Hampshire, they have what the proprietors call “the only perfect specimen
of a Greenland or River Whale in the United States.” Moreover, at a place in
Yorkshire, England, Burton Constable by name, a certain Sir Clifford Constable
has in his possession the skeleton of a Sperm Whale, but of moderate size, by
no means of the full-grown magnitude of my friend King Tranquo's.
In
both cases, the stranded whales to which these two skeletons belonged, were
originally claimed by their proprietors upon similar grounds. King Tranquo
seizing his because he wanted it; and Sir Clifford, because he was lord of the
seignories of those parts. Sir Clifford's whale has been articulated
throughout; so that, like a great chest of drawers, you can open and shut him,
in all his bony cavities—spread out his ribs like a gigantic fan—and swing all
day upon his lower jaw. Locks are to be put upon some of his trap-doors and
shutters; and a footman will show round future visitors with a bunch of keys at
his side. Sir Clifford thinks of charging twopence for a peep at the whispering
gallery in the spinal column; threepence to hear the echo in the hollow of his
cerebellum; and sixpence for the unrivalled view from his forehead.
The
skeleton dimensions I shall now proceed to set down are copied verbatim from my
right arm, where I had them tattooed; as in my wild wanderings at that period,
there was no other secure way of preserving such valuable statistics. But as I
was crowded for space, and wished the other parts of my body to remain a blank
page for a poem I was then composing—at least, what untattooed parts might
remain—I did not trouble myself with the odd inches; nor, indeed, should inches
at all enter into a congenial admeasurement of the whale.
CHAPTER
103. Measurement of The Whale's Skeleton.
In
the first place, I wish to lay before you a particular, plain statement,
touching the living bulk of this leviathan, whose skeleton we are briefly to
exhibit. Such a statement may prove useful here.
According
to a careful calculation I have made, and which I partly base upon Captain
Scoresby's estimate, of seventy tons for the largest sized Greenland whale of
sixty feet in length; according to my careful calculation, I say, a Sperm Whale
of the largest magnitude, between eighty-five and ninety feet in length, and
something less than forty feet in its fullest circumference, such a whale will
weigh at least ninety tons; so that, reckoning thirteen men to a ton, he would
considerably outweigh the combined population of a whole village of one
thousand one hundred inhabitants.
Think
you not then that brains, like yoked cattle, should be put to this leviathan, to
make him at all budge to any landsman's imagination?
Having
already in various ways put before you his skull, spout-hole, jaw, teeth, tail,
forehead, fins, and divers other parts, I shall now simply point out what is
most interesting in the general bulk of his unobstructed bones. But as the
colossal skull embraces so very large a proportion of the entire extent of the
skeleton; as it is by far the most complicated part; and as nothing is to be
repeated concerning it in this chapter, you must not fail to carry it in your
mind, or under your arm, as we proceed, otherwise you will not gain a complete
notion of the general structure we are about to view.
In
length, the Sperm Whale's skeleton at Tranque measured seventy-two feet; so
that when fully invested and extended in life, he must have been ninety feet
long; for in the whale, the skeleton loses about one fifth in length compared
with the living body. Of this seventy-two feet, his skull and jaw comprised
some twenty feet, leaving some fifty feet of plain back-bone. Attached to this
back-bone, for something less than a third of its length, was the mighty
circular basket of ribs which once enclosed his vitals.
To
me this vast ivory-ribbed chest, with the long, unrelieved spine, extending far
away from it in a straight line, not a little resembled the hull of a great
ship new-laid upon the stocks, when only some twenty of her naked bow-ribs are
inserted, and the keel is otherwise, for the time, but a long, disconnected
timber.
The
ribs were ten on a side. The first, to begin from the neck, was nearly six feet
long; the second, third, and fourth were each successively longer, till you
came to the climax of the fifth, or one of the middle ribs, which measured
eight feet and some inches. From that part, the remaining ribs diminished, till
the tenth and last only spanned five feet and some inches. In general
thickness, they all bore a seemly correspondence to their length. The middle
ribs were the most arched. In some of the Arsacides they are used for beams
whereon to lay footpath bridges over small streams.
In
considering these ribs, I could not but be struck anew with the circumstance,
so variously repeated in this book, that the skeleton of the whale is by no
means the mould of his invested form. The largest of the Tranque ribs, one of
the middle ones, occupied that part of the fish which, in life, is greatest in
depth. Now, the greatest depth of the invested body of this particular whale
must have been at least sixteen feet; whereas, the corresponding rib measured
but little more than eight feet. So that this rib only conveyed half of the
true notion of the living magnitude of that part. Besides, for some way, where
I now saw but a naked spine, all that had been once wrapped round with tons of
added bulk in flesh, muscle, blood, and bowels. Still more, for the ample fins,
I here saw but a few disordered joints; and in place of the weighty and
majestic, but boneless flukes, an utter blank!
How
vain and foolish, then, thought I, for timid untravelled man to try to
comprehend aright this wondrous whale, by merely poring over his dead
attenuated skeleton, stretched in this peaceful wood. No. Only in the heart of
quickest perils; only when within the eddyings of his angry flukes; only on the
profound unbounded sea, can the fully invested whale be truly and livingly
found out.
But
the spine. For that, the best way we can consider it is, with a crane, to pile
its bones high up on end. No speedy enterprise. But now it's done, it looks
much like Pompey's Pillar.
There
are forty and odd vertebræ in all, which in the skeleton are not locked
together. They mostly lie like the great knobbed blocks on a Gothic spire,
forming solid courses of heavy masonry. The largest, a middle one, is in width
something less than three feet, and in depth more than four. The smallest,
where the spine tapers away into the tail, is only two inches in width, and
looks something like a white billiard-ball. I was told that there were still
smaller ones, but they had been lost by some little cannibal urchins, the
priest's children, who had stolen them to play marbles with. Thus we see how
that the spine of even the hugest of living things tapers off at last into
simple child's play.
CHAPTER
104. The Fossil Whale.
From
his mighty bulk the whale affords a most congenial theme whereon to enlarge,
amplify, and generally expatiate. Would you, you could not compress him. By
good rights he should only be treated of in imperial folio. Not to tell over
again his furlongs from spiracle to tail, and the yards he measures about the
waist; only think of the gigantic involutions of his intestines, where they lie
in him like great cables and hawsers coiled away in the subterranean orlop-deck
of a line-of-battle-ship.
Since
I have undertaken to manhandle this Leviathan, it behooves me to approve myself
omnisciently exhaustive in the enterprise; not overlooking the minutest seminal
germs of his blood, and spinning him out to the uttermost coil of his bowels.
Having already described him in most of his present habitatory and anatomical
peculiarities, it now remains to magnify him in an archæological,
fossiliferous, and antediluvian point of view. Applied to any other creature
than the Leviathan—to an ant or a flea—such portly terms might justly be deemed
unwarrantably grandiloquent. But when Leviathan is the text, the case is
altered. Fain am I to stagger to this emprise under the weightiest words of the
dictionary. And here be it said, that whenever it has been convenient to
consult one in the course of these dissertations, I have invariably used a huge
quarto edition of Johnson, expressly purchased for that purpose; because that
famous lexicographer's uncommon personal bulk more fitted him to compile a
lexicon to be used by a whale author like me.
One
often hears of writers that rise and swell with their subject, though it may
seem but an ordinary one. How, then, with me, writing of this Leviathan?
Unconsciously my chirography expands into placard capitals. Give me a condor's
quill! Give me Vesuvius' crater for an inkstand! Friends, hold my arms! For in
the mere act of penning my thoughts of this Leviathan, they weary me, and make
me faint with their outreaching comprehensiveness of sweep, as if to include
the whole circle of the sciences, and all the generations of whales, and men,
and mastodons, past, present, and to come, with all the revolving panoramas of
empire on earth, and throughout the whole universe, not excluding its suburbs.
Such, and so magnifying, is the virtue of a large and liberal theme! We expand
to its bulk. To produce a mighty book, you must choose a mighty theme. No great
and enduring volume can ever be written on the flea, though many there be who
have tried it.
Ere
entering upon the subject of Fossil Whales, I present my credentials as a
geologist, by stating that in my miscellaneous time I have been a stone-mason,
and also a great digger of ditches, canals and wells, wine-vaults, cellars, and
cisterns of all sorts. Likewise, by way of preliminary, I desire to remind the
reader, that while in the earlier geological strata there are found the fossils
of monsters now almost completely extinct; the subsequent relics discovered in
what are called the Tertiary formations seem the connecting, or at any rate
intercepted links, between the antichronical creatures, and those whose remote
posterity are said to have entered the Ark; all the Fossil Whales hitherto
discovered belong to the Tertiary period, which is the last preceding the
superficial formations. And though none of them precisely answer to any known
species of the present time, they are yet sufficiently akin to them in general
respects, to justify their taking rank as Cetacean fossils.
Detached
broken fossils of pre-adamite whales, fragments of their bones and skeletons,
have within thirty years past, at various intervals, been found at the base of
the Alps, in Lombardy, in France, in England, in Scotland, and in the States of
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. Among the more curious of such remains is
part of a skull, which in the year 1779 was disinterred in the Rue Dauphine in
Paris, a short street opening almost directly upon the palace of the Tuileries;
and bones disinterred in excavating the great docks of Antwerp, in Napoleon's
time. Cuvier pronounced these fragments to have belonged to some utterly
unknown Leviathanic species.
But
by far the most wonderful of all Cetacean relics was the almost complete vast
skeleton of an extinct monster, found in the year 1842, on the plantation of
Judge Creagh, in Alabama. The awe-stricken credulous slaves in the vicinity
took it for the bones of one of the fallen angels. The Alabama doctors declared
it a huge reptile, and bestowed upon it the name of Basilosaurus. But some
specimen bones of it being taken across the sea to Owen, the English Anatomist,
it turned out that this alleged reptile was a whale, though of a departed
species. A significant illustration of the fact, again and again repeated in
this book, that the skeleton of the whale furnishes but little clue to the
shape of his fully invested body. So Owen rechristened the monster Zeuglodon;
and in his paper read before the London Geological Society, pronounced it, in
substance, one of the most extraordinary creatures which the mutations of the
globe have blotted out of existence.
When
I stand among these mighty Leviathan skeletons, skulls, tusks, jaws, ribs, and
vertebræ, all characterized by partial resemblances to the existing breeds of
sea-monsters; but at the same time bearing on the other hand similar affinities
to the annihilated antichronical Leviathans, their incalculable seniors; I am,
by a flood, borne back to that wondrous period, ere time itself can be said to
have begun; for time began with man. Here Saturn's grey chaos rolls over me,
and I obtain dim, shuddering glimpses into those Polar eternities; when wedged
bastions of ice pressed hard upon what are now the Tropics; and in all the
25,000 miles of this world's circumference, not an inhabitable hand's breadth
of land was visible. Then the whole world was the whale's; and, king of
creation, he left his wake along the present lines of the Andes and the
Himmalehs. Who can show a pedigree like Leviathan? Ahab's harpoon had shed
older blood than the Pharaoh's. Methuselah seems a school-boy. I look round to
shake hands with Shem. I am horror-struck at this antemosaic, unsourced existence
of the unspeakable terrors of the whale, which, having been before all time,
must needs exist after all humane ages are over.
But
not alone has this Leviathan left his pre-adamite traces in the stereotype
plates of nature, and in limestone and marl bequeathed his ancient bust; but
upon Egyptian tablets, whose antiquity seems to claim for them an almost
fossiliferous character, we find the unmistakable print of his fin. In an
apartment of the great temple of Denderah, some fifty years ago, there was
discovered upon the granite ceiling a sculptured and painted planisphere,
abounding in centaurs, griffins, and dolphins, similar to the grotesque figures
on the celestial globe of the moderns. Gliding among them, old Leviathan swam
as of yore; was there swimming in that planisphere, centuries before Solomon
was cradled.
Nor
must there be omitted another strange attestation of the antiquity of the
whale, in his own osseous post-diluvian reality, as set down by the venerable
John Leo, the old Barbary traveller.
“Not
far from the Sea-side, they have a Temple, the Rafters and Beams of which are
made of Whale-Bones; for Whales of a monstrous size are oftentimes cast up dead
upon that shore. The Common People imagine, that by a secret Power bestowed by
God upon the Temple, no Whale can pass it without immediate death. But the
truth of the Matter is, that on either side of the Temple, there are Rocks that
shoot two Miles into the Sea, and wound the Whales when they light upon 'em.
They keep a Whale's Rib of an incredible length for a Miracle, which lying upon
the Ground with its convex part uppermost, makes an Arch, the Head of which
cannot be reached by a Man upon a Camel's Back. This Rib (says John Leo) is
said to have layn there a hundred Years before I saw it. Their Historians
affirm, that a Prophet who prophesy'd of Mahomet, came from this Temple, and
some do not stand to assert, that the Prophet Jonas was cast forth by the Whale
at the Base of the Temple.”
In
this Afric Temple of the Whale I leave you, reader, and if you be a
Nantucketer, and a whaleman, you will silently worship there.
CHAPTER
105. Does the Whale's Magnitude Diminish?—Will He Perish?
Inasmuch,
then, as this Leviathan comes floundering down upon us from the head-waters of
the Eternities, it may be fitly inquired, whether, in the long course of his
generations, he has not degenerated from the original bulk of his sires.
But
upon investigation we find, that not only are the whales of the present day
superior in magnitude to those whose fossil remains are found in the Tertiary
system (embracing a distinct geological period prior to man), but of the whales
found in that Tertiary system, those belonging to its latter formations exceed
in size those of its earlier ones.
Of
all the pre-adamite whales yet exhumed, by far the largest is the Alabama one
mentioned in the last chapter, and that was less than seventy feet in length in
the skeleton. Whereas, we have already seen, that the tape-measure gives
seventy-two feet for the skeleton of a large sized modern whale. And I have
heard, on whalemen's authority, that Sperm Whales have been captured near a
hundred feet long at the time of capture.
But
may it not be, that while the whales of the present hour are an advance in
magnitude upon those of all previous geological periods; may it not be, that
since Adam's time they have degenerated?
Assuredly,
we must conclude so, if we are to credit the accounts of such gentlemen as
Pliny, and the ancient naturalists generally. For Pliny tells us of whales that
embraced acres of living bulk, and Aldrovandus of others which measured eight
hundred feet in length—Rope Walks and Thames Tunnels of Whales! And even in the
days of Banks and Solander, Cooke's naturalists, we find a Danish member of the
Academy of Sciences setting down certain Iceland Whales (reydan-siskur, or
Wrinkled Bellies) at one hundred and twenty yards; that is, three hundred and
sixty feet. And Lacépède, the French naturalist, in his elaborate history of
whales, in the very beginning of his work (page 3), sets down the Right Whale
at one hundred metres, three hundred and twenty-eight feet. And this work was
published so late as A.D. 1825.
But
will any whaleman believe these stories? No. The whale of to-day is as big as
his ancestors in Pliny's time. And if ever I go where Pliny is, I, a whaleman
(more than he was), will make bold to tell him so. Because I cannot understand
how it is, that while the Egyptian mummies that were buried thousands of years
before even Pliny was born, do not measure so much in their coffins as a modern
Kentuckian in his socks; and while the cattle and other animals sculptured on
the oldest Egyptian and Nineveh tablets, by the relative proportions in which
they are drawn, just as plainly prove that the high-bred, stall-fed, prize
cattle of Smithfield, not only equal, but far exceed in magnitude the fattest
of Pharaoh's fat kine; in the face of all this, I will not admit that of all
animals the whale alone should have degenerated.
But
still another inquiry remains; one often agitated by the more recondite
Nantucketers. Whether owing to the almost omniscient look-outs at the
mast-heads of the whale-ships, now penetrating even through Behring's straits,
and into the remotest secret drawers and lockers of the world; and the thousand
harpoons and lances darted along all continental coasts; the moot point is,
whether Leviathan can long endure so wide a chase, and so remorseless a havoc;
whether he must not at last be exterminated from the waters, and the last
whale, like the last man, smoke his last pipe, and then himself evaporate in
the final puff.
Comparing
the humped herds of whales with the humped herds of buffalo, which, not forty
years ago, overspread by tens of thousands the prairies of Illinois and
Missouri, and shook their iron manes and scowled with their thunder-clotted
brows upon the sites of populous river-capitals, where now the polite broker
sells you land at a dollar an inch; in such a comparison an irresistible
argument would seem furnished, to show that the hunted whale cannot now escape
speedy extinction.
But
you must look at this matter in every light. Though so short a period ago—not a
good lifetime—the census of the buffalo in Illinois exceeded the census of men
now in London, and though at the present day not one horn or hoof of them
remains in all that region; and though the cause of this wondrous extermination
was the spear of man; yet the far different nature of the whale-hunt
peremptorily forbids so inglorious an end to the Leviathan. Forty men in one
ship hunting the Sperm Whales for forty-eight months think they have done
extremely well, and thank God, if at last they carry home the oil of forty
fish. Whereas, in the days of the old Canadian and Indian hunters and trappers
of the West, when the far west (in whose sunset suns still rise) was a
wilderness and a virgin, the same number of moccasined men, for the same number
of months, mounted on horse instead of sailing in ships, would have slain not
forty, but forty thousand and more buffaloes; a fact that, if need were, could
be statistically stated.
Nor,
considered aright, does it seem any argument in favour of the gradual
extinction of the Sperm Whale, for example, that in former years (the latter
part of the last century, say) these Leviathans, in small pods, were
encountered much oftener than at present, and, in consequence, the voyages were
not so prolonged, and were also much more remunerative. Because, as has been
elsewhere noticed, those whales, influenced by some views to safety, now swim
the seas in immense caravans, so that to a large degree the scattered
solitaries, yokes, and pods, and schools of other days are now aggregated into
vast but widely separated, unfrequent armies. That is all. And equally
fallacious seems the conceit, that because the so-called whale-bone whales no
longer haunt many grounds in former years abounding with them, hence that
species also is declining. For they are only being driven from promontory to
cape; and if one coast is no longer enlivened with their jets, then, be sure,
some other and remoter strand has been very recently startled by the unfamiliar
spectacle.
Furthermore:
concerning these last mentioned Leviathans, they have two firm fortresses,
which, in all human probability, will for ever remain impregnable. And as upon
the invasion of their valleys, the frosty Swiss have retreated to their
mountains; so, hunted from the savannas and glades of the middle seas, the
whale-bone whales can at last resort to their Polar citadels, and diving under
the ultimate glassy barriers and walls there, come up among icy fields and
floes; and in a charmed circle of everlasting December, bid defiance to all
pursuit from man.
But
as perhaps fifty of these whale-bone whales are harpooned for one cachalot,
some philosophers of the forecastle have concluded that this positive havoc has
already very seriously diminished their battalions. But though for some time
past a number of these whales, not less than 13,000, have been annually slain
on the nor' west coast by the Americans alone; yet there are considerations
which render even this circumstance of little or no account as an opposing
argument in this matter.
Natural
as it is to be somewhat incredulous concerning the populousness of the more
enormous creatures of the globe, yet what shall we say to Harto, the historian
of Goa, when he tells us that at one hunting the King of Siam took 4,000
elephants; that in those regions elephants are numerous as droves of cattle in
the temperate climes. And there seems no reason to doubt that if these
elephants, which have now been hunted for thousands of years, by Semiramis, by
Porus, by Hannibal, and by all the successive monarchs of the East—if they
still survive there in great numbers, much more may the great whale outlast all
hunting, since he has a pasture to expatiate in, which is precisely twice as
large as all Asia, both Americas, Europe and Africa, New Holland, and all the
Isles of the sea combined.
Moreover:
we are to consider, that from the presumed great longevity of whales, their
probably attaining the age of a century and more, therefore at any one period
of time, several distinct adult generations must be contemporary. And what that
is, we may soon gain some idea of, by imagining all the grave-yards,
cemeteries, and family vaults of creation yielding up the live bodies of all
the men, women, and children who were alive seventy-five years ago; and adding
this countless host to the present human population of the globe.
Wherefore,
for all these things, we account the whale immortal in his species, however
perishable in his individuality. He swam the seas before the continents broke
water; he once swam over the site of the Tuileries, and Windsor Castle, and the
Kremlin. In Noah's flood he despised Noah's Ark; and if ever the world is to be
again flooded, like the Netherlands, to kill off its rats, then the eternal
whale will still survive, and rearing upon the topmost crest of the equatorial
flood, spout his frothed defiance to the skies.
CHAPTER
106. Ahab's Leg.
The
precipitating manner in which Captain Ahab had quitted the Samuel Enderby of
London, had not been unattended with some small violence to his own person. He
had lighted with such energy upon a thwart of his boat that his ivory leg had
received a half-splintering shock. And when after gaining his own deck, and his
own pivot-hole there, he so vehemently wheeled round with an urgent command to
the steersman (it was, as ever, something about his not steering inflexibly
enough); then, the already shaken ivory received such an additional twist and
wrench, that though it still remained entire, and to all appearances lusty, yet
Ahab did not deem it entirely trustworthy.
And,
indeed, it seemed small matter for wonder, that for all his pervading, mad
recklessness, Ahab did at times give careful heed to the condition of that dead
bone upon which he partly stood. For it had not been very long prior to the
Pequod's sailing from Nantucket, that he had been found one night lying prone
upon the ground, and insensible; by some unknown, and seemingly inexplicable,
unimaginable casualty, his ivory limb having been so violently displaced, that
it had stake-wise smitten, and all but pierced his groin; nor was it without
extreme difficulty that the agonizing wound was entirely cured.
Nor,
at the time, had it failed to enter his monomaniac mind, that all the anguish
of that then present suffering was but the direct issue of a former woe; and he
too plainly seemed to see, that as the most poisonous reptile of the marsh
perpetuates his kind as inevitably as the sweetest songster of the grove; so,
equally with every felicity, all miserable events do naturally beget their
like. Yea, more than equally, thought Ahab; since both the ancestry and
posterity of Grief go further than the ancestry and posterity of Joy. For, not
to hint of this: that it is an inference from certain canonic teachings, that
while some natural enjoyments here shall have no children born to them for the
other world, but, on the contrary, shall be followed by the joy-childlessness
of all hell's despair; whereas, some guilty mortal miseries shall still
fertilely beget to themselves an eternally progressive progeny of griefs beyond
the grave; not at all to hint of this, there still seems an inequality in the
deeper analysis of the thing. For, thought Ahab, while even the highest earthly
felicities ever have a certain unsignifying pettiness lurking in them, but, at
bottom, all heartwoes, a mystic significance, and, in some men, an archangelic
grandeur; so do their diligent tracings-out not belie the obvious deduction. To
trail the genealogies of these high mortal miseries, carries us at last among
the sourceless primogenitures of the gods; so that, in the face of all the
glad, hay-making suns, and soft cymballing, round harvest-moons, we must needs
give in to this: that the gods themselves are not for ever glad. The
ineffaceable, sad birth-mark in the brow of man, is but the stamp of sorrow in
the signers.
Unwittingly
here a secret has been divulged, which perhaps might more properly, in set way,
have been disclosed before. With many other particulars concerning Ahab, always
had it remained a mystery to some, why it was, that for a certain period, both
before and after the sailing of the Pequod, he had hidden himself away with
such Grand-Lama-like exclusiveness; and, for that one interval, sought
speechless refuge, as it were, among the marble senate of the dead. Captain
Peleg's bruited reason for this thing appeared by no means adequate; though,
indeed, as touching all Ahab's deeper part, every revelation partook more of
significant darkness than of explanatory light. But, in the end, it all came
out; this one matter did, at least. That direful mishap was at the bottom of
his temporary recluseness. And not only this, but to that ever-contracting,
dropping circle ashore, who, for any reason, possessed the privilege of a less
banned approach to him; to that timid circle the above hinted
casualty—remaining, as it did, moodily unaccounted for by Ahab—invested itself
with terrors, not entirely underived from the land of spirits and of wails. So
that, through their zeal for him, they had all conspired, so far as in them
lay, to muffle up the knowledge of this thing from others; and hence it was,
that not till a considerable interval had elapsed, did it transpire upon the
Pequod's decks.
But
be all this as it may; let the unseen, ambiguous synod in the air, or the
vindictive princes and potentates of fire, have to do or not with earthly Ahab,
yet, in this present matter of his leg, he took plain practical procedures;—he
called the carpenter.
And
when that functionary appeared before him, he bade him without delay set about
making a new leg, and directed the mates to see him supplied with all the studs
and joists of jaw-ivory (Sperm Whale) which had thus far been accumulated on
the voyage, in order that a careful selection of the stoutest, clearest-grained
stuff might be secured. This done, the carpenter received orders to have the
leg completed that night; and to provide all the fittings for it, independent
of those pertaining to the distrusted one in use. Moreover, the ship's forge
was ordered to be hoisted out of its temporary idleness in the hold; and, to
accelerate the affair, the blacksmith was commanded to proceed at once to the
forging of whatever iron contrivances might be needed.
CHAPTER
107. The Carpenter.
Seat
thyself sultanically among the moons of Saturn, and take high abstracted man
alone; and he seems a wonder, a grandeur, and a woe. But from the same point,
take mankind in mass, and for the most part, they seem a mob of unnecessary
duplicates, both contemporary and hereditary. But most humble though he was,
and far from furnishing an example of the high, humane abstraction; the
Pequod's carpenter was no duplicate; hence, he now comes in person on this
stage.
Like
all sea-going ship carpenters, and more especially those belonging to whaling
vessels, he was, to a certain off-handed, practical extent, alike experienced
in numerous trades and callings collateral to his own; the carpenter's pursuit
being the ancient and outbranching trunk of all those numerous handicrafts
which more or less have to do with wood as an auxiliary material. But, besides
the application to him of the generic remark above, this carpenter of the
Pequod was singularly efficient in those thousand nameless mechanical
emergencies continually recurring in a large ship, upon a three or four years' voyage,
in uncivilized and far-distant seas. For not to speak of his readiness in
ordinary duties:—repairing stove boats, sprung spars, reforming the shape of
clumsy-bladed oars, inserting bull's eyes in the deck, or new tree-nails in the
side planks, and other miscellaneous matters more directly pertaining to his
special business; he was moreover unhesitatingly expert in all manner of
conflicting aptitudes, both useful and capricious.
The
one grand stage where he enacted all his various parts so manifold, was his
vice-bench; a long rude ponderous table furnished with several vices, of
different sizes, and both of iron and of wood. At all times except when whales
were alongside, this bench was securely lashed athwartships against the rear of
the Try-works.
A
belaying pin is found too large to be easily inserted into its hole: the
carpenter claps it into one of his ever-ready vices, and straightway files it
smaller. A lost land-bird of strange plumage strays on board, and is made a
captive: out of clean shaved rods of right-whale bone, and cross-beams of sperm
whale ivory, the carpenter makes a pagoda-looking cage for it. An oarsman
sprains his wrist: the carpenter concocts a soothing lotion. Stubb longed for
vermillion stars to be painted upon the blade of his every oar; screwing each
oar in his big vice of wood, the carpenter symmetrically supplies the
constellation. A sailor takes a fancy to wear shark-bone ear-rings: the
carpenter drills his ears. Another has the toothache: the carpenter out
pincers, and clapping one hand upon his bench bids him be seated there; but the
poor fellow unmanageably winces under the unconcluded operation; whirling round
the handle of his wooden vice, the carpenter signs him to clap his jaw in that,
if he would have him draw the tooth.
Thus,
this carpenter was prepared at all points, and alike indifferent and without
respect in all. Teeth he accounted bits of ivory; heads he deemed but
top-blocks; men themselves he lightly held for capstans. But while now upon so
wide a field thus variously accomplished and with such liveliness of expertness
in him, too; all this would seem to argue some uncommon vivacity of
intelligence. But not precisely so. For nothing was this man more remarkable,
than for a certain impersonal stolidity as it were; impersonal, I say; for it
so shaded off into the surrounding infinite of things, that it seemed one with
the general stolidity discernible in the whole visible world; which while
pauselessly active in uncounted modes, still eternally holds its peace, and
ignores you, though you dig foundations for cathedrals. Yet was this
half-horrible stolidity in him, involving, too, as it appeared, an
all-ramifying heartlessness;—yet was it oddly dashed at times, with an old,
crutch-like, antediluvian, wheezing humorousness, not unstreaked now and then
with a certain grizzled wittiness; such as might have served to pass the time
during the midnight watch on the bearded forecastle of Noah's ark. Was it that
this old carpenter had been a life-long wanderer, whose much rolling, to and
fro, not only had gathered no moss; but what is more, had rubbed off whatever
small outward clingings might have originally pertained to him? He was a stript
abstract; an unfractioned integral; uncompromised as a new-born babe; living without
premeditated reference to this world or the next. You might almost say, that
this strange uncompromisedness in him involved a sort of unintelligence; for in
his numerous trades, he did not seem to work so much by reason or by instinct,
or simply because he had been tutored to it, or by any intermixture of all
these, even or uneven; but merely by a kind of deaf and dumb, spontaneous
literal process. He was a pure manipulator; his brain, if he had ever had one,
must have early oozed along into the muscles of his fingers. He was like one of
those unreasoning but still highly useful, multum in parvo, Sheffield
contrivances, assuming the exterior—though a little swelled—of a common pocket
knife; but containing, not only blades of various sizes, but also screw-drivers,
cork-screws, tweezers, awls, pens, rulers, nail-filers, countersinkers. So, if
his superiors wanted to use the carpenter for a screw-driver, all they had to
do was to open that part of him, and the screw was fast: or if for tweezers,
take him up by the legs, and there they were.
Yet,
as previously hinted, this omnitooled, open-and-shut carpenter, was, after all,
no mere machine of an automaton. If he did not have a common soul in him, he
had a subtle something that somehow anomalously did its duty. What that was,
whether essence of quicksilver, or a few drops of hartshorn, there is no
telling. But there it was; and there it had abided for now some sixty years or
more. And this it was, this same unaccountable, cunning life-principle in him;
this it was, that kept him a great part of the time soliloquizing; but only
like an unreasoning wheel, which also hummingly soliloquizes; or rather, his
body was a sentry-box and this soliloquizer on guard there, and talking all the
time to keep himself awake.
CHAPTER
108. Ahab and the Carpenter.
The
Deck—First Night Watch.
(Carpenter
standing before his vice-bench, and by the light of two lanterns busily filing
the ivory joist for the leg, which joist is firmly fixed in the vice. Slabs of
ivory, leather straps, pads, screws, and various tools of all sorts lying about
the bench. Forward, the red flame of the forge is seen, where the blacksmith is
at work.)
Drat
the file, and drat the bone! That is hard which should be soft, and that is
soft which should be hard. So we go, who file old jaws and shinbones. Let's try
another. Aye, now, this works better (sneezes). Halloa, this bone dust is
(sneezes)—why it's (sneezes)—yes it's (sneezes)—bless my soul, it won't let me
speak! This is what an old fellow gets now for working in dead lumber. Saw a
live tree, and you don't get this dust; amputate a live bone, and you don't get
it (sneezes). Come, come, you old Smut, there, bear a hand, and let's have that
ferule and buckle-screw; I'll be ready for them presently. Lucky now (sneezes)
there's no knee-joint to make; that might puzzle a little; but a mere
shinbone—why it's easy as making hop-poles; only I should like to put a good
finish on. Time, time; if I but only had the time, I could turn him out as neat
a leg now as ever (sneezes) scraped to a lady in a parlor. Those buckskin legs
and calves of legs I've seen in shop windows wouldn't compare at all. They soak
water, they do; and of course get rheumatic, and have to be doctored (sneezes)
with washes and lotions, just like live legs. There; before I saw it off, now,
I must call his old Mogulship, and see whether the length will be all right;
too short, if anything, I guess. Ha! that's the heel; we are in luck; here he
comes, or it's somebody else, that's certain.
AHAB
(advancing). (During the ensuing scene, the carpenter continues sneezing at
times.)
Well,
manmaker!
Just
in time, sir. If the captain pleases, I will now mark the length. Let me
measure, sir.
Measured
for a leg! good. Well, it's not the first time. About it! There; keep thy
finger on it. This is a cogent vice thou hast here, carpenter; let me feel its
grip once. So, so; it does pinch some.
Oh,
sir, it will break bones—beware, beware!
No
fear; I like a good grip; I like to feel something in this slippery world that
can hold, man. What's Prometheus about there?—the blacksmith, I mean—what's he
about?
He
must be forging the buckle-screw, sir, now.
Right.
It's a partnership; he supplies the muscle part. He makes a fierce red flame
there!
Aye,
sir; he must have the white heat for this kind of fine work.
Um-m.
So he must. I do deem it now a most meaning thing, that that old Greek,
Prometheus, who made men, they say, should have been a blacksmith, and animated
them with fire; for what's made in fire must properly belong to fire; and so
hell's probable. How the soot flies! This must be the remainder the Greek made
the Africans of. Carpenter, when he's through with that buckle, tell him to
forge a pair of steel shoulder-blades; there's a pedlar aboard with a crushing
pack.
Sir?
Hold;
while Prometheus is about it, I'll order a complete man after a desirable
pattern. Imprimis, fifty feet high in his socks; then, chest modelled after the
Thames Tunnel; then, legs with roots to 'em, to stay in one place; then, arms
three feet through the wrist; no heart at all, brass forehead, and about a
quarter of an acre of fine brains; and let me see—shall I order eyes to see
outwards? No, but put a sky-light on top of his head to illuminate inwards.
There, take the order, and away.
Now,
what's he speaking about, and who's he speaking to, I should like to know?
Shall I keep standing here? (aside).
'Tis
but indifferent architecture to make a blind dome; here's one. No, no, no; I
must have a lantern.
Ho,
ho! That's it, hey? Here are two, sir; one will serve my turn.
What
art thou thrusting that thief-catcher into my face for, man? Thrusted light is
worse than presented pistols.
I
thought, sir, that you spoke to carpenter.
Carpenter?
why that's—but no;—a very tidy, and, I may say, an extremely gentlemanlike sort
of business thou art in here, carpenter;—or would'st thou rather work in clay?
Sir?—Clay?
clay, sir? That's mud; we leave clay to ditchers, sir.
The
fellow's impious! What art thou sneezing about?
Bone
is rather dusty, sir.
Take
the hint, then; and when thou art dead, never bury thyself under living
people's noses.
Sir?—oh!
ah!—I guess so;—yes—oh, dear!
Look
ye, carpenter, I dare say thou callest thyself a right good workmanlike
workman, eh? Well, then, will it speak thoroughly well for thy work, if, when I
come to mount this leg thou makest, I shall nevertheless feel another leg in
the same identical place with it; that is, carpenter, my old lost leg; the
flesh and blood one, I mean. Canst thou not drive that old Adam away?
Truly,
sir, I begin to understand somewhat now. Yes, I have heard something curious on
that score, sir; how that a dismasted man never entirely loses the feeling of
his old spar, but it will be still pricking him at times. May I humbly ask if
it be really so, sir?
It
is, man. Look, put thy live leg here in the place where mine once was; so, now,
here is only one distinct leg to the eye, yet two to the soul. Where thou
feelest tingling life; there, exactly there, there to a hair, do I. Is't a
riddle?
I
should humbly call it a poser, sir.
Hist,
then. How dost thou know that some entire, living, thinking thing may not be
invisibly and uninterpenetratingly standing precisely where thou now standest;
aye, and standing there in thy spite? In thy most solitary hours, then, dost
thou not fear eavesdroppers? Hold, don't speak! And if I still feel the smart
of my crushed leg, though it be now so long dissolved; then, why mayst not
thou, carpenter, feel the fiery pains of hell for ever, and without a body?
Hah!
Good
Lord! Truly, sir, if it comes to that, I must calculate over again; I think I
didn't carry a small figure, sir.
Look
ye, pudding-heads should never grant premises.—How long before the leg is done?
Perhaps
an hour, sir.
Bungle
away at it then, and bring it to me (turns to go). Oh, Life! Here I am, proud
as Greek god, and yet standing debtor to this blockhead for a bone to stand on!
Cursed be that mortal inter-indebtedness which will not do away with ledgers. I
would be free as air; and I'm down in the whole world's books. I am so rich, I
could have given bid for bid with the wealthiest Prætorians at the auction of
the Roman empire (which was the world's); and yet I owe for the flesh in the
tongue I brag with. By heavens! I'll get a crucible, and into it, and dissolve
myself down to one small, compendious vertebra. So.
CARPENTER
(resuming his work).
Well,
well, well! Stubb knows him best of all, and Stubb always says he's queer; says
nothing but that one sufficient little word queer; he's queer, says Stubb; he's
queer—queer, queer; and keeps dinning it into Mr. Starbuck all the
time—queer—sir—queer, queer, very queer. And here's his leg! Yes, now that I
think of it, here's his bedfellow! has a stick of whale's jaw-bone for a wife!
And this is his leg; he'll stand on this. What was that now about one leg
standing in three places, and all three places standing in one hell—how was
that? Oh! I don't wonder he looked so scornful at me! I'm a sort of
strange-thoughted sometimes, they say; but that's only haphazard-like. Then, a
short, little old body like me, should never undertake to wade out into deep
waters with tall, heron-built captains; the water chucks you under the chin
pretty quick, and there's a great cry for life-boats. And here's the heron's
leg! long and slim, sure enough! Now, for most folks one pair of legs lasts a
lifetime, and that must be because they use them mercifully, as a
tender-hearted old lady uses her roly-poly old coach-horses. But Ahab; oh he's
a hard driver. Look, driven one leg to death, and spavined the other for life,
and now wears out bone legs by the cord. Halloa, there, you Smut! bear a hand
there with those screws, and let's finish it before the resurrection fellow
comes a-calling with his horn for all legs, true or false, as brewery-men go
round collecting old beer barrels, to fill 'em up again. What a leg this is! It
looks like a real live leg, filed down to nothing but the core; he'll be
standing on this to-morrow; he'll be taking altitudes on it. Halloa! I almost
forgot the little oval slate, smoothed ivory, where he figures up the latitude.
So, so; chisel, file, and sand-paper, now!
CHAPTER
109. Ahab and Starbuck in the Cabin.
According
to usage they were pumping the ship next morning; and lo! no inconsiderable oil
came up with the water; the casks below must have sprung a bad leak. Much
concern was shown; and Starbuck went down into the cabin to report this
unfavourable affair.*
*In
Sperm-whalemen with any considerable quantity of oil on board, it is a regular
semi-weekly duty to conduct a hose into the hold, and drench the casks with
sea-water; which afterwards, at varying intervals, is removed by the ship's
pumps. Hereby the casks are sought to be kept damply tight; while by the
changed character of the withdrawn water, the mariners readily detect any
serious leakage in the precious cargo.
Now,
from the South and West the Pequod was drawing nigh to Formosa and the Bashee
Isles, between which lies one of the tropical outlets from the China waters
into the Pacific. And so Starbuck found Ahab with a general chart of the
oriental archipelagoes spread before him; and another separate one representing
the long eastern coasts of the Japanese islands—Niphon, Matsmai, and Sikoke.
With his snow-white new ivory leg braced against the screwed leg of his table,
and with a long pruning-hook of a jack-knife in his hand, the wondrous old man,
with his back to the gangway door, was wrinkling his brow, and tracing his old
courses again.
“Who's
there?” hearing the footstep at the door, but not turning round to it. “On
deck! Begone!”
“Captain
Ahab mistakes; it is I. The oil in the hold is leaking, sir. We must up Burtons
and break out.”
“Up
Burtons and break out? Now that we are nearing Japan; heave-to here for a week
to tinker a parcel of old hoops?”
“Either
do that, sir, or waste in one day more oil than we may make good in a year.
What we come twenty thousand miles to get is worth saving, sir.”
“So
it is, so it is; if we get it.”
“I
was speaking of the oil in the hold, sir.”
“And
I was not speaking or thinking of that at all. Begone! Let it leak! I'm all
aleak myself. Aye! leaks in leaks! not only full of leaky casks, but those
leaky casks are in a leaky ship; and that's a far worse plight than the
Pequod's, man. Yet I don't stop to plug my leak; for who can find it in the
deep-loaded hull; or how hope to plug it, even if found, in this life's howling
gale? Starbuck! I'll not have the Burtons hoisted.”
“What
will the owners say, sir?”
“Let
the owners stand on Nantucket beach and outyell the Typhoons. What cares Ahab?
Owners, owners? Thou art always prating to me, Starbuck, about those miserly
owners, as if the owners were my conscience. But look ye, the only real owner
of anything is its commander; and hark ye, my conscience is in this ship's
keel.—On deck!”
“Captain
Ahab,” said the reddening mate, moving further into the cabin, with a daring so
strangely respectful and cautious that it almost seemed not only every way
seeking to avoid the slightest outward manifestation of itself, but within also
seemed more than half distrustful of itself; “A better man than I might well
pass over in thee what he would quickly enough resent in a younger man; aye,
and in a happier, Captain Ahab.”
“Devils!
Dost thou then so much as dare to critically think of me?—On deck!”
“Nay,
sir, not yet; I do entreat. And I do dare, sir—to be forbearing! Shall we not
understand each other better than hitherto, Captain Ahab?”
Ahab
seized a loaded musket from the rack (forming part of most South-Sea-men's
cabin furniture), and pointing it towards Starbuck, exclaimed: “There is one
God that is Lord over the earth, and one Captain that is lord over the
Pequod.—On deck!”
For
an instant in the flashing eyes of the mate, and his fiery cheeks, you would
have almost thought that he had really received the blaze of the levelled tube.
But, mastering his emotion, he half calmly rose, and as he quitted the cabin,
paused for an instant and said: “Thou hast outraged, not insulted me, sir; but
for that I ask thee not to beware of Starbuck; thou wouldst but laugh; but let
Ahab beware of Ahab; beware of thyself, old man.”
“He
waxes brave, but nevertheless obeys; most careful bravery that!” murmured Ahab,
as Starbuck disappeared. “What's that he said—Ahab beware of Ahab—there's
something there!” Then unconsciously using the musket for a staff, with an iron
brow he paced to and fro in the little cabin; but presently the thick plaits of
his forehead relaxed, and returning the gun to the rack, he went to the deck.
“Thou
art but too good a fellow, Starbuck,” he said lowly to the mate; then raising
his voice to the crew: “Furl the t'gallant-sails, and close-reef the top-sails,
fore and aft; back the main-yard; up Burton, and break out in the main-hold.”
It
were perhaps vain to surmise exactly why it was, that as respecting Starbuck,
Ahab thus acted. It may have been a flash of honesty in him; or mere prudential
policy which, under the circumstance, imperiously forbade the slightest symptom
of open disaffection, however transient, in the important chief officer of his
ship. However it was, his orders were executed; and the Burtons were hoisted.
CHAPTER
110. Queequeg in His Coffin.
Upon
searching, it was found that the casks last struck into the hold were perfectly
sound, and that the leak must be further off. So, it being calm weather, they
broke out deeper and deeper, disturbing the slumbers of the huge ground-tier
butts; and from that black midnight sending those gigantic moles into the
daylight above. So deep did they go; and so ancient, and corroded, and weedy
the aspect of the lowermost puncheons, that you almost looked next for some
mouldy corner-stone cask containing coins of Captain Noah, with copies of the
posted placards, vainly warning the infatuated old world from the flood. Tierce
after tierce, too, of water, and bread, and beef, and shooks of staves, and
iron bundles of hoops, were hoisted out, till at last the piled decks were hard
to get about; and the hollow hull echoed under foot, as if you were treading
over empty catacombs, and reeled and rolled in the sea like an air-freighted
demijohn. Top-heavy was the ship as a dinnerless student with all Aristotle in
his head. Well was it that the Typhoons did not visit them then.
Now,
at this time it was that my poor pagan companion, and fast bosom-friend,
Queequeg, was seized with a fever, which brought him nigh to his endless end.
Be
it said, that in this vocation of whaling, sinecures are unknown; dignity and
danger go hand in hand; till you get to be Captain, the higher you rise the harder
you toil. So with poor Queequeg, who, as harpooneer, must not only face all the
rage of the living whale, but—as we have elsewhere seen—mount his dead back in
a rolling sea; and finally descend into the gloom of the hold, and bitterly
sweating all day in that subterraneous confinement, resolutely manhandle the
clumsiest casks and see to their stowage. To be short, among whalemen, the
harpooneers are the holders, so called.
Poor
Queequeg! when the ship was about half disembowelled, you should have stooped
over the hatchway, and peered down upon him there; where, stripped to his
woollen drawers, the tattooed savage was crawling about amid that dampness and
slime, like a green spotted lizard at the bottom of a well. And a well, or an
ice-house, it somehow proved to him, poor pagan; where, strange to say, for all
the heat of his sweatings, he caught a terrible chill which lapsed into a
fever; and at last, after some days' suffering, laid him in his hammock, close
to the very sill of the door of death. How he wasted and wasted away in those
few long-lingering days, till there seemed but little left of him but his frame
and tattooing. But as all else in him thinned, and his cheek-bones grew
sharper, his eyes, nevertheless, seemed growing fuller and fuller; they became
of a strange softness of lustre; and mildly but deeply looked out at you there
from his sickness, a wondrous testimony to that immortal health in him which
could not die, or be weakened. And like circles on the water, which, as they
grow fainter, expand; so his eyes seemed rounding and rounding, like the rings
of Eternity. An awe that cannot be named would steal over you as you sat by the
side of this waning savage, and saw as strange things in his face, as any
beheld who were bystanders when Zoroaster died. For whatever is truly wondrous
and fearful in man, never yet was put into words or books. And the drawing near
of Death, which alike levels all, alike impresses all with a last revelation,
which only an author from the dead could adequately tell. So that—let us say it
again—no dying Chaldee or Greek had higher and holier thoughts than those,
whose mysterious shades you saw creeping over the face of poor Queequeg, as he
quietly lay in his swaying hammock, and the rolling sea seemed gently rocking
him to his final rest, and the ocean's invisible flood-tide lifted him higher
and higher towards his destined heaven.
Not
a man of the crew but gave him up; and, as for Queequeg himself, what he
thought of his case was forcibly shown by a curious favour he asked. He called
one to him in the grey morning watch, when the day was just breaking, and
taking his hand, said that while in Nantucket he had chanced to see certain
little canoes of dark wood, like the rich war-wood of his native isle; and upon
inquiry, he had learned that all whalemen who died in Nantucket, were laid in
those same dark canoes, and that the fancy of being so laid had much pleased
him; for it was not unlike the custom of his own race, who, after embalming a
dead warrior, stretched him out in his canoe, and so left him to be floated
away to the starry archipelagoes; for not only do they believe that the stars
are isles, but that far beyond all visible horizons, their own mild,
uncontinented seas, interflow with the blue heavens; and so form the white
breakers of the milky way. He added, that he shuddered at the thought of being
buried in his hammock, according to the usual sea-custom, tossed like something
vile to the death-devouring sharks. No: he desired a canoe like those of
Nantucket, all the more congenial to him, being a whaleman, that like a
whale-boat these coffin-canoes were without a keel; though that involved but
uncertain steering, and much lee-way adown the dim ages.
Now,
when this strange circumstance was made known aft, the carpenter was at once
commanded to do Queequeg's bidding, whatever it might include. There was some
heathenish, coffin-coloured old lumber aboard, which, upon a long previous
voyage, had been cut from the aboriginal groves of the Lackaday islands, and
from these dark planks the coffin was recommended to be made. No sooner was the
carpenter apprised of the order, than taking his rule, he forthwith with all
the indifferent promptitude of his character, proceeded into the forecastle and
took Queequeg's measure with great accuracy, regularly chalking Queequeg's
person as he shifted the rule.
“Ah!
poor fellow! he'll have to die now,” ejaculated the Long Island sailor.
Going
to his vice-bench, the carpenter for convenience sake and general reference,
now transferringly measured on it the exact length the coffin was to be, and
then made the transfer permanent by cutting two notches at its extremities.
This done, he marshalled the planks and his tools, and to work.
When
the last nail was driven, and the lid duly planed and fitted, he lightly
shouldered the coffin and went forward with it, inquiring whether they were
ready for it yet in that direction.
Overhearing
the indignant but half-humorous cries with which the people on deck began to
drive the coffin away, Queequeg, to every one's consternation, commanded that
the thing should be instantly brought to him, nor was there any denying him;
seeing that, of all mortals, some dying men are the most tyrannical; and
certainly, since they will shortly trouble us so little for evermore, the poor
fellows ought to be indulged.
Leaning
over in his hammock, Queequeg long regarded the coffin with an attentive eye.
He then called for his harpoon, had the wooden stock drawn from it, and then
had the iron part placed in the coffin along with one of the paddles of his
boat. All by his own request, also, biscuits were then ranged round the sides
within: a flask of fresh water was placed at the head, and a small bag of woody
earth scraped up in the hold at the foot; and a piece of sail-cloth being
rolled up for a pillow, Queequeg now entreated to be lifted into his final bed,
that he might make trial of its comforts, if any it had. He lay without moving
a few minutes, then told one to go to his bag and bring out his little god,
Yojo. Then crossing his arms on his breast with Yojo between, he called for the
coffin lid (hatch he called it) to be placed over him. The head part turned
over with a leather hinge, and there lay Queequeg in his coffin with little but
his composed countenance in view. “Rarmai” (it will do; it is easy), he
murmured at last, and signed to be replaced in his hammock.
But
ere this was done, Pip, who had been slily hovering near by all this while,
drew nigh to him where he lay, and with soft sobbings, took him by the hand; in
the other, holding his tambourine.
“Poor
rover! will ye never have done with all this weary roving? where go ye now? But
if the currents carry ye to those sweet Antilles where the beaches are only
beat with water-lilies, will ye do one little errand for me? Seek out one Pip,
who's now been missing long: I think he's in those far Antilles. If ye find him,
then comfort him; for he must be very sad; for look! he's left his tambourine
behind;—I found it. Rig-a-dig, dig, dig! Now, Queequeg, die; and I'll beat ye
your dying march.”
“I
have heard,” murmured Starbuck, gazing down the scuttle, “that in violent fevers,
men, all ignorance, have talked in ancient tongues; and that when the mystery
is probed, it turns out always that in their wholly forgotten childhood those
ancient tongues had been really spoken in their hearing by some lofty scholars.
So, to my fond faith, poor Pip, in this strange sweetness of his lunacy, brings
heavenly vouchers of all our heavenly homes. Where learned he that, but
there?—Hark! he speaks again: but more wildly now.”
“Form
two and two! Let's make a General of him! Ho, where's his harpoon? Lay it
across here.—Rig-a-dig, dig, dig! huzza! Oh for a game cock now to sit upon his
head and crow! Queequeg dies game!—mind ye that; Queequeg dies game!—take ye
good heed of that; Queequeg dies game! I say; game, game, game! but base little
Pip, he died a coward; died all a'shiver;—out upon Pip! Hark ye; if ye find
Pip, tell all the Antilles he's a runaway; a coward, a coward, a coward! Tell
them he jumped from a whale-boat! I'd never beat my tambourine over base Pip,
and hail him General, if he were once more dying here. No, no! shame upon all
cowards—shame upon them! Let 'em go drown like Pip, that jumped from a
whale-boat. Shame! shame!”
During
all this, Queequeg lay with closed eyes, as if in a dream. Pip was led away,
and the sick man was replaced in his hammock.
But
now that he had apparently made every preparation for death; now that his
coffin was proved a good fit, Queequeg suddenly rallied; soon there seemed no
need of the carpenter's box: and thereupon, when some expressed their delighted
surprise, he, in substance, said, that the cause of his sudden convalescence
was this;—at a critical moment, he had just recalled a little duty ashore,
which he was leaving undone; and therefore had changed his mind about dying: he
could not die yet, he averred. They asked him, then, whether to live or die was
a matter of his own sovereign will and pleasure. He answered, certainly. In a
word, it was Queequeg's conceit, that if a man made up his mind to live, mere
sickness could not kill him: nothing but a whale, or a gale, or some violent,
ungovernable, unintelligent destroyer of that sort.
Now,
there is this noteworthy difference between savage and civilized; that while a
sick, civilized man may be six months convalescing, generally speaking, a sick
savage is almost half-well again in a day. So, in good time my Queequeg gained
strength; and at length after sitting on the windlass for a few indolent days
(but eating with a vigorous appetite) he suddenly leaped to his feet, threw out
his arms and legs, gave himself a good stretching, yawned a little bit, and
then springing into the head of his hoisted boat, and poising a harpoon,
pronounced himself fit for a fight.
With
a wild whimsiness, he now used his coffin for a sea-chest; and emptying into it
his canvas bag of clothes, set them in order there. Many spare hours he spent,
in carving the lid with all manner of grotesque figures and drawings; and it
seemed that hereby he was striving, in his rude way, to copy parts of the
twisted tattooing on his body. And this tattooing had been the work of a
departed prophet and seer of his island, who, by those hieroglyphic marks, had
written out on his body a complete theory of the heavens and the earth, and a
mystical treatise on the art of attaining truth; so that Queequeg in his own
proper person was a riddle to unfold; a wondrous work in one volume; but whose
mysteries not even himself could read, though his own live heart beat against
them; and these mysteries were therefore destined in the end to moulder away
with the living parchment whereon they were inscribed, and so be unsolved to
the last. And this thought it must have been which suggested to Ahab that wild
exclamation of his, when one morning turning away from surveying poor
Queequeg—“Oh, devilish tantalization of the gods!”
CHAPTER
111. The Pacific.
When
gliding by the Bashee isles we emerged at last upon the great South Sea; were
it not for other things, I could have greeted my dear Pacific with uncounted
thanks, for now the long supplication of my youth was answered; that serene
ocean rolled eastwards from me a thousand leagues of blue.
There
is, one knows not what sweet mystery about this sea, whose gently awful
stirrings seem to speak of some hidden soul beneath; like those fabled
undulations of the Ephesian sod over the buried Evangelist St. John. And meet
it is, that over these sea-pastures, wide-rolling watery prairies and Potters'
Fields of all four continents, the waves should rise and fall, and ebb and flow
unceasingly; for here, millions of mixed shades and shadows, drowned dreams,
somnambulisms, reveries; all that we call lives and souls, lie dreaming,
dreaming, still; tossing like slumberers in their beds; the ever-rolling waves
but made so by their restlessness.
To
any meditative Magian rover, this serene Pacific, once beheld, must ever after
be the sea of his adoption. It rolls the midmost waters of the world, the
Indian ocean and Atlantic being but its arms. The same waves wash the moles of
the new-built Californian towns, but yesterday planted by the recentest race of
men, and lave the faded but still gorgeous skirts of Asiatic lands, older than
Abraham; while all between float milky-ways of coral isles, and low-lying,
endless, unknown Archipelagoes, and impenetrable Japans. Thus this mysterious,
divine Pacific zones the world's whole bulk about; makes all coasts one bay to
it; seems the tide-beating heart of earth. Lifted by those eternal swells, you
needs must own the seductive god, bowing your head to Pan.
But
few thoughts of Pan stirred Ahab's brain, as standing like an iron statue at
his accustomed place beside the mizen rigging, with one nostril he unthinkingly
snuffed the sugary musk from the Bashee isles (in whose sweet woods mild lovers
must be walking), and with the other consciously inhaled the salt breath of the
new found sea; that sea in which the hated White Whale must even then be
swimming. Launched at length upon these almost final waters, and gliding
towards the Japanese cruising-ground, the old man's purpose intensified itself.
His firm lips met like the lips of a vice; the Delta of his forehead's veins
swelled like overladen brooks; in his very sleep, his ringing cry ran through
the vaulted hull, “Stern all! the White Whale spouts thick blood!”
CHAPTER
112. The Blacksmith.
Availing
himself of the mild, summer-cool weather that now reigned in these latitudes,
and in preparation for the peculiarly active pursuits shortly to be
anticipated, Perth, the begrimed, blistered old blacksmith, had not removed his
portable forge to the hold again, after concluding his contributory work for
Ahab's leg, but still retained it on deck, fast lashed to ringbolts by the
foremast; being now almost incessantly invoked by the headsmen, and
harpooneers, and bowsmen to do some little job for them; altering, or
repairing, or new shaping their various weapons and boat furniture. Often he
would be surrounded by an eager circle, all waiting to be served; holding
boat-spades, pike-heads, harpoons, and lances, and jealously watching his every
sooty movement, as he toiled. Nevertheless, this old man's was a patient hammer
wielded by a patient arm. No murmur, no impatience, no petulance did come from
him. Silent, slow, and solemn; bowing over still further his chronically broken
back, he toiled away, as if toil were life itself, and the heavy beating of his
hammer the heavy beating of his heart. And so it was.—Most miserable!
A
peculiar walk in this old man, a certain slight but painful appearing yawing in
his gait, had at an early period of the voyage excited the curiosity of the
mariners. And to the importunity of their persisted questionings he had finally
given in; and so it came to pass that every one now knew the shameful story of
his wretched fate.
Belated,
and not innocently, one bitter winter's midnight, on the road running between
two country towns, the blacksmith half-stupidly felt the deadly numbness
stealing over him, and sought refuge in a leaning, dilapidated barn. The issue
was, the loss of the extremities of both feet. Out of this revelation, part by
part, at last came out the four acts of the gladness, and the one long, and as
yet uncatastrophied fifth act of the grief of his life's drama.
He
was an old man, who, at the age of nearly sixty, had postponedly encountered
that thing in sorrow's technicals called ruin. He had been an artisan of famed
excellence, and with plenty to do; owned a house and garden; embraced a
youthful, daughter-like, loving wife, and three blithe, ruddy children; every
Sunday went to a cheerful-looking church, planted in a grove. But one night,
under cover of darkness, and further concealed in a most cunning disguisement,
a desperate burglar slid into his happy home, and robbed them all of
everything. And darker yet to tell, the blacksmith himself did ignorantly
conduct this burglar into his family's heart. It was the Bottle Conjuror! Upon
the opening of that fatal cork, forth flew the fiend, and shrivelled up his home.
Now, for prudent, most wise, and economic reasons, the blacksmith's shop was in
the basement of his dwelling, but with a separate entrance to it; so that
always had the young and loving healthy wife listened with no unhappy
nervousness, but with vigorous pleasure, to the stout ringing of her
young-armed old husband's hammer; whose reverberations, muffled by passing
through the floors and walls, came up to her, not unsweetly, in her nursery;
and so, to stout Labor's iron lullaby, the blacksmith's infants were rocked to
slumber.
Oh,
woe on woe! Oh, Death, why canst thou not sometimes be timely? Hadst thou taken
this old blacksmith to thyself ere his full ruin came upon him, then had the
young widow had a delicious grief, and her orphans a truly venerable, legendary
sire to dream of in their after years; and all of them a care-killing
competency. But Death plucked down some virtuous elder brother, on whose
whistling daily toil solely hung the responsibilities of some other family, and
left the worse than useless old man standing, till the hideous rot of life
should make him easier to harvest.
Why
tell the whole? The blows of the basement hammer every day grew more and more
between; and each blow every day grew fainter than the last; the wife sat
frozen at the window, with tearless eyes, glitteringly gazing into the weeping
faces of her children; the bellows fell; the forge choked up with cinders; the
house was sold; the mother dived down into the long church-yard grass; her
children twice followed her thither; and the houseless, familyless old man
staggered off a vagabond in crape; his every woe unreverenced; his grey head a
scorn to flaxen curls!
Death
seems the only desirable sequel for a career like this; but Death is only a
launching into the region of the strange Untried; it is but the first
salutation to the possibilities of the immense Remote, the Wild, the Watery,
the Unshored; therefore, to the death-longing eyes of such men, who still have
left in them some interior compunctions against suicide, does the
all-contributed and all-receptive ocean alluringly spread forth his whole plain
of unimaginable, taking terrors, and wonderful, new-life adventures; and from
the hearts of infinite Pacifics, the thousand mermaids sing to them—“Come
hither, broken-hearted; here is another life without the guilt of intermediate
death; here are wonders supernatural, without dying for them. Come hither! bury
thyself in a life which, to your now equally abhorred and abhorring, landed
world, is more oblivious than death. Come hither! put up thy gravestone, too,
within the churchyard, and come hither, till we marry thee!”
Hearkening
to these voices, East and West, by early sunrise, and by fall of eve, the
blacksmith's soul responded, Aye, I come! And so Perth went a-whaling.
CHAPTER
113. The Forge.
With
matted beard, and swathed in a bristling shark-skin apron, about mid-day, Perth
was standing between his forge and anvil, the latter placed upon an iron-wood
log, with one hand holding a pike-head in the coals, and with the other at his
forge's lungs, when Captain Ahab came along, carrying in his hand a small
rusty-looking leathern bag. While yet a little distance from the forge, moody
Ahab paused; till at last, Perth, withdrawing his iron from the fire, began hammering
it upon the anvil—the red mass sending off the sparks in thick hovering
flights, some of which flew close to Ahab.
“Are
these thy Mother Carey's chickens, Perth? they are always flying in thy wake;
birds of good omen, too, but not to all;—look here, they burn; but thou—thou
liv'st among them without a scorch.”
“Because
I am scorched all over, Captain Ahab,” answered Perth, resting for a moment on
his hammer; “I am past scorching; not easily can'st thou scorch a scar.”
“Well,
well; no more. Thy shrunk voice sounds too calmly, sanely woeful to me. In no
Paradise myself, I am impatient of all misery in others that is not mad. Thou
should'st go mad, blacksmith; say, why dost thou not go mad? How can'st thou
endure without being mad? Do the heavens yet hate thee, that thou can'st not go
mad?—What wert thou making there?”
“Welding
an old pike-head, sir; there were seams and dents in it.”
“And
can'st thou make it all smooth again, blacksmith, after such hard usage as it
had?”
“I
think so, sir.”
“And
I suppose thou can'st smoothe almost any seams and dents; never mind how hard
the metal, blacksmith?”
“Aye,
sir, I think I can; all seams and dents but one.”
“Look
ye here, then,” cried Ahab, passionately advancing, and leaning with both hands
on Perth's shoulders; “look ye here—here—can ye smoothe out a seam like this,
blacksmith,” sweeping one hand across his ribbed brow; “if thou could'st,
blacksmith, glad enough would I lay my head upon thy anvil, and feel thy
heaviest hammer between my eyes. Answer! Can'st thou smoothe this seam?”
“Oh!
that is the one, sir! Said I not all seams and dents but one?”
“Aye,
blacksmith, it is the one; aye, man, it is unsmoothable; for though thou only
see'st it here in my flesh, it has worked down into the bone of my skull—that
is all wrinkles! But, away with child's play; no more gaffs and pikes to-day.
Look ye here!” jingling the leathern bag, as if it were full of gold coins. “I,
too, want a harpoon made; one that a thousand yoke of fiends could not part, Perth;
something that will stick in a whale like his own fin-bone. There's the stuff,”
flinging the pouch upon the anvil. “Look ye, blacksmith, these are the gathered
nail-stubbs of the steel shoes of racing horses.”
“Horse-shoe
stubbs, sir? Why, Captain Ahab, thou hast here, then, the best and stubbornest
stuff we blacksmiths ever work.”
“I
know it, old man; these stubbs will weld together like glue from the melted
bones of murderers. Quick! forge me the harpoon. And forge me first, twelve
rods for its shank; then wind, and twist, and hammer these twelve together like
the yarns and strands of a tow-line. Quick! I'll blow the fire.”
When
at last the twelve rods were made, Ahab tried them, one by one, by spiralling
them, with his own hand, round a long, heavy iron bolt. “A flaw!” rejecting the
last one. “Work that over again, Perth.”
This
done, Perth was about to begin welding the twelve into one, when Ahab stayed
his hand, and said he would weld his own iron. As, then, with regular, gasping
hems, he hammered on the anvil, Perth passing to him the glowing rods, one
after the other, and the hard pressed forge shooting up its intense straight
flame, the Parsee passed silently, and bowing over his head towards the fire,
seemed invoking some curse or some blessing on the toil. But, as Ahab looked
up, he slid aside.
“What's
that bunch of lucifers dodging about there for?” muttered Stubb, looking on
from the forecastle. “That Parsee smells fire like a fusee; and smells of it
himself, like a hot musket's powder-pan.”
At
last the shank, in one complete rod, received its final heat; and as Perth, to
temper it, plunged it all hissing into the cask of water near by, the scalding
steam shot up into Ahab's bent face.
“Would'st
thou brand me, Perth?” wincing for a moment with the pain; “have I been but
forging my own branding-iron, then?”
“Pray
God, not that; yet I fear something, Captain Ahab. Is not this harpoon for the
White Whale?”
“For
the white fiend! But now for the barbs; thou must make them thyself, man. Here
are my razors—the best of steel; here, and make the barbs sharp as the
needle-sleet of the Icy Sea.”
For
a moment, the old blacksmith eyed the razors as though he would fain not use
them.
“Take
them, man, I have no need for them; for I now neither shave, sup, nor pray
till—but here—to work!”
Fashioned
at last into an arrowy shape, and welded by Perth to the shank, the steel soon
pointed the end of the iron; and as the blacksmith was about giving the barbs
their final heat, prior to tempering them, he cried to Ahab to place the
water-cask near.
“No,
no—no water for that; I want it of the true death-temper. Ahoy, there!
Tashtego, Queequeg, Daggoo! What say ye, pagans! Will ye give me as much blood
as will cover this barb?” holding it high up. A cluster of dark nods replied,
Yes. Three punctures were made in the heathen flesh, and the White Whale's
barbs were then tempered.
“Ego
non baptizo te in nomine patris, sed in nomine diaboli!” deliriously howled
Ahab, as the malignant iron scorchingly devoured the baptismal blood.
Now,
mustering the spare poles from below, and selecting one of hickory, with the
bark still investing it, Ahab fitted the end to the socket of the iron. A coil
of new tow-line was then unwound, and some fathoms of it taken to the windlass,
and stretched to a great tension. Pressing his foot upon it, till the rope
hummed like a harp-string, then eagerly bending over it, and seeing no
strandings, Ahab exclaimed, “Good! and now for the seizings.”
At
one extremity the rope was unstranded, and the separate spread yarns were all
braided and woven round the socket of the harpoon; the pole was then driven
hard up into the socket; from the lower end the rope was traced half-way along
the pole's length, and firmly secured so, with intertwistings of twine. This
done, pole, iron, and rope—like the Three Fates—remained inseparable, and Ahab
moodily stalked away with the weapon; the sound of his ivory leg, and the sound
of the hickory pole, both hollowly ringing along every plank. But ere he
entered his cabin, light, unnatural, half-bantering, yet most piteous sound was
heard. Oh, Pip! thy wretched laugh, thy idle but unresting eye; all thy strange
mummeries not unmeaningly blended with the black tragedy of the melancholy
ship, and mocked it!
CHAPTER
114. The Gilder.
Penetrating
further and further into the heart of the Japanese cruising ground, the Pequod
was soon all astir in the fishery. Often, in mild, pleasant weather, for
twelve, fifteen, eighteen, and twenty hours on the stretch, they were engaged
in the boats, steadily pulling, or sailing, or paddling after the whales, or
for an interlude of sixty or seventy minutes calmly awaiting their uprising; though
with but small success for their pains.
At
such times, under an abated sun; afloat all day upon smooth, slow heaving
swells; seated in his boat, light as a birch canoe; and so sociably mixing with
the soft waves themselves, that like hearth-stone cats they purr against the
gunwale; these are the times of dreamy quietude, when beholding the tranquil
beauty and brilliancy of the ocean's skin, one forgets the tiger heart that
pants beneath it; and would not willingly remember, that this velvet paw but
conceals a remorseless fang.
These
are the times, when in his whale-boat the rover softly feels a certain filial,
confident, land-like feeling towards the sea; that he regards it as so much
flowery earth; and the distant ship revealing only the tops of her masts, seems
struggling forward, not through high rolling waves, but through the tall grass
of a rolling prairie: as when the western emigrants' horses only show their
erected ears, while their hidden bodies widely wade through the amazing
verdure.
The
long-drawn virgin vales; the mild blue hill-sides; as over these there steals
the hush, the hum; you almost swear that play-wearied children lie sleeping in
these solitudes, in some glad May-time, when the flowers of the woods are
plucked. And all this mixes with your most mystic mood; so that fact and fancy,
half-way meeting, interpenetrate, and form one seamless whole.
Nor
did such soothing scenes, however temporary, fail of at least as temporary an
effect on Ahab. But if these secret golden keys did seem to open in him his own
secret golden treasuries, yet did his breath upon them prove but tarnishing.
Oh,
grassy glades! oh, ever vernal endless landscapes in the soul; in ye,—though
long parched by the dead drought of the earthy life,—in ye, men yet may roll,
like young horses in new morning clover; and for some few fleeting moments,
feel the cool dew of the life immortal on them. Would to God these blessed
calms would last. But the mingled, mingling threads of life are woven by warp
and woof: calms crossed by storms, a storm for every calm. There is no steady
unretracing progress in this life; we do not advance through fixed gradations,
and at the last one pause:—through infancy's unconscious spell, boyhood's
thoughtless faith, adolescence' doubt (the common doom), then scepticism, then
disbelief, resting at last in manhood's pondering repose of If. But once gone
through, we trace the round again; and are infants, boys, and men, and Ifs
eternally. Where lies the final harbor, whence we unmoor no more? In what rapt
ether sails the world, of which the weariest will never weary? Where is the
foundling's father hidden? Our souls are like those orphans whose unwedded
mothers die in bearing them: the secret of our paternity lies in their grave,
and we must there to learn it.
And
that same day, too, gazing far down from his boat's side into that same golden
sea, Starbuck lowly murmured:—
“Loveliness
unfathomable, as ever lover saw in his young bride's eye!—Tell me not of thy
teeth-tiered sharks, and thy kidnapping cannibal ways. Let faith oust fact; let
fancy oust memory; I look deep down and do believe.”
And
Stubb, fish-like, with sparkling scales, leaped up in that same golden light:—
“I
am Stubb, and Stubb has his history; but here Stubb takes oaths that he has
always been jolly!”
CHAPTER
115. The Pequod Meets The Bachelor.
And
jolly enough were the sights and the sounds that came bearing down before the
wind, some few weeks after Ahab's harpoon had been welded.
It
was a Nantucket ship, the Bachelor, which had just wedged in her last cask of
oil, and bolted down her bursting hatches; and now, in glad holiday apparel,
was joyously, though somewhat vain-gloriously, sailing round among the
widely-separated ships on the ground, previous to pointing her prow for home.
The
three men at her mast-head wore long streamers of narrow red bunting at their
hats; from the stern, a whale-boat was suspended, bottom down; and hanging
captive from the bowsprit was seen the long lower jaw of the last whale they
had slain. Signals, ensigns, and jacks of all colours were flying from her
rigging, on every side. Sideways lashed in each of her three basketed tops were
two barrels of sperm; above which, in her top-mast cross-trees, you saw slender
breakers of the same precious fluid; and nailed to her main truck was a brazen
lamp.
As
was afterwards learned, the Bachelor had met with the most surprising success;
all the more wonderful, for that while cruising in the same seas numerous other
vessels had gone entire months without securing a single fish. Not only had
barrels of beef and bread been given away to make room for the far more
valuable sperm, but additional supplemental casks had been bartered for, from
the ships she had met; and these were stowed along the deck, and in the
captain's and officers' state-rooms. Even the cabin table itself had been
knocked into kindling-wood; and the cabin mess dined off the broad head of an
oil-butt, lashed down to the floor for a centrepiece. In the forecastle, the
sailors had actually caulked and pitched their chests, and filled them; it was
humorously added, that the cook had clapped a head on his largest boiler, and
filled it; that the steward had plugged his spare coffee-pot and filled it;
that the harpooneers had headed the sockets of their irons and filled them;
that indeed everything was filled with sperm, except the captain's pantaloons
pockets, and those he reserved to thrust his hands into, in self-complacent
testimony of his entire satisfaction.
As
this glad ship of good luck bore down upon the moody Pequod, the barbarian
sound of enormous drums came from her forecastle; and drawing still nearer, a
crowd of her men were seen standing round her huge try-pots, which, covered
with the parchment-like poke or stomach skin of the black fish, gave forth a
loud roar to every stroke of the clenched hands of the crew. On the
quarter-deck, the mates and harpooneers were dancing with the olive-hued girls
who had eloped with them from the Polynesian Isles; while suspended in an
ornamented boat, firmly secured aloft between the foremast and mainmast, three
Long Island negroes, with glittering fiddle-bows of whale ivory, were presiding
over the hilarious jig. Meanwhile, others of the ship's company were tumultuously
busy at the masonry of the try-works, from which the huge pots had been
removed. You would have almost thought they were pulling down the cursed
Bastille, such wild cries they raised, as the now useless brick and mortar were
being hurled into the sea.
Lord
and master over all this scene, the captain stood erect on the ship's elevated
quarter-deck, so that the whole rejoicing drama was full before him, and seemed
merely contrived for his own individual diversion.
And
Ahab, he too was standing on his quarter-deck, shaggy and black, with a
stubborn gloom; and as the two ships crossed each other's wakes—one all
jubilations for things passed, the other all forebodings as to things to
come—their two captains in themselves impersonated the whole striking contrast
of the scene.
“Come
aboard, come aboard!” cried the gay Bachelor's commander, lifting a glass and a
bottle in the air.
“Hast
seen the White Whale?” gritted Ahab in reply.
“No;
only heard of him; but don't believe in him at all,” said the other good-humoredly.
“Come aboard!”
“Thou
art too damned jolly. Sail on. Hast lost any men?”
“Not
enough to speak of—two islanders, that's all;—but come aboard, old hearty, come
along. I'll soon take that black from your brow. Come along, will ye (merry's the
play); a full ship and homeward-bound.”
“How
wondrous familiar is a fool!” muttered Ahab; then aloud, “Thou art a full ship
and homeward bound, thou sayst; well, then, call me an empty ship, and
outward-bound. So go thy ways, and I will mine. Forward there! Set all sail,
and keep her to the wind!”
And
thus, while the one ship went cheerily before the breeze, the other stubbornly
fought against it; and so the two vessels parted; the crew of the Pequod
looking with grave, lingering glances towards the receding Bachelor; but the
Bachelor's men never heeding their gaze for the lively revelry they were in.
And as Ahab, leaning over the taffrail, eyed the homeward-bound craft, he took
from his pocket a small vial of sand, and then looking from the ship to the
vial, seemed thereby bringing two remote associations together, for that vial
was filled with Nantucket soundings.
CHAPTER
116. The Dying Whale.
Not
seldom in this life, when, on the right side, fortune's favourites sail close
by us, we, though all adroop before, catch somewhat of the rushing breeze, and
joyfully feel our bagging sails fill out. So seemed it with the Pequod. For
next day after encountering the gay Bachelor, whales were seen and four were
slain; and one of them by Ahab.
It
was far down the afternoon; and when all the spearings of the crimson fight
were done: and floating in the lovely sunset sea and sky, sun and whale both
stilly died together; then, such a sweetness and such plaintiveness, such
inwreathing orisons curled up in that rosy air, that it almost seemed as if far
over from the deep green convent valleys of the Manilla isles, the Spanish
land-breeze, wantonly turned sailor, had gone to sea, freighted with these
vesper hymns.
Soothed
again, but only soothed to deeper gloom, Ahab, who had sterned off from the
whale, sat intently watching his final wanings from the now tranquil boat. For
that strange spectacle observable in all sperm whales dying—the turning
sunwards of the head, and so expiring—that strange spectacle, beheld of such a
placid evening, somehow to Ahab conveyed a wondrousness unknown before.
“He
turns and turns him to it,—how slowly, but how steadfastly, his
homage-rendering and invoking brow, with his last dying motions. He too
worships fire; most faithful, broad, baronial vassal of the sun!—Oh that these
too-favouring eyes should see these too-favouring sights. Look! here, far
water-locked; beyond all hum of human weal or woe; in these most candid and
impartial seas; where to traditions no rocks furnish tablets; where for long
Chinese ages, the billows have still rolled on speechless and unspoken to, as
stars that shine upon the Niger's unknown source; here, too, life dies sunwards
full of faith; but see! no sooner dead, than death whirls round the corpse, and
it heads some other way.
“Oh,
thou dark Hindoo half of nature, who of drowned bones hast builded thy separate
throne somewhere in the heart of these unverdured seas; thou art an infidel,
thou queen, and too truly speakest to me in the wide-slaughtering Typhoon, and
the hushed burial of its after calm. Nor has this thy whale sunwards turned his
dying head, and then gone round again, without a lesson to me.
“Oh,
trebly hooped and welded hip of power! Oh, high aspiring, rainbowed jet!—that
one strivest, this one jettest all in vain! In vain, oh whale, dost thou seek
intercedings with yon all-quickening sun, that only calls forth life, but gives
it not again. Yet dost thou, darker half, rock me with a prouder, if a darker
faith. All thy unnamable imminglings float beneath me here; I am buoyed by
breaths of once living things, exhaled as air, but water now.
“Then
hail, for ever hail, O sea, in whose eternal tossings the wild fowl finds his
only rest. Born of earth, yet suckled by the sea; though hill and valley
mothered me, ye billows are my foster-brothers!”
CHAPTER
117. The Whale Watch.
The
four whales slain that evening had died wide apart; one, far to windward; one,
less distant, to leeward; one ahead; one astern. These last three were brought
alongside ere nightfall; but the windward one could not be reached till
morning; and the boat that had killed it lay by its side all night; and that
boat was Ahab's.
The
waif-pole was thrust upright into the dead whale's spout-hole; and the lantern
hanging from its top, cast a troubled flickering glare upon the black, glossy
back, and far out upon the midnight waves, which gently chafed the whale's
broad flank, like soft surf upon a beach.
Ahab
and all his boat's crew seemed asleep but the Parsee; who crouching in the bow,
sat watching the sharks, that spectrally played round the whale, and tapped the
light cedar planks with their tails. A sound like the moaning in squadrons over
Asphaltites of unforgiven ghosts of Gomorrah, ran shuddering through the air.
Started
from his slumbers, Ahab, face to face, saw the Parsee; and hooped round by the
gloom of the night they seemed the last men in a flooded world. “I have dreamed
it again,” said he.
“Of
the hearses? Have I not said, old man, that neither hearse nor coffin can be
thine?”
“And
who are hearsed that die on the sea?”
“But
I said, old man, that ere thou couldst die on this voyage, two hearses must
verily be seen by thee on the sea; the first not made by mortal hands; and the
visible wood of the last one must be grown in America.”
“Aye,
aye! a strange sight that, Parsee:—a hearse and its plumes floating over the
ocean with the waves for the pall-bearers. Ha! Such a sight we shall not soon
see.”
“Believe
it or not, thou canst not die till it be seen, old man.”
“And
what was that saying about thyself?”
“Though
it come to the last, I shall still go before thee thy pilot.”
“And
when thou art so gone before—if that ever befall—then ere I can follow, thou
must still appear to me, to pilot me still?—Was it not so? Well, then, did I
believe all ye say, oh my pilot! I have here two pledges that I shall yet slay
Moby Dick and survive it.”
“Take
another pledge, old man,” said the Parsee, as his eyes lighted up like
fire-flies in the gloom—“Hemp only can kill thee.”
“The
gallows, ye mean.—I am immortal then, on land and on sea,” cried Ahab, with a
laugh of derision;—“Immortal on land and on sea!”
Both
were silent again, as one man. The grey dawn came on, and the slumbering crew
arose from the boat's bottom, and ere noon the dead whale was brought to the
ship.
CHAPTER
118. The Quadrant.
The
season for the Line at length drew near; and every day when Ahab, coming from
his cabin, cast his eyes aloft, the vigilant helmsman would ostentatiously
handle his spokes, and the eager mariners quickly run to the braces, and would
stand there with all their eyes centrally fixed on the nailed doubloon;
impatient for the order to point the ship's prow for the equator. In good time
the order came. It was hard upon high noon; and Ahab, seated in the bows of his
high-hoisted boat, was about taking his wonted daily observation of the sun to
determine his latitude.
Now,
in that Japanese sea, the days in summer are as freshets of effulgences. That
unblinkingly vivid Japanese sun seems the blazing focus of the glassy ocean's
immeasurable burning-glass. The sky looks lacquered; clouds there are none; the
horizon floats; and this nakedness of unrelieved radiance is as the
insufferable splendors of God's throne. Well that Ahab's quadrant was furnished
with coloured glasses, through which to take sight of that solar fire. So,
swinging his seated form to the roll of the ship, and with his
astrological-looking instrument placed to his eye, he remained in that posture
for some moments to catch the precise instant when the sun should gain its
precise meridian. Meantime while his whole attention was absorbed, the Parsee
was kneeling beneath him on the ship's deck, and with face thrown up like
Ahab's, was eyeing the same sun with him; only the lids of his eyes half hooded
their orbs, and his wild face was subdued to an earthly passionlessness. At
length the desired observation was taken; and with his pencil upon his ivory
leg, Ahab soon calculated what his latitude must be at that precise instant.
Then falling into a moment's revery, he again looked up towards the sun and
murmured to himself: “Thou sea-mark! thou high and mighty Pilot! thou tellest
me truly where I am—but canst thou cast the least hint where I shall be? Or
canst thou tell where some other thing besides me is this moment living? Where
is Moby Dick? This instant thou must be eyeing him. These eyes of mine look
into the very eye that is even now beholding him; aye, and into the eye that is
even now equally beholding the objects on the unknown, thither side of thee,
thou sun!”
Then
gazing at his quadrant, and handling, one after the other, its numerous
cabalistical contrivances, he pondered again, and muttered: “Foolish toy!
babies' plaything of haughty Admirals, and Commodores, and Captains; the world
brags of thee, of thy cunning and might; but what after all canst thou do, but
tell the poor, pitiful point, where thou thyself happenest to be on this wide
planet, and the hand that holds thee: no! not one jot more! Thou canst not tell
where one drop of water or one grain of sand will be to-morrow noon; and yet
with thy impotence thou insultest the sun! Science! Curse thee, thou vain toy;
and cursed be all the things that cast man's eyes aloft to that heaven, whose
live vividness but scorches him, as these old eyes are even now scorched with
thy light, O sun! Level by nature to this earth's horizon are the glances of
man's eyes; not shot from the crown of his head, as if God had meant him to
gaze on his firmament. Curse thee, thou quadrant!” dashing it to the deck, “no
longer will I guide my earthly way by thee; the level ship's compass, and the
level dead-reckoning, by log and by line; these shall conduct me, and show me
my place on the sea. Aye,” lighting from the boat to the deck, “thus I trample
on thee, thou paltry thing that feebly pointest on high; thus I split and
destroy thee!”
As
the frantic old man thus spoke and thus trampled with his live and dead feet, a
sneering triumph that seemed meant for Ahab, and a fatalistic despair that
seemed meant for himself—these passed over the mute, motionless Parsee's face.
Unobserved he rose and glided away; while, awestruck by the aspect of their
commander, the seamen clustered together on the forecastle, till Ahab,
troubledly pacing the deck, shouted out—“To the braces! Up helm!—square in!”
In
an instant the yards swung round; and as the ship half-wheeled upon her heel,
her three firm-seated graceful masts erectly poised upon her long, ribbed hull,
seemed as the three Horatii pirouetting on one sufficient steed.
Standing
between the knight-heads, Starbuck watched the Pequod's tumultuous way, and
Ahab's also, as he went lurching along the deck.
“I
have sat before the dense coal fire and watched it all aglow, full of its
tormented flaming life; and I have seen it wane at last, down, down, to dumbest
dust. Old man of oceans! of all this fiery life of thine, what will at length
remain but one little heap of ashes!”
“Aye,”
cried Stubb, “but sea-coal ashes—mind ye that, Mr. Starbuck—sea-coal, not your
common charcoal. Well, well; I heard Ahab mutter, 'Here some one thrusts these
cards into these old hands of mine; swears that I must play them, and no
others.' And damn me, Ahab, but thou actest right; live in the game, and die in
it!”
CHAPTER
119. The Candles.
Warmest
climes but nurse the cruellest fangs: the tiger of Bengal crouches in spiced
groves of ceaseless verdure. Skies the most effulgent but basket the deadliest
thunders: gorgeous Cuba knows tornadoes that never swept tame northern lands.
So, too, it is, that in these resplendent Japanese seas the mariner encounters
the direst of all storms, the Typhoon. It will sometimes burst from out that
cloudless sky, like an exploding bomb upon a dazed and sleepy town.
Towards
evening of that day, the Pequod was torn of her canvas, and bare-poled was left
to fight a Typhoon which had struck her directly ahead. When darkness came on,
sky and sea roared and split with the thunder, and blazed with the lightning,
that showed the disabled masts fluttering here and there with the rags which
the first fury of the tempest had left for its after sport.
Holding
by a shroud, Starbuck was standing on the quarter-deck; at every flash of the
lightning glancing aloft, to see what additional disaster might have befallen
the intricate hamper there; while Stubb and Flask were directing the men in the
higher hoisting and firmer lashing of the boats. But all their pains seemed
naught. Though lifted to the very top of the cranes, the windward quarter boat
(Ahab's) did not escape. A great rolling sea, dashing high up against the
reeling ship's high teetering side, stove in the boat's bottom at the stern,
and left it again, all dripping through like a sieve.
“Bad
work, bad work! Mr. Starbuck,” said Stubb, regarding the wreck, “but the sea
will have its way. Stubb, for one, can't fight it. You see, Mr. Starbuck, a
wave has such a great long start before it leaps, all round the world it runs,
and then comes the spring! But as for me, all the start I have to meet it, is
just across the deck here. But never mind; it's all in fun: so the old song
says;”—(sings.)
Oh! jolly is the gale,
And a joker is the whale,
A' flourishin' his tail,—
Such a funny, sporty, gamy, jesty, joky, hoky-poky lad, is the Ocean, oh!
The scud all a flyin',
That's his flip only foamin';
When he stirs in the spicin',—
Such a funny, sporty, gamy, jesty, joky, hoky-poky lad, is the Ocean, oh!
Thunder splits the ships,
But he only smacks his lips,
A tastin' of this flip,—
Such a funny, sporty, gamy, jesty, joky, hoky-poky lad, is the Ocean, oh!
“Avast
Stubb,” cried Starbuck, “let the Typhoon sing, and strike his harp here in our
rigging; but if thou art a brave man thou wilt hold thy peace.”
“But
I am not a brave man; never said I was a brave man; I am a coward; and I sing
to keep up my spirits. And I tell you what it is, Mr. Starbuck, there's no way
to stop my singing in this world but to cut my throat. And when that's done,
ten to one I sing ye the doxology for a wind-up.”
“Madman!
look through my eyes if thou hast none of thine own.”
“What!
how can you see better of a dark night than anybody else, never mind how
foolish?”
“Here!”
cried Starbuck, seizing Stubb by the shoulder, and pointing his hand towards
the weather bow, “markest thou not that the gale comes from the eastward, the
very course Ahab is to run for Moby Dick? the very course he swung to this day
noon? now mark his boat there; where is that stove? In the stern-sheets, man;
where he is wont to stand—his stand-point is stove, man! Now jump overboard,
and sing away, if thou must!
“I
don't half understand ye: what's in the wind?”
“Yes,
yes, round the Cape of Good Hope is the shortest way to Nantucket,”
soliloquized Starbuck suddenly, heedless of Stubb's question. “The gale that
now hammers at us to stave us, we can turn it into a fair wind that will drive
us towards home. Yonder, to windward, all is blackness of doom; but to leeward,
homeward—I see it lightens up there; but not with the lightning.”
At
that moment in one of the intervals of profound darkness, following the
flashes, a voice was heard at his side; and almost at the same instant a volley
of thunder peals rolled overhead.
“Who's
there?”
“Old
Thunder!” said Ahab, groping his way along the bulwarks to his pivot-hole; but
suddenly finding his path made plain to him by elbowed lances of fire.
Now,
as the lightning rod to a spire on shore is intended to carry off the perilous
fluid into the soil; so the kindred rod which at sea some ships carry to each
mast, is intended to conduct it into the water. But as this conductor must
descend to considerable depth, that its end may avoid all contact with the
hull; and as moreover, if kept constantly towing there, it would be liable to
many mishaps, besides interfering not a little with some of the rigging, and
more or less impeding the vessel's way in the water; because of all this, the
lower parts of a ship's lightning-rods are not always overboard; but are
generally made in long slender links, so as to be the more readily hauled up
into the chains outside, or thrown down into the sea, as occasion may require.
“The
rods! the rods!” cried Starbuck to the crew, suddenly admonished to vigilance
by the vivid lightning that had just been darting flambeaux, to light Ahab to
his post. “Are they overboard? drop them over, fore and aft. Quick!”
“Avast!”
cried Ahab; “let's have fair play here, though we be the weaker side. Yet I'll
contribute to raise rods on the Himmalehs and Andes, that all the world may be
secured; but out on privileges! Let them be, sir.”
“Look
aloft!” cried Starbuck. “The corpusants! the corpusants!”
All
the yard-arms were tipped with a pallid fire; and touched at each tri-pointed
lightning-rod-end with three tapering white flames, each of the three tall
masts was silently burning in that sulphurous air, like three gigantic wax
tapers before an altar.
“Blast
the boat! let it go!” cried Stubb at this instant, as a swashing sea heaved up
under his own little craft, so that its gunwale violently jammed his hand, as
he was passing a lashing. “Blast it!”—but slipping backward on the deck, his
uplifted eyes caught the flames; and immediately shifting his tone he
cried—“The corpusants have mercy on us all!”
To
sailors, oaths are household words; they will swear in the trance of the calm,
and in the teeth of the tempest; they will imprecate curses from the
topsail-yard-arms, when most they teeter over to a seething sea; but in all my
voyagings, seldom have I heard a common oath when God's burning finger has been
laid on the ship; when His “Mene, Mene, Tekel Upharsin” has been woven into the
shrouds and the cordage.
While
this pallidness was burning aloft, few words were heard from the enchanted
crew; who in one thick cluster stood on the forecastle, all their eyes gleaming
in that pale phosphorescence, like a far away constellation of stars. Relieved
against the ghostly light, the gigantic jet negro, Daggoo, loomed up to thrice
his real stature, and seemed the black cloud from which the thunder had come.
The parted mouth of Tashtego revealed his shark-white teeth, which strangely
gleamed as if they too had been tipped by corpusants; while lit up by the
preternatural light, Queequeg's tattooing burned like Satanic blue flames on
his body.
The
tableau all waned at last with the pallidness aloft; and once more the Pequod
and every soul on her decks were wrapped in a pall. A moment or two passed,
when Starbuck, going forward, pushed against some one. It was Stubb. “What
thinkest thou now, man; I heard thy cry; it was not the same in the song.”
“No,
no, it wasn't; I said the corpusants have mercy on us all; and I hope they
will, still. But do they only have mercy on long faces?—have they no bowels for
a laugh? And look ye, Mr. Starbuck—but it's too dark to look. Hear me, then: I
take that mast-head flame we saw for a sign of good luck; for those masts are
rooted in a hold that is going to be chock a' block with sperm-oil, d'ye see;
and so, all that sperm will work up into the masts, like sap in a tree. Yes,
our three masts will yet be as three spermaceti candles—that's the good promise
we saw.”
At
that moment Starbuck caught sight of Stubb's face slowly beginning to glimmer
into sight. Glancing upwards, he cried: “See! see!” and once more the high
tapering flames were beheld with what seemed redoubled supernaturalness in
their pallor.
“The
corpusants have mercy on us all,” cried Stubb, again.
At
the base of the mainmast, full beneath the doubloon and the flame, the Parsee
was kneeling in Ahab's front, but with his head bowed away from him; while near
by, from the arched and overhanging rigging, where they had just been engaged
securing a spar, a number of the seamen, arrested by the glare, now cohered
together, and hung pendulous, like a knot of numbed wasps from a drooping,
orchard twig. In various enchanted attitudes, like the standing, or stepping,
or running skeletons in Herculaneum, others remained rooted to the deck; but
all their eyes upcast.
“Aye,
aye, men!” cried Ahab. “Look up at it; mark it well; the white flame but lights
the way to the White Whale! Hand me those mainmast links there; I would fain
feel this pulse, and let mine beat against it; blood against fire! So.”
Then
turning—the last link held fast in his left hand, he put his foot upon the
Parsee; and with fixed upward eye, and high-flung right arm, he stood erect
before the lofty tri-pointed trinity of flames.
“Oh!
thou clear spirit of clear fire, whom on these seas I as Persian once did
worship, till in the sacramental act so burned by thee, that to this hour I
bear the scar; I now know thee, thou clear spirit, and I now know that thy
right worship is defiance. To neither love nor reverence wilt thou be kind; and
e'en for hate thou canst but kill; and all are killed. No fearless fool now
fronts thee. I own thy speechless, placeless power; but to the last gasp of my
earthquake life will dispute its unconditional, unintegral mastery in me. In
the midst of the personified impersonal, a personality stands here. Though but
a point at best; whencesoe'er I came; wheresoe'er I go; yet while I earthly
live, the queenly personality lives in me, and feels her royal rights. But war
is pain, and hate is woe. Come in thy lowest form of love, and I will kneel and
kiss thee; but at thy highest, come as mere supernal power; and though thou
launchest navies of full-freighted worlds, there's that in here that still
remains indifferent. Oh, thou clear spirit, of thy fire thou madest me, and
like a true child of fire, I breathe it back to thee.”
[Sudden,
repeated flashes of lightning; the nine flames leap lengthwise to thrice their
previous height; Ahab, with the rest, closes his eyes, his right hand pressed
hard upon them.]
“I
own thy speechless, placeless power; said I not so? Nor was it wrung from me;
nor do I now drop these links. Thou canst blind; but I can then grope. Thou
canst consume; but I can then be ashes. Take the homage of these poor eyes, and
shutter-hands. I would not take it. The lightning flashes through my skull;
mine eye-balls ache and ache; my whole beaten brain seems as beheaded, and
rolling on some stunning ground. Oh, oh! Yet blindfold, yet will I talk to
thee. Light though thou be, thou leapest out of darkness; but I am darkness
leaping out of light, leaping out of thee! The javelins cease; open eyes; see,
or not? There burn the flames! Oh, thou magnanimous! now I do glory in my
genealogy. But thou art but my fiery father; my sweet mother, I know not. Oh,
cruel! what hast thou done with her? There lies my puzzle; but thine is
greater. Thou knowest not how came ye, hence callest thyself unbegotten;
certainly knowest not thy beginning, hence callest thyself unbegun. I know that
of me, which thou knowest not of thyself, oh, thou omnipotent. There is some
unsuffusing thing beyond thee, thou clear spirit, to whom all thy eternity is
but time, all thy creativeness mechanical. Through thee, thy flaming self, my
scorched eyes do dimly see it. Oh, thou foundling fire, thou hermit immemorial,
thou too hast thy incommunicable riddle, thy unparticipated grief. Here again
with haughty agony, I read my sire. Leap! leap up, and lick the sky! I leap
with thee; I burn with thee; would fain be welded with thee; defyingly I
worship thee!”
“The
boat! the boat!” cried Starbuck, “look at thy boat, old man!”
Ahab's
harpoon, the one forged at Perth's fire, remained firmly lashed in its
conspicuous crotch, so that it projected beyond his whale-boat's bow; but the
sea that had stove its bottom had caused the loose leather sheath to drop off;
and from the keen steel barb there now came a levelled flame of pale, forked
fire. As the silent harpoon burned there like a serpent's tongue, Starbuck grasped
Ahab by the arm—“God, God is against thee, old man; forbear! 'tis an ill
voyage! ill begun, ill continued; let me square the yards, while we may, old
man, and make a fair wind of it homewards, to go on a better voyage than this.”
Overhearing
Starbuck, the panic-stricken crew instantly ran to the braces—though not a sail
was left aloft. For the moment all the aghast mate's thoughts seemed theirs;
they raised a half mutinous cry. But dashing the rattling lightning links to
the deck, and snatching the burning harpoon, Ahab waved it like a torch among
them; swearing to transfix with it the first sailor that but cast loose a
rope's end. Petrified by his aspect, and still more shrinking from the fiery
dart that he held, the men fell back in dismay, and Ahab again spoke:—
“All
your oaths to hunt the White Whale are as binding as mine; and heart, soul, and
body, lungs and life, old Ahab is bound. And that ye may know to what tune this
heart beats; look ye here; thus I blow out the last fear!” And with one blast
of his breath he extinguished the flame.
As
in the hurricane that sweeps the plain, men fly the neighborhood of some lone,
gigantic elm, whose very height and strength but render it so much the more
unsafe, because so much the more a mark for thunderbolts; so at those last
words of Ahab's many of the mariners did run from him in a terror of dismay.
CHAPTER
120. The Deck Towards the End of the First Night Watch.
Ahab
standing by the helm. Starbuck approaching him.
“We
must send down the main-top-sail yard, sir. The band is working loose and the
lee lift is half-stranded. Shall I strike it, sir?”
“Strike
nothing; lash it. If I had sky-sail poles, I'd sway them up now.”
“Sir!—in
God's name!—sir?”
“Well.”
“The
anchors are working, sir. Shall I get them inboard?”
“Strike
nothing, and stir nothing, but lash everything. The wind rises, but it has not
got up to my table-lands yet. Quick, and see to it.—By masts and keels! he
takes me for the hunch-backed skipper of some coasting smack. Send down my
main-top-sail yard! Ho, gluepots! Loftiest trucks were made for wildest winds,
and this brain-truck of mine now sails amid the cloud-scud. Shall I strike
that? Oh, none but cowards send down their brain-trucks in tempest time. What a
hooroosh aloft there! I would e'en take it for sublime, did I not know that the
colic is a noisy malady. Oh, take medicine, take medicine!”
CHAPTER
121. Midnight.—The Forecastle Bulwarks.
Stubb
and Flask mounted on them, and passing additional lashings over the anchors
there hanging.
“No,
Stubb; you may pound that knot there as much as you please, but you will never
pound into me what you were just now saying. And how long ago is it since you
said the very contrary? Didn't you once say that whatever ship Ahab sails in,
that ship should pay something extra on its insurance policy, just as though it
were loaded with powder barrels aft and boxes of lucifers forward? Stop, now;
didn't you say so?”
“Well,
suppose I did? What then? I've part changed my flesh since that time, why not
my mind? Besides, supposing we are loaded with powder barrels aft and lucifers
forward; how the devil could the lucifers get afire in this drenching spray
here? Why, my little man, you have pretty red hair, but you couldn't get afire
now. Shake yourself; you're Aquarius, or the water-bearer, Flask; might fill
pitchers at your coat collar. Don't you see, then, that for these extra risks
the Marine Insurance companies have extra guarantees? Here are hydrants, Flask.
But hark, again, and I'll answer ye the other thing. First take your leg off
from the crown of the anchor here, though, so I can pass the rope; now listen.
What's the mighty difference between holding a mast's lightning-rod in the
storm, and standing close by a mast that hasn't got any lightning-rod at all in
a storm? Don't you see, you timber-head, that no harm can come to the holder of
the rod, unless the mast is first struck? What are you talking about, then? Not
one ship in a hundred carries rods, and Ahab,—aye, man, and all of us,—were in
no more danger then, in my poor opinion, than all the crews in ten thousand
ships now sailing the seas. Why, you King-Post, you, I suppose you would have
every man in the world go about with a small lightning-rod running up the
corner of his hat, like a militia officer's skewered feather, and trailing
behind like his sash. Why don't ye be sensible, Flask? it's easy to be
sensible; why don't ye, then? any man with half an eye can be sensible.”
“I
don't know that, Stubb. You sometimes find it rather hard.”
“Yes,
when a fellow's soaked through, it's hard to be sensible, that's a fact. And I
am about drenched with this spray. Never mind; catch the turn there, and pass
it. Seems to me we are lashing down these anchors now as if they were never
going to be used again. Tying these two anchors here, Flask, seems like tying a
man's hands behind him. And what big generous hands they are, to be sure. These
are your iron fists, hey? What a hold they have, too! I wonder, Flask, whether
the world is anchored anywhere; if she is, she swings with an uncommon long
cable, though. There, hammer that knot down, and we've done. So; next to
touching land, lighting on deck is the most satisfactory. I say, just wring out
my jacket skirts, will ye? Thank ye. They laugh at long-togs so, Flask; but
seems to me, a long tailed coat ought always to be worn in all storms afloat.
The tails tapering down that way, serve to carry off the water, d'ye see. Same
with cocked hats; the cocks form gable-end eave-troughs, Flask. No more
monkey-jackets and tarpaulins for me; I must mount a swallow-tail, and drive
down a beaver; so. Halloa! whew! there goes my tarpaulin overboard; Lord, Lord,
that the winds that come from heaven should be so unmannerly! This is a nasty
night, lad.”
CHAPTER
122. Midnight Aloft.—Thunder and Lightning.
The
main-top-sail yard.—Tashtego passing new lashings around it.
“Um,
um, um. Stop that thunder! Plenty too much thunder up here. What's the use of
thunder? Um, um, um. We don't want thunder; we want rum; give us a glass of
rum. Um, um, um!”
CHAPTER
123. The Musket.
During
the most violent shocks of the Typhoon, the man at the Pequod's jaw-bone tiller
had several times been reelingly hurled to the deck by its spasmodic motions,
even though preventer tackles had been attached to it—for they were
slack—because some play to the tiller was indispensable.
In
a severe gale like this, while the ship is but a tossed shuttlecock to the
blast, it is by no means uncommon to see the needles in the compasses, at
intervals, go round and round. It was thus with the Pequod's; at almost every
shock the helmsman had not failed to notice the whirling velocity with which
they revolved upon the cards; it is a sight that hardly anyone can behold
without some sort of unwonted emotion.
Some
hours after midnight, the Typhoon abated so much, that through the strenuous
exertions of Starbuck and Stubb—one engaged forward and the other aft—the
shivered remnants of the jib and fore and main-top-sails were cut adrift from
the spars, and went eddying away to leeward, like the feathers of an albatross,
which sometimes are cast to the winds when that storm-tossed bird is on the
wing.
The
three corresponding new sails were now bent and reefed, and a storm-trysail was
set further aft; so that the ship soon went through the water with some
precision again; and the course—for the present, East-south-east—which he was
to steer, if practicable, was once more given to the helmsman. For during the
violence of the gale, he had only steered according to its vicissitudes. But as
he was now bringing the ship as near her course as possible, watching the
compass meanwhile, lo! a good sign! the wind seemed coming round astern; aye, the
foul breeze became fair!
Instantly
the yards were squared, to the lively song of “Ho! the fair wind! oh-ye-ho,
cheerly men!” the crew singing for joy, that so promising an event should so
soon have falsified the evil portents preceding it.
In
compliance with the standing order of his commander—to report immediately, and
at any one of the twenty-four hours, any decided change in the affairs of the
deck,—Starbuck had no sooner trimmed the yards to the breeze—however
reluctantly and gloomily,—than he mechanically went below to apprise Captain
Ahab of the circumstance.
Ere
knocking at his state-room, he involuntarily paused before it a moment. The
cabin lamp—taking long swings this way and that—was burning fitfully, and
casting fitful shadows upon the old man's bolted door,—a thin one, with fixed
blinds inserted, in place of upper panels. The isolated subterraneousness of
the cabin made a certain humming silence to reign there, though it was hooped
round by all the roar of the elements. The loaded muskets in the rack were
shiningly revealed, as they stood upright against the forward bulkhead.
Starbuck was an honest, upright man; but out of Starbuck's heart, at that
instant when he saw the muskets, there strangely evolved an evil thought; but
so blent with its neutral or good accompaniments that for the instant he hardly
knew it for itself.
“He
would have shot me once,” he murmured, “yes, there's the very musket that he
pointed at me;—that one with the studded stock; let me touch it—lift it. Strange,
that I, who have handled so many deadly lances, strange, that I should shake so
now. Loaded? I must see. Aye, aye; and powder in the pan;—that's not good. Best
spill it?—wait. I'll cure myself of this. I'll hold the musket boldly while I
think.—I come to report a fair wind to him. But how fair? Fair for death and
doom,—that's fair for Moby Dick. It's a fair wind that's only fair for that
accursed fish.—The very tube he pointed at me!—the very one; this one—I hold it
here; he would have killed me with the very thing I handle now.—Aye and he
would fain kill all his crew. Does he not say he will not strike his spars to
any gale? Has he not dashed his heavenly quadrant? and in these same perilous
seas, gropes he not his way by mere dead reckoning of the error-abounding log?
and in this very Typhoon, did he not swear that he would have no
lightning-rods? But shall this crazed old man be tamely suffered to drag a
whole ship's company down to doom with him?—Yes, it would make him the wilful
murderer of thirty men and more, if this ship come to any deadly harm; and come
to deadly harm, my soul swears this ship will, if Ahab have his way. If, then,
he were this instant—put aside, that crime would not be his. Ha! is he
muttering in his sleep? Yes, just there,—in there, he's sleeping. Sleeping?
aye, but still alive, and soon awake again. I can't withstand thee, then, old
man. Not reasoning; not remonstrance; not entreaty wilt thou hearken to; all
this thou scornest. Flat obedience to thy own flat commands, this is all thou
breathest. Aye, and say'st the men have vow'd thy vow; say'st all of us are
Ahabs. Great God forbid!—But is there no other way? no lawful way?—Make him a
prisoner to be taken home? What! hope to wrest this old man's living power from
his own living hands? Only a fool would try it. Say he were pinioned even;
knotted all over with ropes and hawsers; chained down to ring-bolts on this
cabin floor; he would be more hideous than a caged tiger, then. I could not
endure the sight; could not possibly fly his howlings; all comfort, sleep
itself, inestimable reason would leave me on the long intolerable voyage. What,
then, remains? The land is hundreds of leagues away, and locked Japan the
nearest. I stand alone here upon an open sea, with two oceans and a whole
continent between me and law.—Aye, aye, 'tis so.—Is heaven a murderer when its
lightning strikes a would-be murderer in his bed, tindering sheets and skin
together?—And would I be a murderer, then, if”—and slowly, stealthily, and half
sideways looking, he placed the loaded musket's end against the door.
“On
this level, Ahab's hammock swings within; his head this way. A touch, and
Starbuck may survive to hug his wife and child again.—Oh Mary! Mary!—boy! boy!
boy!—But if I wake thee not to death, old man, who can tell to what unsounded
deeps Starbuck's body this day week may sink, with all the crew! Great God,
where art Thou? Shall I? shall I?—The wind has gone down and shifted, sir; the
fore and main topsails are reefed and set; she heads her course.”
“Stern
all! Oh Moby Dick, I clutch thy heart at last!”
Such
were the sounds that now came hurtling from out the old man's tormented sleep,
as if Starbuck's voice had caused the long dumb dream to speak.
The
yet levelled musket shook like a drunkard's arm against the panel; Starbuck
seemed wrestling with an angel; but turning from the door, he placed the
death-tube in its rack, and left the place.
“He's
too sound asleep, Mr. Stubb; go thou down, and wake him, and tell him. I must
see to the deck here. Thou know'st what to say.”
CHAPTER
124. The Needle.
Next
morning the not-yet-subsided sea rolled in long slow billows of mighty bulk,
and striving in the Pequod's gurgling track, pushed her on like giants' palms
outspread. The strong, unstaggering breeze abounded so, that sky and air seemed
vast outbellying sails; the whole world boomed before the wind. Muffled in the
full morning light, the invisible sun was only known by the spread intensity of
his place; where his bayonet rays moved on in stacks. Emblazonings, as of
crowned Babylonian kings and queens, reigned over everything. The sea was as a
crucible of molten gold, that bubblingly leaps with light and heat.
Long
maintaining an enchanted silence, Ahab stood apart; and every time the tetering
ship loweringly pitched down her bowsprit, he turned to eye the bright sun's
rays produced ahead; and when she profoundly settled by the stern, he turned
behind, and saw the sun's rearward place, and how the same yellow rays were
blending with his undeviating wake.
“Ha,
ha, my ship! thou mightest well be taken now for the sea-chariot of the sun.
Ho, ho! all ye nations before my prow, I bring the sun to ye! Yoke on the
further billows; hallo! a tandem, I drive the sea!”
But
suddenly reined back by some counter thought, he hurried towards the helm,
huskily demanding how the ship was heading.
“East-sou-east,
sir,” said the frightened steersman.
“Thou
liest!” smiting him with his clenched fist. “Heading East at this hour in the
morning, and the sun astern?”
Upon
this every soul was confounded; for the phenomenon just then observed by Ahab
had unaccountably escaped every one else; but its very blinding palpableness
must have been the cause.
Thrusting
his head half way into the binnacle, Ahab caught one glimpse of the compasses;
his uplifted arm slowly fell; for a moment he almost seemed to stagger.
Standing behind him Starbuck looked, and lo! the two compasses pointed East,
and the Pequod was as infallibly going West.
But
ere the first wild alarm could get out abroad among the crew, the old man with
a rigid laugh exclaimed, “I have it! It has happened before. Mr. Starbuck, last
night's thunder turned our compasses—that's all. Thou hast before now heard of
such a thing, I take it.”
“Aye;
but never before has it happened to me, sir,” said the pale mate, gloomily.
Here,
it must needs be said, that accidents like this have in more than one case
occurred to ships in violent storms. The magnetic energy, as developed in the
mariner's needle, is, as all know, essentially one with the electricity beheld
in heaven; hence it is not to be much marvelled at, that such things should be.
Instances where the lightning has actually struck the vessel, so as to smite
down some of the spars and rigging, the effect upon the needle has at times
been still more fatal; all its loadstone virtue being annihilated, so that the
before magnetic steel was of no more use than an old wife's knitting needle.
But in either case, the needle never again, of itself, recovers the original
virtue thus marred or lost; and if the binnacle compasses be affected, the same
fate reaches all the others that may be in the ship; even were the lowermost
one inserted into the kelson.
Deliberately
standing before the binnacle, and eyeing the transpointed compasses, the old
man, with the sharp of his extended hand, now took the precise bearing of the
sun, and satisfied that the needles were exactly inverted, shouted out his
orders for the ship's course to be changed accordingly. The yards were hard up;
and once more the Pequod thrust her undaunted bows into the opposing wind, for
the supposed fair one had only been juggling her.
Meanwhile,
whatever were his own secret thoughts, Starbuck said nothing, but quietly he issued
all requisite orders; while Stubb and Flask—who in some small degree seemed
then to be sharing his feelings—likewise unmurmuringly acquiesced. As for the
men, though some of them lowly rumbled, their fear of Ahab was greater than
their fear of Fate. But as ever before, the pagan harpooneers remained almost
wholly unimpressed; or if impressed, it was only with a certain magnetism shot
into their congenial hearts from inflexible Ahab's.
For
a space the old man walked the deck in rolling reveries. But chancing to slip
with his ivory heel, he saw the crushed copper sight-tubes of the quadrant he
had the day before dashed to the deck.
“Thou
poor, proud heaven-gazer and sun's pilot! yesterday I wrecked thee, and to-day
the compasses would fain have wrecked me. So, so. But Ahab is lord over the
level loadstone yet. Mr. Starbuck—a lance without a pole; a top-maul, and the
smallest of the sail-maker's needles. Quick!”
Accessory,
perhaps, to the impulse dictating the thing he was now about to do, were certain
prudential motives, whose object might have been to revive the spirits of his
crew by a stroke of his subtile skill, in a matter so wondrous as that of the
inverted compasses. Besides, the old man well knew that to steer by
transpointed needles, though clumsily practicable, was not a thing to be passed
over by superstitious sailors, without some shudderings and evil portents.
“Men,”
said he, steadily turning upon the crew, as the mate handed him the things he
had demanded, “my men, the thunder turned old Ahab's needles; but out of this
bit of steel Ahab can make one of his own, that will point as true as any.”
Abashed
glances of servile wonder were exchanged by the sailors, as this was said; and
with fascinated eyes they awaited whatever magic might follow. But Starbuck
looked away.
With
a blow from the top-maul Ahab knocked off the steel head of the lance, and then
handing to the mate the long iron rod remaining, bade him hold it upright,
without its touching the deck. Then, with the maul, after repeatedly smiting
the upper end of this iron rod, he placed the blunted needle endwise on the top
of it, and less strongly hammered that, several times, the mate still holding
the rod as before. Then going through some small strange motions with
it—whether indispensable to the magnetizing of the steel, or merely intended to
augment the awe of the crew, is uncertain—he called for linen thread; and
moving to the binnacle, slipped out the two reversed needles there, and
horizontally suspended the sail-needle by its middle, over one of the
compass-cards. At first, the steel went round and round, quivering and
vibrating at either end; but at last it settled to its place, when Ahab, who
had been intently watching for this result, stepped frankly back from the
binnacle, and pointing his stretched arm towards it, exclaimed,—“Look ye, for
yourselves, if Ahab be not lord of the level loadstone! The sun is East, and
that compass swears it!”
One
after another they peered in, for nothing but their own eyes could persuade
such ignorance as theirs, and one after another they slunk away.
In
his fiery eyes of scorn and triumph, you then saw Ahab in all his fatal pride.
CHAPTER
125. The Log and Line.
While
now the fated Pequod had been so long afloat this voyage, the log and line had
but very seldom been in use. Owing to a confident reliance upon other means of
determining the vessel's place, some merchantmen, and many whalemen, especially
when cruising, wholly neglect to heave the log; though at the same time, and
frequently more for form's sake than anything else, regularly putting down upon
the customary slate the course steered by the ship, as well as the presumed
average rate of progression every hour. It had been thus with the Pequod. The
wooden reel and angular log attached hung, long untouched, just beneath the
railing of the after bulwarks. Rains and spray had damped it; sun and wind had
warped it; all the elements had combined to rot a thing that hung so idly. But
heedless of all this, his mood seized Ahab, as he happened to glance upon the
reel, not many hours after the magnet scene, and he remembered how his quadrant
was no more, and recalled his frantic oath about the level log and line. The
ship was sailing plungingly; astern the billows rolled in riots.
“Forward,
there! Heave the log!”
Two
seamen came. The golden-hued Tahitian and the grizzly Manxman. “Take the reel,
one of ye, I'll heave.”
They
went towards the extreme stern, on the ship's lee side, where the deck, with
the oblique energy of the wind, was now almost dipping into the creamy,
sidelong-rushing sea.
The
Manxman took the reel, and holding it high up, by the projecting handle-ends of
the spindle, round which the spool of line revolved, so stood with the angular
log hanging downwards, till Ahab advanced to him.
Ahab
stood before him, and was lightly unwinding some thirty or forty turns to form
a preliminary hand-coil to toss overboard, when the old Manxman, who was
intently eyeing both him and the line, made bold to speak.
“Sir,
I mistrust it; this line looks far gone, long heat and wet have spoiled it.”
“'Twill
hold, old gentleman. Long heat and wet, have they spoiled thee? Thou seem'st to
hold. Or, truer perhaps, life holds thee; not thou it.”
“I
hold the spool, sir. But just as my captain says. With these grey hairs of mine
'tis not worth while disputing, 'specially with a superior, who'll ne'er
confess.”
“What's
that? There now's a patched professor in Queen Nature's granite-founded
College; but methinks he's too subservient. Where wert thou born?”
“In
the little rocky Isle of Man, sir.”
“Excellent!
Thou'st hit the world by that.”
“I
know not, sir, but I was born there.”
“In
the Isle of Man, hey? Well, the other way, it's good. Here's a man from Man; a
man born in once independent Man, and now unmanned of Man; which is sucked
in—by what? Up with the reel! The dead, blind wall butts all inquiring heads at
last. Up with it! So.”
The
log was heaved. The loose coils rapidly straightened out in a long dragging
line astern, and then, instantly, the reel began to whirl. In turn, jerkingly
raised and lowered by the rolling billows, the towing resistance of the log
caused the old reelman to stagger strangely.
“Hold
hard!”
Snap!
the overstrained line sagged down in one long festoon; the tugging log was
gone.
“I
crush the quadrant, the thunder turns the needles, and now the mad sea parts
the log-line. But Ahab can mend all. Haul in here, Tahitian; reel up, Manxman.
And look ye, let the carpenter make another log, and mend thou the line. See to
it.”
“There
he goes now; to him nothing's happened; but to me, the skewer seems loosening
out of the middle of the world. Haul in, haul in, Tahitian! These lines run
whole, and whirling out: come in broken, and dragging slow. Ha, Pip? come to
help; eh, Pip?”
“Pip?
whom call ye Pip? Pip jumped from the whale-boat. Pip's missing. Let's see now
if ye haven't fished him up here, fisherman. It drags hard; I guess he's
holding on. Jerk him, Tahiti! Jerk him off; we haul in no cowards here. Ho!
there's his arm just breaking water. A hatchet! a hatchet! cut it off—we haul
in no cowards here. Captain Ahab! sir, sir! here's Pip, trying to get on board
again.”
“Peace,
thou crazy loon,” cried the Manxman, seizing him by the arm. “Away from the
quarter-deck!”
“The
greater idiot ever scolds the lesser,” muttered Ahab, advancing. “Hands off
from that holiness! Where sayest thou Pip was, boy?
“Astern
there, sir, astern! Lo! lo!”
“And
who art thou, boy? I see not my reflection in the vacant pupils of thy eyes. Oh
God! that man should be a thing for immortal souls to sieve through! Who art
thou, boy?”
“Bell-boy,
sir; ship's-crier; ding, dong, ding! Pip! Pip! Pip! One hundred pounds of clay
reward for Pip; five feet high—looks cowardly—quickest known by that! Ding,
dong, ding! Who's seen Pip the coward?”
“There
can be no hearts above the snow-line. Oh, ye frozen heavens! look down here. Ye
did beget this luckless child, and have abandoned him, ye creative libertines.
Here, boy; Ahab's cabin shall be Pip's home henceforth, while Ahab lives. Thou
touchest my inmost centre, boy; thou art tied to me by cords woven of my
heart-strings. Come, let's down.”
“What's
this? here's velvet shark-skin,” intently gazing at Ahab's hand, and feeling
it. “Ah, now, had poor Pip but felt so kind a thing as this, perhaps he had
ne'er been lost! This seems to me, sir, as a man-rope; something that weak
souls may hold by. Oh, sir, let old Perth now come and rivet these two hands
together; the black one with the white, for I will not let this go.”
“Oh,
boy, nor will I thee, unless I should thereby drag thee to worse horrors than
are here. Come, then, to my cabin. Lo! ye believers in gods all goodness, and
in man all ill, lo you! see the omniscient gods oblivious of suffering man; and
man, though idiotic, and knowing not what he does, yet full of the sweet things
of love and gratitude. Come! I feel prouder leading thee by thy black hand,
than though I grasped an Emperor's!”
“There
go two daft ones now,” muttered the old Manxman. “One daft with strength, the
other daft with weakness. But here's the end of the rotten line—all dripping,
too. Mend it, eh? I think we had best have a new line altogether. I'll see Mr.
Stubb about it.”
CHAPTER
126. The Life-Buoy.
Steering
now south-eastward by Ahab's levelled steel, and her progress solely determined
by Ahab's level log and line; the Pequod held on her path towards the Equator.
Making so long a passage through such unfrequented waters, descrying no ships,
and ere long, sideways impelled by unvarying trade winds, over waves
monotonously mild; all these seemed the strange calm things preluding some
riotous and desperate scene.
At
last, when the ship drew near to the outskirts, as it were, of the Equatorial
fishing-ground, and in the deep darkness that goes before the dawn, was sailing
by a cluster of rocky islets; the watch—then headed by Flask—was startled by a
cry so plaintively wild and unearthly—like half-articulated wailings of the
ghosts of all Herod's murdered Innocents—that one and all, they started from
their reveries, and for the space of some moments stood, or sat, or leaned all
transfixedly listening, like the carved Roman slave, while that wild cry
remained within hearing. The Christian or civilized part of the crew said it
was mermaids, and shuddered; but the pagan harpooneers remained unappalled. Yet
the grey Manxman—the oldest mariner of all—declared that the wild thrilling
sounds that were heard, were the voices of newly drowned men in the sea.
Below
in his hammock, Ahab did not hear of this till grey dawn, when he came to the
deck; it was then recounted to him by Flask, not unaccompanied with hinted dark
meanings. He hollowly laughed, and thus explained the wonder.
Those
rocky islands the ship had passed were the resort of great numbers of seals,
and some young seals that had lost their dams, or some dams that had lost their
cubs, must have risen nigh the ship and kept company with her, crying and
sobbing with their human sort of wail. But this only the more affected some of
them, because most mariners cherish a very superstitious feeling about seals,
arising not only from their peculiar tones when in distress, but also from the
human look of their round heads and semi-intelligent faces, seen peeringly
uprising from the water alongside. In the sea, under certain circumstances,
seals have more than once been mistaken for men.
But
the bodings of the crew were destined to receive a most plausible confirmation
in the fate of one of their number that morning. At sun-rise this man went from
his hammock to his mast-head at the fore; and whether it was that he was not
yet half waked from his sleep (for sailors sometimes go aloft in a transition
state), whether it was thus with the man, there is now no telling; but, be that
as it may, he had not been long at his perch, when a cry was heard—a cry and a
rushing—and looking up, they saw a falling phantom in the air; and looking
down, a little tossed heap of white bubbles in the blue of the sea.
The
life-buoy—a long slender cask—was dropped from the stern, where it always hung
obedient to a cunning spring; but no hand rose to seize it, and the sun having
long beat upon this cask it had shrunken, so that it slowly filled, and that
parched wood also filled at its every pore; and the studded iron-bound cask
followed the sailor to the bottom, as if to yield him his pillow, though in
sooth but a hard one.
And
thus the first man of the Pequod that mounted the mast to look out for the
White Whale, on the White Whale's own peculiar ground; that man was swallowed
up in the deep. But few, perhaps, thought of that at the time. Indeed, in some
sort, they were not grieved at this event, at least as a portent; for they
regarded it, not as a foreshadowing of evil in the future, but as the
fulfilment of an evil already presaged. They declared that now they knew the
reason of those wild shrieks they had heard the night before. But again the old
Manxman said nay.
The
lost life-buoy was now to be replaced; Starbuck was directed to see to it; but
as no cask of sufficient lightness could be found, and as in the feverish
eagerness of what seemed the approaching crisis of the voyage, all hands were
impatient of any toil but what was directly connected with its final end,
whatever that might prove to be; therefore, they were going to leave the ship's
stern unprovided with a buoy, when by certain strange signs and inuendoes
Queequeg hinted a hint concerning his coffin.
“A
life-buoy of a coffin!” cried Starbuck, starting.
“Rather
queer, that, I should say,” said Stubb.
“It
will make a good enough one,” said Flask, “the carpenter here can arrange it
easily.”
“Bring
it up; there's nothing else for it,” said Starbuck, after a melancholy pause.
“Rig it, carpenter; do not look at me so—the coffin, I mean. Dost thou hear me?
Rig it.”
“And
shall I nail down the lid, sir?” moving his hand as with a hammer.
“Aye.”
“And
shall I caulk the seams, sir?” moving his hand as with a caulking-iron.
“Aye.”
“And
shall I then pay over the same with pitch, sir?” moving his hand as with a
pitch-pot.
“Away!
what possesses thee to this? Make a life-buoy of the coffin, and no more.—Mr.
Stubb, Mr. Flask, come forward with me.”
“He
goes off in a huff. The whole he can endure; at the parts he baulks. Now I
don't like this. I make a leg for Captain Ahab, and he wears it like a
gentleman; but I make a bandbox for Queequeg, and he won't put his head into
it. Are all my pains to go for nothing with that coffin? And now I'm ordered to
make a life-buoy of it. It's like turning an old coat; going to bring the flesh
on the other side now. I don't like this cobbling sort of business—I don't like
it at all; it's undignified; it's not my place. Let tinkers' brats do tinkerings;
we are their betters. I like to take in hand none but clean, virgin,
fair-and-square mathematical jobs, something that regularly begins at the
beginning, and is at the middle when midway, and comes to an end at the
conclusion; not a cobbler's job, that's at an end in the middle, and at the
beginning at the end. It's the old woman's tricks to be giving cobbling jobs.
Lord! what an affection all old women have for tinkers. I know an old woman of
sixty-five who ran away with a bald-headed young tinker once. And that's the
reason I never would work for lonely widow old women ashore, when I kept my
job-shop in the Vineyard; they might have taken it into their lonely old heads
to run off with me. But heigh-ho! there are no caps at sea but snow-caps. Let
me see. Nail down the lid; caulk the seams; pay over the same with pitch;
batten them down tight, and hang it with the snap-spring over the ship's stern.
Were ever such things done before with a coffin? Some superstitious old
carpenters, now, would be tied up in the rigging, ere they would do the job.
But I'm made of knotty Aroostook hemlock; I don't budge. Cruppered with a
coffin! Sailing about with a grave-yard tray! But never mind. We workers in
woods make bridal-bedsteads and card-tables, as well as coffins and hearses. We
work by the month, or by the job, or by the profit; not for us to ask the why
and wherefore of our work, unless it be too confounded cobbling, and then we
stash it if we can. Hem! I'll do the job, now, tenderly. I'll have me—let's
see—how many in the ship's company, all told? But I've forgotten. Any way, I'll
have me thirty separate, Turk's-headed life-lines, each three feet long hanging
all round to the coffin. Then, if the hull go down, there'll be thirty lively
fellows all fighting for one coffin, a sight not seen very often beneath the
sun! Come hammer, caulking-iron, pitch-pot, and marling-spike! Let's to it.”
CHAPTER
127. The Deck.
The
coffin laid upon two line-tubs, between the vice-bench and the open hatchway;
the Carpenter caulking its seams; the string of twisted oakum slowly unwinding
from a large roll of it placed in the bosom of his frock.—Ahab comes slowly
from the cabin-gangway, and hears Pip following him.
“Back,
lad; I will be with ye again presently. He goes! Not this hand complies with my
humor more genially than that boy.—Middle aisle of a church! What's here?”
“Life-buoy,
sir. Mr. Starbuck's orders. Oh, look, sir! Beware the hatchway!”
“Thank
ye, man. Thy coffin lies handy to the vault.”
“Sir?
The hatchway? oh! So it does, sir, so it does.”
“Art
not thou the leg-maker? Look, did not this stump come from thy shop?”
“I
believe it did, sir; does the ferrule stand, sir?”
“Well
enough. But art thou not also the undertaker?”
“Aye,
sir; I patched up this thing here as a coffin for Queequeg; but they've set me
now to turning it into something else.”
“Then
tell me; art thou not an arrant, all-grasping, intermeddling, monopolising,
heathenish old scamp, to be one day making legs, and the next day coffins to
clap them in, and yet again life-buoys out of those same coffins? Thou art as
unprincipled as the gods, and as much of a jack-of-all-trades.”
“But
I do not mean anything, sir. I do as I do.”
“The
gods again. Hark ye, dost thou not ever sing working about a coffin? The
Titans, they say, hummed snatches when chipping out the craters for volcanoes;
and the grave-digger in the play sings, spade in hand. Dost thou never?”
“Sing,
sir? Do I sing? Oh, I'm indifferent enough, sir, for that; but the reason why
the grave-digger made music must have been because there was none in his spade,
sir. But the caulking mallet is full of it. Hark to it.”
“Aye,
and that's because the lid there's a sounding-board; and what in all things
makes the sounding-board is this—there's naught beneath. And yet, a coffin with
a body in it rings pretty much the same, Carpenter. Hast thou ever helped carry
a bier, and heard the coffin knock against the churchyard gate, going in?
“Faith,
sir, I've——”
“Faith?
What's that?”
“Why,
faith, sir, it's only a sort of exclamation-like—that's all, sir.”
“Um,
um; go on.”
“I
was about to say, sir, that——”
“Art
thou a silk-worm? Dost thou spin thy own shroud out of thyself? Look at thy
bosom! Despatch! and get these traps out of sight.”
“He
goes aft. That was sudden, now; but squalls come sudden in hot latitudes. I've
heard that the Isle of Albemarle, one of the Gallipagos, is cut by the Equator
right in the middle. Seems to me some sort of Equator cuts yon old man, too,
right in his middle. He's always under the Line—fiery hot, I tell ye! He's
looking this way—come, oakum; quick. Here we go again. This wooden mallet is
the cork, and I'm the professor of musical glasses—tap, tap!”
(Ahab
to himself.)
“There's
a sight! There's a sound! The greyheaded woodpecker tapping the hollow tree!
Blind and dumb might well be envied now. See! that thing rests on two
line-tubs, full of tow-lines. A most malicious wag, that fellow. Rat-tat! So
man's seconds tick! Oh! how immaterial are all materials! What things real are
there, but imponderable thoughts? Here now's the very dreaded symbol of grim
death, by a mere hap, made the expressive sign of the help and hope of most
endangered life. A life-buoy of a coffin! Does it go further? Can it be that in
some spiritual sense the coffin is, after all, but an immortality-preserver!
I'll think of that. But no. So far gone am I in the dark side of earth, that
its other side, the theoretic bright one, seems but uncertain twilight to me.
Will ye never have done, Carpenter, with that accursed sound? I go below; let
me not see that thing here when I return again. Now, then, Pip, we'll talk this
over; I do suck most wondrous philosophies from thee! Some unknown conduits
from the unknown worlds must empty into thee!”
CHAPTER
128. The Pequod Meets The Rachel.
Next
day, a large ship, the Rachel, was descried, bearing directly down upon the
Pequod, all her spars thickly clustering with men. At the time the Pequod was
making good speed through the water; but as the broad-winged windward stranger
shot nigh to her, the boastful sails all fell together as blank bladders that
are burst, and all life fled from the smitten hull.
“Bad
news; she brings bad news,” muttered the old Manxman. But ere her commander,
who, with trumpet to mouth, stood up in his boat; ere he could hopefully hail,
Ahab's voice was heard.
“Hast
seen the White Whale?”
“Aye,
yesterday. Have ye seen a whale-boat adrift?”
Throttling
his joy, Ahab negatively answered this unexpected question; and would then have
fain boarded the stranger, when the stranger captain himself, having stopped
his vessel's way, was seen descending her side. A few keen pulls, and his
boat-hook soon clinched the Pequod's main-chains, and he sprang to the deck.
Immediately he was recognised by Ahab for a Nantucketer he knew. But no formal
salutation was exchanged.
“Where
was he?—not killed!—not killed!” cried Ahab, closely advancing. “How was it?”
It
seemed that somewhat late on the afternoon of the day previous, while three of
the stranger's boats were engaged with a shoal of whales, which had led them
some four or five miles from the ship; and while they were yet in swift chase
to windward, the white hump and head of Moby Dick had suddenly loomed up out of
the water, not very far to leeward; whereupon, the fourth rigged boat—a
reserved one—had been instantly lowered in chase. After a keen sail before the
wind, this fourth boat—the swiftest keeled of all—seemed to have succeeded in fastening—at
least, as well as the man at the mast-head could tell anything about it. In the
distance he saw the diminished dotted boat; and then a swift gleam of bubbling
white water; and after that nothing more; whence it was concluded that the
stricken whale must have indefinitely run away with his pursuers, as often
happens. There was some apprehension, but no positive alarm, as yet. The recall
signals were placed in the rigging; darkness came on; and forced to pick up her
three far to windward boats—ere going in quest of the fourth one in the
precisely opposite direction—the ship had not only been necessitated to leave
that boat to its fate till near midnight, but, for the time, to increase her
distance from it. But the rest of her crew being at last safe aboard, she
crowded all sail—stunsail on stunsail—after the missing boat; kindling a fire
in her try-pots for a beacon; and every other man aloft on the look-out. But
though when she had thus sailed a sufficient distance to gain the presumed
place of the absent ones when last seen; though she then paused to lower her
spare boats to pull all around her; and not finding anything, had again dashed
on; again paused, and lowered her boats; and though she had thus continued
doing till daylight; yet not the least glimpse of the missing keel had been
seen.
The
story told, the stranger Captain immediately went on to reveal his object in
boarding the Pequod. He desired that ship to unite with his own in the search;
by sailing over the sea some four or five miles apart, on parallel lines, and
so sweeping a double horizon, as it were.
“I
will wager something now,” whispered Stubb to Flask, “that some one in that
missing boat wore off that Captain's best coat; mayhap, his watch—he's so
cursed anxious to get it back. Who ever heard of two pious whale-ships cruising
after one missing whale-boat in the height of the whaling season? See, Flask,
only see how pale he looks—pale in the very buttons of his eyes—look—it wasn't
the coat—it must have been the—”
“My
boy, my own boy is among them. For God's sake—I beg, I conjure”—here exclaimed
the stranger Captain to Ahab, who thus far had but icily received his petition.
“For eight-and-forty hours let me charter your ship—I will gladly pay for it,
and roundly pay for it—if there be no other way—for eight-and-forty hours
only—only that—you must, oh, you must, and you shall do this thing.”
“His
son!” cried Stubb, “oh, it's his son he's lost! I take back the coat and
watch—what says Ahab? We must save that boy.”
“He's
drowned with the rest on 'em, last night,” said the old Manx sailor standing
behind them; “I heard; all of ye heard their spirits.”
Now,
as it shortly turned out, what made this incident of the Rachel's the more
melancholy, was the circumstance, that not only was one of the Captain's sons
among the number of the missing boat's crew; but among the number of the other
boat's crews, at the same time, but on the other hand, separated from the ship
during the dark vicissitudes of the chase, there had been still another son; as
that for a time, the wretched father was plunged to the bottom of the cruellest
perplexity; which was only solved for him by his chief mate's instinctively
adopting the ordinary procedure of a whale-ship in such emergencies, that is,
when placed between jeopardized but divided boats, always to pick up the
majority first. But the captain, for some unknown constitutional reason, had
refrained from mentioning all this, and not till forced to it by Ahab's iciness
did he allude to his one yet missing boy; a little lad, but twelve years old,
whose father with the earnest but unmisgiving hardihood of a Nantucketer's
paternal love, had thus early sought to initiate him in the perils and wonders
of a vocation almost immemorially the destiny of all his race. Nor does it
unfrequently occur, that Nantucket captains will send a son of such tender age
away from them, for a protracted three or four years' voyage in some other ship
than their own; so that their first knowledge of a whaleman's career shall be
unenervated by any chance display of a father's natural but untimely
partiality, or undue apprehensiveness and concern.
Meantime,
now the stranger was still beseeching his poor boon of Ahab; and Ahab still
stood like an anvil, receiving every shock, but without the least quivering of
his own.
“I
will not go,” said the stranger, “till you say aye to me. Do to me as you would
have me do to you in the like case. For you too have a boy, Captain Ahab—though
but a child, and nestling safely at home now—a child of your old age too—Yes,
yes, you relent; I see it—run, run, men, now, and stand by to square in the
yards.”
“Avast,”
cried Ahab—“touch not a rope-yarn”; then in a voice that prolongingly moulded
every word—“Captain Gardiner, I will not do it. Even now I lose time. Good-bye,
good-bye. God bless ye, man, and may I forgive myself, but I must go. Mr.
Starbuck, look at the binnacle watch, and in three minutes from this present
instant warn off all strangers: then brace forward again, and let the ship sail
as before.”
Hurriedly
turning, with averted face, he descended into his cabin, leaving the strange
captain transfixed at this unconditional and utter rejection of his so earnest
suit. But starting from his enchantment, Gardiner silently hurried to the side;
more fell than stepped into his boat, and returned to his ship.
Soon
the two ships diverged their wakes; and long as the strange vessel was in view,
she was seen to yaw hither and thither at every dark spot, however small, on
the sea. This way and that her yards were swung round; starboard and larboard,
she continued to tack; now she beat against a head sea; and again it pushed her
before it; while all the while, her masts and yards were thickly clustered with
men, as three tall cherry trees, when the boys are cherrying among the boughs.
But
by her still halting course and winding, woeful way, you plainly saw that this
ship that so wept with spray, still remained without comfort. She was Rachel,
weeping for her children, because they were not.
CHAPTER
129. The Cabin.
(Ahab
moving to go on deck; Pip catches him by the hand to follow.)
“Lad,
lad, I tell thee thou must not follow Ahab now. The hour is coming when Ahab
would not scare thee from him, yet would not have thee by him. There is that in
thee, poor lad, which I feel too curing to my malady. Like cures like; and for
this hunt, my malady becomes my most desired health. Do thou abide below here,
where they shall serve thee, as if thou wert the captain. Aye, lad, thou shalt
sit here in my own screwed chair; another screw to it, thou must be.”
“No,
no, no! ye have not a whole body, sir; do ye but use poor me for your one lost
leg; only tread upon me, sir; I ask no more, so I remain a part of ye.”
“Oh!
spite of million villains, this makes me a bigot in the fadeless fidelity of
man!—and a black! and crazy!—but methinks like-cures-like applies to him too;
he grows so sane again.”
“They
tell me, sir, that Stubb did once desert poor little Pip, whose drowned bones
now show white, for all the blackness of his living skin. But I will never
desert ye, sir, as Stubb did him. Sir, I must go with ye.”
“If
thou speakest thus to me much more, Ahab's purpose keels up in him. I tell thee
no; it cannot be.”
“Oh
good master, master, master!”
“Weep
so, and I will murder thee! have a care, for Ahab too is mad. Listen, and thou
wilt often hear my ivory foot upon the deck, and still know that I am there.
And now I quit thee. Thy hand!—Met! True art thou, lad, as the circumference to
its centre. So: God for ever bless thee; and if it come to that,—God for ever
save thee, let what will befall.”
(Ahab
goes; Pip steps one step forward.)
“Here
he this instant stood; I stand in his air,—but I'm alone. Now were even poor
Pip here I could endure it, but he's missing. Pip! Pip! Ding, dong, ding! Who's
seen Pip? He must be up here; let's try the door. What? neither lock, nor bolt,
nor bar; and yet there's no opening it. It must be the spell; he told me to
stay here: Aye, and told me this screwed chair was mine. Here, then, I'll seat
me, against the transom, in the ship's full middle, all her keel and her three
masts before me. Here, our old sailors say, in their black seventy-fours great
admirals sometimes sit at table, and lord it over rows of captains and
lieutenants. Ha! what's this? epaulets! epaulets! the epaulets all come
crowding! Pass round the decanters; glad to see ye; fill up, monsieurs! What an
odd feeling, now, when a black boy's host to white men with gold lace upon
their coats!—Monsieurs, have ye seen one Pip?—a little negro lad, five feet
high, hang-dog look, and cowardly! Jumped from a whale-boat once;—seen him? No!
Well then, fill up again, captains, and let's drink shame upon all cowards! I
name no names. Shame upon them! Put one foot upon the table. Shame upon all
cowards.—Hist! above there, I hear ivory—Oh, master! master! I am indeed
down-hearted when you walk over me. But here I'll stay, though this stern
strikes rocks; and they bulge through; and oysters come to join me.”
CHAPTER
130. The Hat.
And
now that at the proper time and place, after so long and wide a preliminary
cruise, Ahab,—all other whaling waters swept—seemed to have chased his foe into
an ocean-fold, to slay him the more securely there; now, that he found himself
hard by the very latitude and longitude where his tormenting wound had been
inflicted; now that a vessel had been spoken which on the very day preceding
had actually encountered Moby Dick;—and now that all his successive meetings
with various ships contrastingly concurred to show the demoniac indifference
with which the white whale tore his hunters, whether sinning or sinned against;
now it was that there lurked a something in the old man's eyes, which it was
hardly sufferable for feeble souls to see. As the unsetting polar star, which
through the livelong, arctic, six months' night sustains its piercing, steady,
central gaze; so Ahab's purpose now fixedly gleamed down upon the constant
midnight of the gloomy crew. It domineered above them so, that all their
bodings, doubts, misgivings, fears, were fain to hide beneath their souls, and
not sprout forth a single spear or leaf.
In
this foreshadowing interval too, all humor, forced or natural, vanished. Stubb
no more strove to raise a smile; Starbuck no more strove to check one. Alike,
joy and sorrow, hope and fear, seemed ground to finest dust, and powdered, for
the time, in the clamped mortar of Ahab's iron soul. Like machines, they dumbly
moved about the deck, ever conscious that the old man's despot eye was on them.
But
did you deeply scan him in his more secret confidential hours; when he thought
no glance but one was on him; then you would have seen that even as Ahab's eyes
so awed the crew's, the inscrutable Parsee's glance awed his; or somehow, at
least, in some wild way, at times affected it. Such an added, gliding
strangeness began to invest the thin Fedallah now; such ceaseless shudderings
shook him; that the men looked dubious at him; half uncertain, as it seemed,
whether indeed he were a mortal substance, or else a tremulous shadow cast upon
the deck by some unseen being's body. And that shadow was always hovering
there. For not by night, even, had Fedallah ever certainly been known to
slumber, or go below. He would stand still for hours: but never sat or leaned;
his wan but wondrous eyes did plainly say—We two watchmen never rest.
Nor,
at any time, by night or day could the mariners now step upon the deck, unless
Ahab was before them; either standing in his pivot-hole, or exactly pacing the
planks between two undeviating limits,—the main-mast and the mizen; or else
they saw him standing in the cabin-scuttle,—his living foot advanced upon the
deck, as if to step; his hat slouched heavily over his eyes; so that however
motionless he stood, however the days and nights were added on, that he had not
swung in his hammock; yet hidden beneath that slouching hat, they could never
tell unerringly whether, for all this, his eyes were really closed at times; or
whether he was still intently scanning them; no matter, though he stood so in
the scuttle for a whole hour on the stretch, and the unheeded night-damp
gathered in beads of dew upon that stone-carved coat and hat. The clothes that
the night had wet, the next day's sunshine dried upon him; and so, day after
day, and night after night; he went no more beneath the planks; whatever he
wanted from the cabin that thing he sent for.
He
ate in the same open air; that is, his two only meals,—breakfast and dinner:
supper he never touched; nor reaped his beard; which darkly grew all gnarled,
as unearthed roots of trees blown over, which still grow idly on at naked base,
though perished in the upper verdure. But though his whole life was now become
one watch on deck; and though the Parsee's mystic watch was without
intermission as his own; yet these two never seemed to speak—one man to the
other—unless at long intervals some passing unmomentous matter made it
necessary. Though such a potent spell seemed secretly to join the twain;
openly, and to the awe-struck crew, they seemed pole-like asunder. If by day
they chanced to speak one word; by night, dumb men were both, so far as
concerned the slightest verbal interchange. At times, for longest hours,
without a single hail, they stood far parted in the starlight; Ahab in his
scuttle, the Parsee by the mainmast; but still fixedly gazing upon each other;
as if in the Parsee Ahab saw his forethrown shadow, in Ahab the Parsee his
abandoned substance.
And
yet, somehow, did Ahab—in his own proper self, as daily, hourly, and every
instant, commandingly revealed to his subordinates,—Ahab seemed an independent
lord; the Parsee but his slave. Still again both seemed yoked together, and an
unseen tyrant driving them; the lean shade siding the solid rib. For be this
Parsee what he may, all rib and keel was solid Ahab.
At
the first faintest glimmering of the dawn, his iron voice was heard from
aft,—“Man the mast-heads!”—and all through the day, till after sunset and after
twilight, the same voice every hour, at the striking of the helmsman's bell,
was heard—“What d'ye see?—sharp! sharp!”
But
when three or four days had slided by, after meeting the children-seeking
Rachel; and no spout had yet been seen; the monomaniac old man seemed
distrustful of his crew's fidelity; at least, of nearly all except the Pagan
harpooneers; he seemed to doubt, even, whether Stubb and Flask might not
willingly overlook the sight he sought. But if these suspicions were really
his, he sagaciously refrained from verbally expressing them, however his
actions might seem to hint them.
“I
will have the first sight of the whale myself,”—he said. “Aye! Ahab must have
the doubloon!” and with his own hands he rigged a nest of basketed bowlines;
and sending a hand aloft, with a single sheaved block, to secure to the
main-mast head, he received the two ends of the downward-reeved rope; and
attaching one to his basket prepared a pin for the other end, in order to
fasten it at the rail. This done, with that end yet in his hand and standing
beside the pin, he looked round upon his crew, sweeping from one to the other;
pausing his glance long upon Daggoo, Queequeg, Tashtego; but shunning Fedallah;
and then settling his firm relying eye upon the chief mate, said,—“Take the
rope, sir—I give it into thy hands, Starbuck.” Then arranging his person in the
basket, he gave the word for them to hoist him to his perch, Starbuck being the
one who secured the rope at last; and afterwards stood near it. And thus, with
one hand clinging round the royal mast, Ahab gazed abroad upon the sea for
miles and miles,—ahead, astern, this side, and that,—within the wide expanded circle
commanded at so great a height.
When
in working with his hands at some lofty almost isolated place in the rigging,
which chances to afford no foothold, the sailor at sea is hoisted up to that
spot, and sustained there by the rope; under these circumstances, its fastened
end on deck is always given in strict charge to some one man who has the
special watch of it. Because in such a wilderness of running rigging, whose
various different relations aloft cannot always be infallibly discerned by what
is seen of them at the deck; and when the deck-ends of these ropes are being
every few minutes cast down from the fastenings, it would be but a natural
fatality, if, unprovided with a constant watchman, the hoisted sailor should by
some carelessness of the crew be cast adrift and fall all swooping to the sea.
So Ahab's proceedings in this matter were not unusual; the only strange thing
about them seemed to be, that Starbuck, almost the one only man who had ever
ventured to oppose him with anything in the slightest degree approaching to
decision—one of those too, whose faithfulness on the look-out he had seemed to
doubt somewhat;—it was strange, that this was the very man he should select for
his watchman; freely giving his whole life into such an otherwise distrusted
person's hands.
Now,
the first time Ahab was perched aloft; ere he had been there ten minutes; one
of those red-billed savage sea-hawks which so often fly incommodiously close
round the manned mast-heads of whalemen in these latitudes; one of these birds
came wheeling and screaming round his head in a maze of untrackably swift
circlings. Then it darted a thousand feet straight up into the air; then
spiralized downwards, and went eddying again round his head.
But
with his gaze fixed upon the dim and distant horizon, Ahab seemed not to mark
this wild bird; nor, indeed, would any one else have marked it much, it being
no uncommon circumstance; only now almost the least heedful eye seemed to see
some sort of cunning meaning in almost every sight.
“Your
hat, your hat, sir!” suddenly cried the Sicilian seaman, who being posted at
the mizen-mast-head, stood directly behind Ahab, though somewhat lower than his
level, and with a deep gulf of air dividing them.
But
already the sable wing was before the old man's eyes; the long hooked bill at
his head: with a scream, the black hawk darted away with his prize.
An
eagle flew thrice round Tarquin's head, removing his cap to replace it, and
thereupon Tanaquil, his wife, declared that Tarquin would be king of Rome. But
only by the replacing of the cap was that omen accounted good. Ahab's hat was
never restored; the wild hawk flew on and on with it; far in advance of the
prow: and at last disappeared; while from the point of that disappearance, a
minute black spot was dimly discerned, falling from that vast height into the
sea.
CHAPTER
131. The Pequod Meets The Delight.
The
intense Pequod sailed on; the rolling waves and days went by; the
life-buoy-coffin still lightly swung; and another ship, most miserably misnamed
the Delight, was descried. As she drew nigh, all eyes were fixed upon her broad
beams, called shears, which, in some whaling-ships, cross the quarter-deck at
the height of eight or nine feet; serving to carry the spare, unrigged, or
disabled boats.
Upon
the stranger's shears were beheld the shattered, white ribs, and some few
splintered planks, of what had once been a whale-boat; but you now saw through
this wreck, as plainly as you see through the peeled, half-unhinged, and
bleaching skeleton of a horse.
“Hast
seen the White Whale?”
“Look!”
replied the hollow-cheeked captain from his taffrail; and with his trumpet he
pointed to the wreck.
“Hast
killed him?”
“The
harpoon is not yet forged that ever will do that,” answered the other, sadly
glancing upon a rounded hammock on the deck, whose gathered sides some
noiseless sailors were busy in sewing together.
“Not
forged!” and snatching Perth's levelled iron from the crotch, Ahab held it out,
exclaiming—“Look ye, Nantucketer; here in this hand I hold his death! Tempered
in blood, and tempered by lightning are these barbs; and I swear to temper them
triply in that hot place behind the fin, where the White Whale most feels his
accursed life!”
“Then
God keep thee, old man—see'st thou that”—pointing to the hammock—“I bury but
one of five stout men, who were alive only yesterday; but were dead ere night.
Only that one I bury; the rest were buried before they died; you sail upon
their tomb.” Then turning to his crew—“Are ye ready there? place the plank then
on the rail, and lift the body; so, then—Oh! God”—advancing towards the hammock
with uplifted hands—“may the resurrection and the life——”
“Brace
forward! Up helm!” cried Ahab like lightning to his men.
But
the suddenly started Pequod was not quick enough to escape the sound of the
splash that the corpse soon made as it struck the sea; not so quick, indeed,
but that some of the flying bubbles might have sprinkled her hull with their
ghostly baptism.
As
Ahab now glided from the dejected Delight, the strange life-buoy hanging at the
Pequod's stern came into conspicuous relief.
“Ha!
yonder! look yonder, men!” cried a foreboding voice in her wake. “In vain, oh,
ye strangers, ye fly our sad burial; ye but turn us your taffrail to show us
your coffin!”
CHAPTER
132. The Symphony.
It
was a clear steel-blue day. The firmaments of air and sea were hardly separable
in that all-pervading azure; only, the pensive air was transparently pure and
soft, with a woman's look, and the robust and man-like sea heaved with long,
strong, lingering swells, as Samson's chest in his sleep.
Hither,
and thither, on high, glided the snow-white wings of small, unspeckled birds;
these were the gentle thoughts of the feminine air; but to and fro in the
deeps, far down in the bottomless blue, rushed mighty leviathans, sword-fish,
and sharks; and these were the strong, troubled, murderous thinkings of the
masculine sea.
But
though thus contrasting within, the contrast was only in shades and shadows
without; those two seemed one; it was only the sex, as it were, that
distinguished them.
Aloft,
like a royal czar and king, the sun seemed giving this gentle air to this bold
and rolling sea; even as bride to groom. And at the girdling line of the
horizon, a soft and tremulous motion—most seen here at the equator—denoted the
fond, throbbing trust, the loving alarms, with which the poor bride gave her
bosom away.
Tied
up and twisted; gnarled and knotted with wrinkles; haggardly firm and
unyielding; his eyes glowing like coals, that still glow in the ashes of ruin;
untottering Ahab stood forth in the clearness of the morn; lifting his
splintered helmet of a brow to the fair girl's forehead of heaven.
Oh,
immortal infancy, and innocency of the azure! Invisible winged creatures that
frolic all round us! Sweet childhood of air and sky! how oblivious were ye of
old Ahab's close-coiled woe! But so have I seen little Miriam and Martha,
laughing-eyed elves, heedlessly gambol around their old sire; sporting with the
circle of singed locks which grew on the marge of that burnt-out crater of his
brain.
Slowly
crossing the deck from the scuttle, Ahab leaned over the side and watched how
his shadow in the water sank and sank to his gaze, the more and the more that
he strove to pierce the profundity. But the lovely aromas in that enchanted air
did at last seem to dispel, for a moment, the cankerous thing in his soul. That
glad, happy air, that winsome sky, did at last stroke and caress him; the
step-mother world, so long cruel—forbidding—now threw affectionate arms round
his stubborn neck, and did seem to joyously sob over him, as if over one, that
however wilful and erring, she could yet find it in her heart to save and to
bless. From beneath his slouched hat Ahab dropped a tear into the sea; nor did
all the Pacific contain such wealth as that one wee drop.
Starbuck
saw the old man; saw him, how he heavily leaned over the side; and he seemed to
hear in his own true heart the measureless sobbing that stole out of the centre
of the serenity around. Careful not to touch him, or be noticed by him, he yet
drew near to him, and stood there.
Ahab
turned.
“Starbuck!”
“Sir.”
“Oh,
Starbuck! it is a mild, mild wind, and a mild looking sky. On such a day—very
much such a sweetness as this—I struck my first whale—a boy-harpooneer of
eighteen! Forty—forty—forty years ago!—ago! Forty years of continual whaling!
forty years of privation, and peril, and storm-time! forty years on the
pitiless sea! for forty years has Ahab forsaken the peaceful land, for forty
years to make war on the horrors of the deep! Aye and yes, Starbuck, out of
those forty years I have not spent three ashore. When I think of this life I
have led; the desolation of solitude it has been; the masoned, walled-town of a
Captain's exclusiveness, which admits but small entrance to any sympathy from
the green country without—oh, weariness! heaviness! Guinea-coast slavery of
solitary command!—when I think of all this; only half-suspected, not so keenly
known to me before—and how for forty years I have fed upon dry salted fare—fit
emblem of the dry nourishment of my soil!—when the poorest landsman has had
fresh fruit to his daily hand, and broken the world's fresh bread to my mouldy
crusts—away, whole oceans away, from that young girl-wife I wedded past fifty,
and sailed for Cape Horn the next day, leaving but one dent in my marriage
pillow—wife? wife?—rather a widow with her husband alive! Aye, I widowed that
poor girl when I married her, Starbuck; and then, the madness, the frenzy, the
boiling blood and the smoking brow, with which, for a thousand lowerings old
Ahab has furiously, foamingly chased his prey—more a demon than a man!—aye,
aye! what a forty years' fool—fool—old fool, has old Ahab been! Why this strife
of the chase? why weary, and palsy the arm at the oar, and the iron, and the
lance? how the richer or better is Ahab now? Behold. Oh, Starbuck! is it not
hard, that with this weary load I bear, one poor leg should have been snatched
from under me? Here, brush this old hair aside; it blinds me, that I seem to
weep. Locks so grey did never grow but from out some ashes! But do I look very
old, so very, very old, Starbuck? I feel deadly faint, bowed, and humped, as
though I were Adam, staggering beneath the piled centuries since Paradise. God!
God! God!—crack my heart!—stave my brain!—mockery! mockery! bitter, biting
mockery of grey hairs, have I lived enough joy to wear ye; and seem and feel
thus intolerably old? Close! stand close to me, Starbuck; let me look into a
human eye; it is better than to gaze into sea or sky; better than to gaze upon
God. By the green land; by the bright hearth-stone! this is the magic glass,
man; I see my wife and my child in thine eye. No, no; stay on board, on
board!—lower not when I do; when branded Ahab gives chase to Moby Dick. That
hazard shall not be thine. No, no! not with the far away home I see in that
eye!”
“Oh,
my Captain! my Captain! noble soul! grand old heart, after all! why should any
one give chase to that hated fish! Away with me! let us fly these deadly
waters! let us home! Wife and child, too, are Starbuck's—wife and child of his
brotherly, sisterly, play-fellow youth; even as thine, sir, are the wife and
child of thy loving, longing, paternal old age! Away! let us away!—this instant
let me alter the course! How cheerily, how hilariously, O my Captain, would we
bowl on our way to see old Nantucket again! I think, sir, they have some such
mild blue days, even as this, in Nantucket.”
“They
have, they have. I have seen them—some summer days in the morning. About this
time—yes, it is his noon nap now—the boy vivaciously wakes; sits up in bed; and
his mother tells him of me, of cannibal old me; how I am abroad upon the deep,
but will yet come back to dance him again.”
“'Tis
my Mary, my Mary herself! She promised that my boy, every morning, should be
carried to the hill to catch the first glimpse of his father's sail! Yes, yes!
no more! it is done! we head for Nantucket! Come, my Captain, study out the
course, and let us away! See, see! the boy's face from the window! the boy's
hand on the hill!”
But
Ahab's glance was averted; like a blighted fruit tree he shook, and cast his
last, cindered apple to the soil.
“What
is it, what nameless, inscrutable, unearthly thing is it; what cozening, hidden
lord and master, and cruel, remorseless emperor commands me; that against all
natural lovings and longings, I so keep pushing, and crowding, and jamming
myself on all the time; recklessly making me ready to do what in my own proper,
natural heart, I durst not so much as dare? Is Ahab, Ahab? Is it I, God, or
who, that lifts this arm? But if the great sun move not of himself; but is as
an errand-boy in heaven; nor one single star can revolve, but by some invisible
power; how then can this one small heart beat; this one small brain think
thoughts; unless God does that beating, does that thinking, does that living,
and not I. By heaven, man, we are turned round and round in this world, like
yonder windlass, and Fate is the handspike. And all the time, lo! that smiling
sky, and this unsounded sea! Look! see yon Albicore! who put it into him to
chase and fang that flying-fish? Where do murderers go, man! Who's to doom,
when the judge himself is dragged to the bar? But it is a mild, mild wind, and
a mild looking sky; and the air smells now, as if it blew from a far-away
meadow; they have been making hay somewhere under the slopes of the Andes,
Starbuck, and the mowers are sleeping among the new-mown hay. Sleeping? Aye,
toil we how we may, we all sleep at last on the field. Sleep? Aye, and rust
amid greenness; as last year's scythes flung down, and left in the half-cut
swaths—Starbuck!”
But
blanched to a corpse's hue with despair, the Mate had stolen away.
Ahab
crossed the deck to gaze over on the other side; but started at two reflected,
fixed eyes in the water there. Fedallah was motionlessly leaning over the same
rail.
CHAPTER
133. The Chase—First Day.
That
night, in the mid-watch, when the old man—as his wont at intervals—stepped
forth from the scuttle in which he leaned, and went to his pivot-hole, he
suddenly thrust out his face fiercely, snuffing up the sea air as a sagacious
ship's dog will, in drawing nigh to some barbarous isle. He declared that a
whale must be near. Soon that peculiar odor, sometimes to a great distance
given forth by the living sperm whale, was palpable to all the watch; nor was
any mariner surprised when, after inspecting the compass, and then the
dog-vane, and then ascertaining the precise bearing of the odor as nearly as
possible, Ahab rapidly ordered the ship's course to be slightly altered, and
the sail to be shortened.
The
acute policy dictating these movements was sufficiently vindicated at daybreak,
by the sight of a long sleek on the sea directly and lengthwise ahead, smooth
as oil, and resembling in the pleated watery wrinkles bordering it, the
polished metallic-like marks of some swift tide-rip, at the mouth of a deep,
rapid stream.
“Man
the mast-heads! Call all hands!”
Thundering
with the butts of three clubbed handspikes on the forecastle deck, Daggoo
roused the sleepers with such judgment claps that they seemed to exhale from
the scuttle, so instantaneously did they appear with their clothes in their
hands.
“What
d'ye see?” cried Ahab, flattening his face to the sky.
“Nothing,
nothing sir!” was the sound hailing down in reply.
“T'gallant
sails!—stunsails! alow and aloft, and on both sides!”
All
sail being set, he now cast loose the life-line, reserved for swaying him to
the main royal-mast head; and in a few moments they were hoisting him thither,
when, while but two thirds of the way aloft, and while peering ahead through
the horizontal vacancy between the main-top-sail and top-gallant-sail, he
raised a gull-like cry in the air. “There she blows!—there she blows! A hump
like a snow-hill! It is Moby Dick!”
Fired
by the cry which seemed simultaneously taken up by the three look-outs, the men
on deck rushed to the rigging to behold the famous whale they had so long been
pursuing. Ahab had now gained his final perch, some feet above the other
look-outs, Tashtego standing just beneath him on the cap of the
top-gallant-mast, so that the Indian's head was almost on a level with Ahab's
heel. From this height the whale was now seen some mile or so ahead, at every
roll of the sea revealing his high sparkling hump, and regularly jetting his
silent spout into the air. To the credulous mariners it seemed the same silent
spout they had so long ago beheld in the moonlit Atlantic and Indian Oceans.
“And
did none of ye see it before?” cried Ahab, hailing the perched men all around
him.
“I
saw him almost that same instant, sir, that Captain Ahab did, and I cried out,”
said Tashtego.
“Not
the same instant; not the same—no, the doubloon is mine, Fate reserved the
doubloon for me. I only; none of ye could have raised the White Whale first.
There she blows!—there she blows!—there she blows! There again!—there again!”
he cried, in long-drawn, lingering, methodic tones, attuned to the gradual
prolongings of the whale's visible jets. “He's going to sound! In stunsails!
Down top-gallant-sails! Stand by three boats. Mr. Starbuck, remember, stay on
board, and keep the ship. Helm there! Luff, luff a point! So; steady, man,
steady! There go flukes! No, no; only black water! All ready the boats there?
Stand by, stand by! Lower me, Mr. Starbuck; lower, lower,—quick, quicker!” and
he slid through the air to the deck.
“He
is heading straight to leeward, sir,” cried Stubb, “right away from us; cannot
have seen the ship yet.”
“Be
dumb, man! Stand by the braces! Hard down the helm!—brace up! Shiver her!—shiver
her!—So; well that! Boats, boats!”
Soon
all the boats but Starbuck's were dropped; all the boat-sails set—all the
paddles plying; with rippling swiftness, shooting to leeward; and Ahab heading
the onset. A pale, death-glimmer lit up Fedallah's sunken eyes; a hideous
motion gnawed his mouth.
Like
noiseless nautilus shells, their light prows sped through the sea; but only
slowly they neared the foe. As they neared him, the ocean grew still more
smooth; seemed drawing a carpet over its waves; seemed a noon-meadow, so
serenely it spread. At length the breathless hunter came so nigh his seemingly
unsuspecting prey, that his entire dazzling hump was distinctly visible,
sliding along the sea as if an isolated thing, and continually set in a
revolving ring of finest, fleecy, greenish foam. He saw the vast, involved
wrinkles of the slightly projecting head beyond. Before it, far out on the soft
Turkish-rugged waters, went the glistening white shadow from his broad, milky
forehead, a musical rippling playfully accompanying the shade; and behind, the
blue waters interchangeably flowed over into the moving valley of his steady
wake; and on either hand bright bubbles arose and danced by his side. But these
were broken again by the light toes of hundreds of gay fowl softly feathering
the sea, alternate with their fitful flight; and like to some flag-staff rising
from the painted hull of an argosy, the tall but shattered pole of a recent
lance projected from the white whale's back; and at intervals one of the cloud
of soft-toed fowls hovering, and to and fro skimming like a canopy over the
fish, silently perched and rocked on this pole, the long tail feathers
streaming like pennons.
A
gentle joyousness—a mighty mildness of repose in swiftness, invested the
gliding whale. Not the white bull Jupiter swimming away with ravished Europa
clinging to his graceful horns; his lovely, leering eyes sideways intent upon
the maid; with smooth bewitching fleetness, rippling straight for the nuptial
bower in Crete; not Jove, not that great majesty Supreme! did surpass the
glorified White Whale as he so divinely swam.
On
each soft side—coincident with the parted swell, that but once leaving him,
then flowed so wide away—on each bright side, the whale shed off enticings. No
wonder there had been some among the hunters who namelessly transported and
allured by all this serenity, had ventured to assail it; but had fatally found
that quietude but the vesture of tornadoes. Yet calm, enticing calm, oh, whale!
thou glidest on, to all who for the first time eye thee, no matter how many in
that same way thou may'st have bejuggled and destroyed before.
And
thus, through the serene tranquillities of the tropical sea, among waves whose
hand-clappings were suspended by exceeding rapture, Moby Dick moved on, still
withholding from sight the full terrors of his submerged trunk, entirely hiding
the wrenched hideousness of his jaw. But soon the fore part of him slowly rose
from the water; for an instant his whole marbleized body formed a high arch,
like Virginia's Natural Bridge, and warningly waving his bannered flukes in the
air, the grand god revealed himself, sounded, and went out of sight. Hoveringly
halting, and dipping on the wing, the white sea-fowls longingly lingered over
the agitated pool that he left.
With
oars apeak, and paddles down, the sheets of their sails adrift, the three boats
now stilly floated, awaiting Moby Dick's reappearance.
“An
hour,” said Ahab, standing rooted in his boat's stern; and he gazed beyond the
whale's place, towards the dim blue spaces and wide wooing vacancies to
leeward. It was only an instant; for again his eyes seemed whirling round in
his head as he swept the watery circle. The breeze now freshened; the sea began
to swell.
“The
birds!—the birds!” cried Tashtego.
In
long Indian file, as when herons take wing, the white birds were now all flying
towards Ahab's boat; and when within a few yards began fluttering over the
water there, wheeling round and round, with joyous, expectant cries. Their
vision was keener than man's; Ahab could discover no sign in the sea. But
suddenly as he peered down and down into its depths, he profoundly saw a white
living spot no bigger than a white weasel, with wonderful celerity uprising,
and magnifying as it rose, till it turned, and then there were plainly revealed
two long crooked rows of white, glistening teeth, floating up from the undiscoverable
bottom. It was Moby Dick's open mouth and scrolled jaw; his vast, shadowed bulk
still half blending with the blue of the sea. The glittering mouth yawned
beneath the boat like an open-doored marble tomb; and giving one sidelong sweep
with his steering oar, Ahab whirled the craft aside from this tremendous
apparition. Then, calling upon Fedallah to change places with him, went forward
to the bows, and seizing Perth's harpoon, commanded his crew to grasp their
oars and stand by to stern.
Now,
by reason of this timely spinning round the boat upon its axis, its bow, by
anticipation, was made to face the whale's head while yet under water. But as
if perceiving this stratagem, Moby Dick, with that malicious intelligence
ascribed to him, sidelingly transplanted himself, as it were, in an instant,
shooting his pleated head lengthwise beneath the boat.
Through
and through; through every plank and each rib, it thrilled for an instant, the
whale obliquely lying on his back, in the manner of a biting shark, slowly and
feelingly taking its bows full within his mouth, so that the long, narrow,
scrolled lower jaw curled high up into the open air, and one of the teeth
caught in a row-lock. The bluish pearl-white of the inside of the jaw was
within six inches of Ahab's head, and reached higher than that. In this
attitude the White Whale now shook the slight cedar as a mildly cruel cat her
mouse. With unastonished eyes Fedallah gazed, and crossed his arms; but the
tiger-yellow crew were tumbling over each other's heads to gain the uttermost
stern.
And
now, while both elastic gunwales were springing in and out, as the whale
dallied with the doomed craft in this devilish way; and from his body being
submerged beneath the boat, he could not be darted at from the bows, for the
bows were almost inside of him, as it were; and while the other boats
involuntarily paused, as before a quick crisis impossible to withstand, then it
was that monomaniac Ahab, furious with this tantalizing vicinity of his foe,
which placed him all alive and helpless in the very jaws he hated; frenzied
with all this, he seized the long bone with his naked hands, and wildly strove
to wrench it from its gripe. As now he thus vainly strove, the jaw slipped from
him; the frail gunwales bent in, collapsed, and snapped, as both jaws, like an
enormous shears, sliding further aft, bit the craft completely in twain, and
locked themselves fast again in the sea, midway between the two floating
wrecks. These floated aside, the broken ends drooping, the crew at the
stern-wreck clinging to the gunwales, and striving to hold fast to the oars to
lash them across.
At
that preluding moment, ere the boat was yet snapped, Ahab, the first to
perceive the whale's intent, by the crafty upraising of his head, a movement
that loosed his hold for the time; at that moment his hand had made one final
effort to push the boat out of the bite. But only slipping further into the
whale's mouth, and tilting over sideways as it slipped, the boat had shaken off
his hold on the jaw; spilled him out of it, as he leaned to the push; and so he
fell flat-faced upon the sea.
Ripplingly
withdrawing from his prey, Moby Dick now lay at a little distance, vertically
thrusting his oblong white head up and down in the billows; and at the same
time slowly revolving his whole spindled body; so that when his vast wrinkled
forehead rose—some twenty or more feet out of the water—the now rising swells,
with all their confluent waves, dazzlingly broke against it; vindictively
tossing their shivered spray still higher into the air.* So, in a gale, the but
half baffled Channel billows only recoil from the base of the Eddystone,
triumphantly to overleap its summit with their scud.
*This
motion is peculiar to the sperm whale. It receives its designation
(pitchpoling) from its being likened to that preliminary up-and-down poise of
the whale-lance, in the exercise called pitchpoling, previously described. By
this motion the whale must best and most comprehensively view whatever objects
may be encircling him.
But
soon resuming his horizontal attitude, Moby Dick swam swiftly round and round
the wrecked crew; sideways churning the water in his vengeful wake, as if
lashing himself up to still another and more deadly assault. The sight of the
splintered boat seemed to madden him, as the blood of grapes and mulberries
cast before Antiochus's elephants in the book of Maccabees. Meanwhile Ahab half
smothered in the foam of the whale's insolent tail, and too much of a cripple
to swim,—though he could still keep afloat, even in the heart of such a
whirlpool as that; helpless Ahab's head was seen, like a tossed bubble which
the least chance shock might burst. From the boat's fragmentary stern, Fedallah
incuriously and mildly eyed him; the clinging crew, at the other drifting end,
could not succor him; more than enough was it for them to look to themselves.
For so revolvingly appalling was the White Whale's aspect, and so planetarily
swift the ever-contracting circles he made, that he seemed horizontally
swooping upon them. And though the other boats, unharmed, still hovered hard
by; still they dared not pull into the eddy to strike, lest that should be the
signal for the instant destruction of the jeopardized castaways, Ahab and all;
nor in that case could they themselves hope to escape. With straining eyes,
then, they remained on the outer edge of the direful zone, whose centre had now
become the old man's head.
Meantime,
from the beginning all this had been descried from the ship's mast heads; and
squaring her yards, she had borne down upon the scene; and was now so nigh,
that Ahab in the water hailed her;—“Sail on the”—but that moment a breaking sea
dashed on him from Moby Dick, and whelmed him for the time. But struggling out
of it again, and chancing to rise on a towering crest, he shouted,—“Sail on the
whale!—Drive him off!”
The
Pequod's prows were pointed; and breaking up the charmed circle, she
effectually parted the white whale from his victim. As he sullenly swam off,
the boats flew to the rescue.
Dragged
into Stubb's boat with blood-shot, blinded eyes, the white brine caking in his
wrinkles; the long tension of Ahab's bodily strength did crack, and helplessly
he yielded to his body's doom: for a time, lying all crushed in the bottom of
Stubb's boat, like one trodden under foot of herds of elephants. Far inland,
nameless wails came from him, as desolate sounds from out ravines.
But
this intensity of his physical prostration did but so much the more abbreviate
it. In an instant's compass, great hearts sometimes condense to one deep pang,
the sum total of those shallow pains kindly diffused through feebler men's
whole lives. And so, such hearts, though summary in each one suffering; still,
if the gods decree it, in their life-time aggregate a whole age of woe, wholly
made up of instantaneous intensities; for even in their pointless centres,
those noble natures contain the entire circumferences of inferior souls.
“The
harpoon,” said Ahab, half way rising, and draggingly leaning on one bended
arm—“is it safe?”
“Aye,
sir, for it was not darted; this is it,” said Stubb, showing it.
“Lay
it before me;—any missing men?”
“One,
two, three, four, five;—there were five oars, sir, and here are five men.”
“That's
good.—Help me, man; I wish to stand. So, so, I see him! there! there! going to
leeward still; what a leaping spout!—Hands off from me! The eternal sap runs up
in Ahab's bones again! Set the sail; out oars; the helm!”
It
is often the case that when a boat is stove, its crew, being picked up by another
boat, help to work that second boat; and the chase is thus continued with what
is called double-banked oars. It was thus now. But the added power of the boat
did not equal the added power of the whale, for he seemed to have treble-banked
his every fin; swimming with a velocity which plainly showed, that if now,
under these circumstances, pushed on, the chase would prove an indefinitely
prolonged, if not a hopeless one; nor could any crew endure for so long a
period, such an unintermitted, intense straining at the oar; a thing barely
tolerable only in some one brief vicissitude. The ship itself, then, as it
sometimes happens, offered the most promising intermediate means of overtaking
the chase. Accordingly, the boats now made for her, and were soon swayed up to
their cranes—the two parts of the wrecked boat having been previously secured
by her—and then hoisting everything to her side, and stacking her canvas high
up, and sideways outstretching it with stun-sails, like the double-jointed
wings of an albatross; the Pequod bore down in the leeward wake of Moby-Dick.
At the well known, methodic intervals, the whale's glittering spout was
regularly announced from the manned mast-heads; and when he would be reported
as just gone down, Ahab would take the time, and then pacing the deck,
binnacle-watch in hand, so soon as the last second of the allotted hour
expired, his voice was heard.—“Whose is the doubloon now? D'ye see him?” and if
the reply was, No, sir! straightway he commanded them to lift him to his perch.
In this way the day wore on; Ahab, now aloft and motionless; anon, unrestingly
pacing the planks.
As
he was thus walking, uttering no sound, except to hail the men aloft, or to bid
them hoist a sail still higher, or to spread one to a still greater breadth—thus
to and fro pacing, beneath his slouched hat, at every turn he passed his own
wrecked boat, which had been dropped upon the quarter-deck, and lay there
reversed; broken bow to shattered stern. At last he paused before it; and as in
an already over-clouded sky fresh troops of clouds will sometimes sail across,
so over the old man's face there now stole some such added gloom as this.
Stubb
saw him pause; and perhaps intending, not vainly, though, to evince his own
unabated fortitude, and thus keep up a valiant place in his Captain's mind, he
advanced, and eyeing the wreck exclaimed—“The thistle the ass refused; it
pricked his mouth too keenly, sir; ha! ha!”
“What
soulless thing is this that laughs before a wreck? Man, man! did I not know
thee brave as fearless fire (and as mechanical) I could swear thou wert a
poltroon. Groan nor laugh should be heard before a wreck.”
“Aye,
sir,” said Starbuck drawing near, “'tis a solemn sight; an omen, and an ill
one.”
“Omen?
omen?—the dictionary! If the gods think to speak outright to man, they will
honorably speak outright; not shake their heads, and give an old wives'
darkling hint.—Begone! Ye two are the opposite poles of one thing; Starbuck is
Stubb reversed, and Stubb is Starbuck; and ye two are all mankind; and Ahab
stands alone among the millions of the peopled earth, nor gods nor men his
neighbors! Cold, cold—I shiver!—How now? Aloft there! D'ye see him? Sing out
for every spout, though he spout ten times a second!”
The
day was nearly done; only the hem of his golden robe was rustling. Soon, it was
almost dark, but the look-out men still remained unset.
“Can't
see the spout now, sir;—too dark”—cried a voice from the air.
“How
heading when last seen?”
“As
before, sir,—straight to leeward.”
“Good!
he will travel slower now 'tis night. Down royals and top-gallant stun-sails,
Mr. Starbuck. We must not run over him before morning; he's making a passage
now, and may heave-to a while. Helm there! keep her full before the
wind!—Aloft! come down!—Mr. Stubb, send a fresh hand to the fore-mast head, and
see it manned till morning.”—Then advancing towards the doubloon in the
main-mast—“Men, this gold is mine, for I earned it; but I shall let it abide
here till the White Whale is dead; and then, whosoever of ye first raises him,
upon the day he shall be killed, this gold is that man's; and if on that day I
shall again raise him, then, ten times its sum shall be divided among all of
ye! Away now!—the deck is thine, sir!”
And
so saying, he placed himself half way within the scuttle, and slouching his
hat, stood there till dawn, except when at intervals rousing himself to see how
the night wore on.
CHAPTER
134. The Chase—Second Day.
At
day-break, the three mast-heads were punctually manned afresh.
“D'ye
see him?” cried Ahab after allowing a little space for the light to spread.
“See
nothing, sir.”
“Turn
up all hands and make sail! he travels faster than I thought for;—the
top-gallant sails!—aye, they should have been kept on her all night. But no
matter—'tis but resting for the rush.”
Here
be it said, that this pertinacious pursuit of one particular whale, continued
through day into night, and through night into day, is a thing by no means
unprecedented in the South sea fishery. For such is the wonderful skill,
prescience of experience, and invincible confidence acquired by some great
natural geniuses among the Nantucket commanders; that from the simple
observation of a whale when last descried, they will, under certain given
circumstances, pretty accurately foretell both the direction in which he will
continue to swim for a time, while out of sight, as well as his probable rate
of progression during that period. And, in these cases, somewhat as a pilot,
when about losing sight of a coast, whose general trending he well knows, and
which he desires shortly to return to again, but at some further point; like as
this pilot stands by his compass, and takes the precise bearing of the cape at
present visible, in order the more certainly to hit aright the remote, unseen
headland, eventually to be visited: so does the fisherman, at his compass, with
the whale; for after being chased, and diligently marked, through several hours
of daylight, then, when night obscures the fish, the creature's future wake
through the darkness is almost as established to the sagacious mind of the
hunter, as the pilot's coast is to him. So that to this hunter's wondrous
skill, the proverbial evanescence of a thing writ in water, a wake, is to all
desired purposes well nigh as reliable as the steadfast land. And as the mighty
iron Leviathan of the modern railway is so familiarly known in its every pace,
that, with watches in their hands, men time his rate as doctors that of a
baby's pulse; and lightly say of it, the up train or the down train will reach
such or such a spot, at such or such an hour; even so, almost, there are
occasions when these Nantucketers time that other Leviathan of the deep,
according to the observed humor of his speed; and say to themselves, so many hours
hence this whale will have gone two hundred miles, will have about reached this
or that degree of latitude or longitude. But to render this acuteness at all
successful in the end, the wind and the sea must be the whaleman's allies; for
of what present avail to the becalmed or windbound mariner is the skill that
assures him he is exactly ninety-three leagues and a quarter from his port?
Inferable from these statements, are many collateral subtile matters touching
the chase of whales.
The
ship tore on; leaving such a furrow in the sea as when a cannon-ball, missent,
becomes a plough-share and turns up the level field.
“By
salt and hemp!” cried Stubb, “but this swift motion of the deck creeps up one's
legs and tingles at the heart. This ship and I are two brave fellows!—Ha, ha!
Some one take me up, and launch me, spine-wise, on the sea,—for by live-oaks!
my spine's a keel. Ha, ha! we go the gait that leaves no dust behind!”
“There
she blows—she blows!—she blows!—right ahead!” was now the mast-head cry.
“Aye,
aye!” cried Stubb, “I knew it—ye can't escape—blow on and split your spout, O
whale! the mad fiend himself is after ye! blow your trump—blister your
lungs!—Ahab will dam off your blood, as a miller shuts his watergate upon the
stream!”
And
Stubb did but speak out for well nigh all that crew. The frenzies of the chase
had by this time worked them bubblingly up, like old wine worked anew. Whatever
pale fears and forebodings some of them might have felt before; these were not
only now kept out of sight through the growing awe of Ahab, but they were
broken up, and on all sides routed, as timid prairie hares that scatter before
the bounding bison. The hand of Fate had snatched all their souls; and by the
stirring perils of the previous day; the rack of the past night's suspense; the
fixed, unfearing, blind, reckless way in which their wild craft went plunging
towards its flying mark; by all these things, their hearts were bowled along.
The wind that made great bellies of their sails, and rushed the vessel on by
arms invisible as irresistible; this seemed the symbol of that unseen agency
which so enslaved them to the race.
They
were one man, not thirty. For as the one ship that held them all; though it was
put together of all contrasting things—oak, and maple, and pine wood; iron, and
pitch, and hemp—yet all these ran into each other in the one concrete hull,
which shot on its way, both balanced and directed by the long central keel;
even so, all the individualities of the crew, this man's valor, that man's
fear; guilt and guiltiness, all varieties were welded into oneness, and were
all directed to that fatal goal which Ahab their one lord and keel did point
to.
The
rigging lived. The mast-heads, like the tops of tall palms, were outspreadingly
tufted with arms and legs. Clinging to a spar with one hand, some reached forth
the other with impatient wavings; others, shading their eyes from the vivid
sunlight, sat far out on the rocking yards; all the spars in full bearing of
mortals, ready and ripe for their fate. Ah! how they still strove through that
infinite blueness to seek out the thing that might destroy them!
“Why
sing ye not out for him, if ye see him?” cried Ahab, when, after the lapse of
some minutes since the first cry, no more had been heard. “Sway me up, men; ye
have been deceived; not Moby Dick casts one odd jet that way, and then
disappears.”
It
was even so; in their headlong eagerness, the men had mistaken some other thing
for the whale-spout, as the event itself soon proved; for hardly had Ahab
reached his perch; hardly was the rope belayed to its pin on deck, when he
struck the key-note to an orchestra, that made the air vibrate as with the
combined discharges of rifles. The triumphant halloo of thirty buckskin lungs
was heard, as—much nearer to the ship than the place of the imaginary jet, less
than a mile ahead—Moby Dick bodily burst into view! For not by any calm and
indolent spoutings; not by the peaceable gush of that mystic fountain in his
head, did the White Whale now reveal his vicinity; but by the far more wondrous
phenomenon of breaching. Rising with his utmost velocity from the furthest
depths, the Sperm Whale thus booms his entire bulk into the pure element of
air, and piling up a mountain of dazzling foam, shows his place to the distance
of seven miles and more. In those moments, the torn, enraged waves he shakes
off, seem his mane; in some cases, this breaching is his act of defiance.
“There
she breaches! there she breaches!” was the cry, as in his immeasurable
bravadoes the White Whale tossed himself salmon-like to Heaven. So suddenly
seen in the blue plain of the sea, and relieved against the still bluer margin
of the sky, the spray that he raised, for the moment, intolerably glittered and
glared like a glacier; and stood there gradually fading and fading away from
its first sparkling intensity, to the dim mistiness of an advancing shower in a
vale.
“Aye,
breach your last to the sun, Moby Dick!” cried Ahab, “thy hour and thy harpoon
are at hand!—Down! down all of ye, but one man at the fore. The boats!—stand
by!”
Unmindful
of the tedious rope-ladders of the shrouds, the men, like shooting stars, slid
to the deck, by the isolated backstays and halyards; while Ahab, less
dartingly, but still rapidly was dropped from his perch.
“Lower
away,” he cried, so soon as he had reached his boat—a spare one, rigged the
afternoon previous. “Mr. Starbuck, the ship is thine—keep away from the boats,
but keep near them. Lower, all!”
As
if to strike a quick terror into them, by this time being the first assailant
himself, Moby Dick had turned, and was now coming for the three crews. Ahab's
boat was central; and cheering his men, he told them he would take the whale
head-and-head,—that is, pull straight up to his forehead,—a not uncommon thing;
for when within a certain limit, such a course excludes the coming onset from
the whale's sidelong vision. But ere that close limit was gained, and while yet
all three boats were plain as the ship's three masts to his eye; the White
Whale churning himself into furious speed, almost in an instant as it were,
rushing among the boats with open jaws, and a lashing tail, offered appalling
battle on every side; and heedless of the irons darted at him from every boat,
seemed only intent on annihilating each separate plank of which those boats
were made. But skilfully manœuvred, incessantly wheeling like trained chargers
in the field; the boats for a while eluded him; though, at times, but by a
plank's breadth; while all the time, Ahab's unearthly slogan tore every other
cry but his to shreds.
But
at last in his untraceable evolutions, the White Whale so crossed and recrossed,
and in a thousand ways entangled the slack of the three lines now fast to him,
that they foreshortened, and, of themselves, warped the devoted boats towards
the planted irons in him; though now for a moment the whale drew aside a
little, as if to rally for a more tremendous charge. Seizing that opportunity,
Ahab first paid out more line: and then was rapidly hauling and jerking in upon
it again—hoping that way to disencumber it of some snarls—when lo!—a sight more
savage than the embattled teeth of sharks!
Caught
and twisted—corkscrewed in the mazes of the line, loose harpoons and lances,
with all their bristling barbs and points, came flashing and dripping up to the
chocks in the bows of Ahab's boat. Only one thing could be done. Seizing the
boat-knife, he critically reached within—through—and then, without—the rays of
steel; dragged in the line beyond, passed it, inboard, to the bowsman, and
then, twice sundering the rope near the chocks—dropped the intercepted fagot of
steel into the sea; and was all fast again. That instant, the White Whale made
a sudden rush among the remaining tangles of the other lines; by so doing,
irresistibly dragged the more involved boats of Stubb and Flask towards his
flukes; dashed them together like two rolling husks on a surf-beaten beach, and
then, diving down into the sea, disappeared in a boiling maelstrom, in which,
for a space, the odorous cedar chips of the wrecks danced round and round, like
the grated nutmeg in a swiftly stirred bowl of punch.
While
the two crews were yet circling in the waters, reaching out after the revolving
line-tubs, oars, and other floating furniture, while aslope little Flask bobbed
up and down like an empty vial, twitching his legs upwards to escape the
dreaded jaws of sharks; and Stubb was lustily singing out for some one to ladle
him up; and while the old man's line—now parting—admitted of his pulling into
the creamy pool to rescue whom he could;—in that wild simultaneousness of a
thousand concreted perils,—Ahab's yet unstricken boat seemed drawn up towards
Heaven by invisible wires,—as, arrow-like, shooting perpendicularly from the
sea, the White Whale dashed his broad forehead against its bottom, and sent it,
turning over and over, into the air; till it fell again—gunwale downwards—and
Ahab and his men struggled out from under it, like seals from a sea-side cave.
The
first uprising momentum of the whale—modifying its direction as he struck the
surface—involuntarily launched him along it, to a little distance from the
centre of the destruction he had made; and with his back to it, he now lay for
a moment slowly feeling with his flukes from side to side; and whenever a stray
oar, bit of plank, the least chip or crumb of the boats touched his skin, his
tail swiftly drew back, and came sideways smiting the sea. But soon, as if
satisfied that his work for that time was done, he pushed his pleated forehead
through the ocean, and trailing after him the intertangled lines, continued his
leeward way at a traveller's methodic pace.
As
before, the attentive ship having descried the whole fight, again came bearing
down to the rescue, and dropping a boat, picked up the floating mariners, tubs,
oars, and whatever else could be caught at, and safely landed them on her
decks. Some sprained shoulders, wrists, and ankles; livid contusions; wrenched
harpoons and lances; inextricable intricacies of rope; shattered oars and
planks; all these were there; but no fatal or even serious ill seemed to have
befallen any one. As with Fedallah the day before, so Ahab was now found grimly
clinging to his boat's broken half, which afforded a comparatively easy float;
nor did it so exhaust him as the previous day's mishap.
But
when he was helped to the deck, all eyes were fastened upon him; as instead of
standing by himself he still half-hung upon the shoulder of Starbuck, who had
thus far been the foremost to assist him. His ivory leg had been snapped off,
leaving but one short sharp splinter.
“Aye,
aye, Starbuck, 'tis sweet to lean sometimes, be the leaner who he will; and
would old Ahab had leaned oftener than he has.”
“The
ferrule has not stood, sir,” said the carpenter, now coming up; “I put good
work into that leg.”
“But
no bones broken, sir, I hope,” said Stubb with true concern.
“Aye!
and all splintered to pieces, Stubb!—d'ye see it.—But even with a broken bone,
old Ahab is untouched; and I account no living bone of mine one jot more me,
than this dead one that's lost. Nor white whale, nor man, nor fiend, can so
much as graze old Ahab in his own proper and inaccessible being. Can any lead
touch yonder floor, any mast scrape yonder roof?—Aloft there! which way?”
“Dead
to leeward, sir.”
“Up
helm, then; pile on the sail again, ship keepers! down the rest of the spare
boats and rig them—Mr. Starbuck away, and muster the boat's crews.”
“Let
me first help thee towards the bulwarks, sir.”
“Oh,
oh, oh! how this splinter gores me now! Accursed fate! that the unconquerable
captain in the soul should have such a craven mate!”
“Sir?”
“My
body, man, not thee. Give me something for a cane—there, that shivered lance
will do. Muster the men. Surely I have not seen him yet. By heaven it cannot
be!—missing?—quick! call them all.”
The
old man's hinted thought was true. Upon mustering the company, the Parsee was
not there.
“The
Parsee!” cried Stubb—“he must have been caught in——”
“The
black vomit wrench thee!—run all of ye above, alow, cabin, forecastle—find
him—not gone—not gone!”
But
quickly they returned to him with the tidings that the Parsee was nowhere to be
found.
“Aye,
sir,” said Stubb—“caught among the tangles of your line—I thought I saw him
dragging under.”
“My
line! my line? Gone?—gone? What means that little word?—What death-knell rings
in it, that old Ahab shakes as if he were the belfry. The harpoon, too!—toss
over the litter there,—d'ye see it?—the forged iron, men, the white whale's—no,
no, no,—blistered fool! this hand did dart it!—'tis in the fish!—Aloft there!
Keep him nailed—Quick!—all hands to the rigging of the boats—collect the
oars—harpooneers! the irons, the irons!—hoist the royals higher—a pull on all
the sheets!—helm there! steady, steady for your life! I'll ten times girdle the
unmeasured globe; yea and dive straight through it, but I'll slay him yet!”
“Great
God! but for one single instant show thyself,” cried Starbuck; “never, never
wilt thou capture him, old man—In Jesus' name no more of this, that's worse
than devil's madness. Two days chased; twice stove to splinters; thy very leg
once more snatched from under thee; thy evil shadow gone—all good angels
mobbing thee with warnings:—what more wouldst thou have?—Shall we keep chasing
this murderous fish till he swamps the last man? Shall we be dragged by him to
the bottom of the sea? Shall we be towed by him to the infernal world? Oh,
oh,—Impiety and blasphemy to hunt him more!”
“Starbuck,
of late I've felt strangely moved to thee; ever since that hour we both
saw—thou know'st what, in one another's eyes. But in this matter of the whale,
be the front of thy face to me as the palm of this hand—a lipless, unfeatured
blank. Ahab is for ever Ahab, man. This whole act's immutably decreed. 'Twas
rehearsed by thee and me a billion years before this ocean rolled. Fool! I am
the Fates' lieutenant; I act under orders. Look thou, underling! that thou
obeyest mine.—Stand round me, men. Ye see an old man cut down to the stump;
leaning on a shivered lance; propped up on a lonely foot. 'Tis Ahab—his body's
part; but Ahab's soul's a centipede, that moves upon a hundred legs. I feel
strained, half stranded, as ropes that tow dismasted frigates in a gale; and I
may look so. But ere I break, ye'll hear me crack; and till ye hear that, know
that Ahab's hawser tows his purpose yet. Believe ye, men, in the things called
omens? Then laugh aloud, and cry encore! For ere they drown, drowning things
will twice rise to the surface; then rise again, to sink for evermore. So with
Moby Dick—two days he's floated—tomorrow will be the third. Aye, men, he'll
rise once more,—but only to spout his last! D'ye feel brave men, brave?”
“As
fearless fire,” cried Stubb.
“And
as mechanical,” muttered Ahab. Then as the men went forward, he muttered on:
“The things called omens! And yesterday I talked the same to Starbuck there,
concerning my broken boat. Oh! how valiantly I seek to drive out of others'
hearts what's clinched so fast in mine!—The Parsee—the Parsee!—gone, gone? and
he was to go before:—but still was to be seen again ere I could perish—How's
that?—There's a riddle now might baffle all the lawyers backed by the ghosts of
the whole line of judges:—like a hawk's beak it pecks my brain. I'll, I'll
solve it, though!”
When
dusk descended, the whale was still in sight to leeward.
So
once more the sail was shortened, and everything passed nearly as on the
previous night; only, the sound of hammers, and the hum of the grindstone was
heard till nearly daylight, as the men toiled by lanterns in the complete and
careful rigging of the spare boats and sharpening their fresh weapons for the
morrow. Meantime, of the broken keel of Ahab's wrecked craft the carpenter made
him another leg; while still as on the night before, slouched Ahab stood fixed
within his scuttle; his hid, heliotrope glance anticipatingly gone backward on
its dial; sat due eastward for the earliest sun.
CHAPTER
135. The Chase.—Third Day.
The
morning of the third day dawned fair and fresh, and once more the solitary
night-man at the fore-mast-head was relieved by crowds of the daylight
look-outs, who dotted every mast and almost every spar.
“D'ye
see him?” cried Ahab; but the whale was not yet in sight.
“In
his infallible wake, though; but follow that wake, that's all. Helm there;
steady, as thou goest, and hast been going. What a lovely day again! were it a
new-made world, and made for a summer-house to the angels, and this morning the
first of its throwing open to them, a fairer day could not dawn upon that
world. Here's food for thought, had Ahab time to think; but Ahab never thinks;
he only feels, feels, feels; that's tingling enough for mortal man! to think's
audacity. God only has that right and privilege. Thinking is, or ought to be, a
coolness and a calmness; and our poor hearts throb, and our poor brains beat
too much for that. And yet, I've sometimes thought my brain was very
calm—frozen calm, this old skull cracks so, like a glass in which the contents
turned to ice, and shiver it. And still this hair is growing now; this moment
growing, and heat must breed it; but no, it's like that sort of common grass
that will grow anywhere, between the earthy clefts of Greenland ice or in Vesuvius
lava. How the wild winds blow it; they whip it about me as the torn shreds of
split sails lash the tossed ship they cling to. A vile wind that has no doubt
blown ere this through prison corridors and cells, and wards of hospitals, and
ventilated them, and now comes blowing hither as innocent as fleeces. Out upon
it!—it's tainted. Were I the wind, I'd blow no more on such a wicked, miserable
world. I'd crawl somewhere to a cave, and slink there. And yet, 'tis a noble
and heroic thing, the wind! who ever conquered it? In every fight it has the
last and bitterest blow. Run tilting at it, and you but run through it. Ha! a
coward wind that strikes stark naked men, but will not stand to receive a
single blow. Even Ahab is a braver thing—a nobler thing than that. Would now
the wind but had a body; but all the things that most exasperate and outrage
mortal man, all these things are bodiless, but only bodiless as objects, not as
agents. There's a most special, a most cunning, oh, a most malicious
difference! And yet, I say again, and swear it now, that there's something all
glorious and gracious in the wind. These warm Trade Winds, at least, that in
the clear heavens blow straight on, in strong and steadfast, vigorous mildness;
and veer not from their mark, however the baser currents of the sea may turn
and tack, and mightiest Mississippies of the land swift and swerve about,
uncertain where to go at last. And by the eternal Poles! these same Trades that
so directly blow my good ship on; these Trades, or something like
them—something so unchangeable, and full as strong, blow my keeled soul along!
To it! Aloft there! What d'ye see?”
“Nothing,
sir.”
“Nothing!
and noon at hand! The doubloon goes a-begging! See the sun! Aye, aye, it must
be so. I've oversailed him. How, got the start? Aye, he's chasing me now; not
I, him—that's bad; I might have known it, too. Fool! the lines—the harpoons
he's towing. Aye, aye, I have run him by last night. About! about! Come down,
all of ye, but the regular look outs! Man the braces!”
Steering
as she had done, the wind had been somewhat on the Pequod's quarter, so that
now being pointed in the reverse direction, the braced ship sailed hard upon
the breeze as she rechurned the cream in her own white wake.
“Against
the wind he now steers for the open jaw,” murmured Starbuck to himself, as he
coiled the new-hauled main-brace upon the rail. “God keep us, but already my
bones feel damp within me, and from the inside wet my flesh. I misdoubt me that
I disobey my God in obeying him!”
“Stand
by to sway me up!” cried Ahab, advancing to the hempen basket. “We should meet
him soon.”
“Aye,
aye, sir,” and straightway Starbuck did Ahab's bidding, and once more Ahab
swung on high.
A
whole hour now passed; gold-beaten out to ages. Time itself now held long
breaths with keen suspense. But at last, some three points off the weather bow,
Ahab descried the spout again, and instantly from the three mast-heads three
shrieks went up as if the tongues of fire had voiced it.
“Forehead
to forehead I meet thee, this third time, Moby Dick! On deck there!—brace
sharper up; crowd her into the wind's eye. He's too far off to lower yet, Mr.
Starbuck. The sails shake! Stand over that helmsman with a top-maul! So, so; he
travels fast, and I must down. But let me have one more good round look aloft
here at the sea; there's time for that. An old, old sight, and yet somehow so
young; aye, and not changed a wink since I first saw it, a boy, from the
sand-hills of Nantucket! The same!—the same!—the same to Noah as to me. There's
a soft shower to leeward. Such lovely leewardings! They must lead somewhere—to
something else than common land, more palmy than the palms. Leeward! the white
whale goes that way; look to windward, then; the better if the bitterer quarter.
But good bye, good bye, old mast-head! What's this?—green? aye, tiny mosses in
these warped cracks. No such green weather stains on Ahab's head! There's the
difference now between man's old age and matter's. But aye, old mast, we both
grow old together; sound in our hulls, though, are we not, my ship? Aye, minus
a leg, that's all. By heaven this dead wood has the better of my live flesh
every way. I can't compare with it; and I've known some ships made of dead
trees outlast the lives of men made of the most vital stuff of vital fathers.
What's that he said? he should still go before me, my pilot; and yet to be seen
again? But where? Will I have eyes at the bottom of the sea, supposing I
descend those endless stairs? and all night I've been sailing from him, wherever
he did sink to. Aye, aye, like many more thou told'st direful truth as touching
thyself, O Parsee; but, Ahab, there thy shot fell short. Good-bye,
mast-head—keep a good eye upon the whale, the while I'm gone. We'll talk
to-morrow, nay, to-night, when the white whale lies down there, tied by head
and tail.”
He
gave the word; and still gazing round him, was steadily lowered through the
cloven blue air to the deck.
In
due time the boats were lowered; but as standing in his shallop's stern, Ahab
just hovered upon the point of the descent, he waved to the mate,—who held one
of the tackle-ropes on deck—and bade him pause.
“Starbuck!”
“Sir?”
“For
the third time my soul's ship starts upon this voyage, Starbuck.”
“Aye,
sir, thou wilt have it so.”
“Some
ships sail from their ports, and ever afterwards are missing, Starbuck!”
“Truth,
sir: saddest truth.”
“Some
men die at ebb tide; some at low water; some at the full of the flood;—and I
feel now like a billow that's all one crested comb, Starbuck. I am old;—shake
hands with me, man.”
Their
hands met; their eyes fastened; Starbuck's tears the glue.
“Oh,
my captain, my captain!—noble heart—go not—go not!—see, it's a brave man that
weeps; how great the agony of the persuasion then!”
“Lower
away!”—cried Ahab, tossing the mate's arm from him. “Stand by the crew!”
In
an instant the boat was pulling round close under the stern.
“The
sharks! the sharks!” cried a voice from the low cabin-window there; “O master,
my master, come back!”
But
Ahab heard nothing; for his own voice was high-lifted then; and the boat leaped
on.
Yet
the voice spake true; for scarce had he pushed from the ship, when numbers of
sharks, seemingly rising from out the dark waters beneath the hull, maliciously
snapped at the blades of the oars, every time they dipped in the water; and in
this way accompanied the boat with their bites. It is a thing not uncommonly
happening to the whale-boats in those swarming seas; the sharks at times
apparently following them in the same prescient way that vultures hover over
the banners of marching regiments in the east. But these were the first sharks
that had been observed by the Pequod since the White Whale had been first
descried; and whether it was that Ahab's crew were all such tiger-yellow
barbarians, and therefore their flesh more musky to the senses of the sharks—a
matter sometimes well known to affect them,—however it was, they seemed to
follow that one boat without molesting the others.
“Heart
of wrought steel!” murmured Starbuck gazing over the side, and following with
his eyes the receding boat—“canst thou yet ring boldly to that sight?—lowering
thy keel among ravening sharks, and followed by them, open-mouthed to the
chase; and this the critical third day?—For when three days flow together in
one continuous intense pursuit; be sure the first is the morning, the second
the noon, and the third the evening and the end of that thing—be that end what
it may. Oh! my God! what is this that shoots through me, and leaves me so
deadly calm, yet expectant,—fixed at the top of a shudder! Future things swim
before me, as in empty outlines and skeletons; all the past is somehow grown
dim. Mary, girl! thou fadest in pale glories behind me; boy! I seem to see but
thy eyes grown wondrous blue. Strangest problems of life seem clearing; but
clouds sweep between—Is my journey's end coming? My legs feel faint; like his
who has footed it all day. Feel thy heart,—beats it yet? Stir thyself,
Starbuck!—stave it off—move, move! speak aloud!—Mast-head there! See ye my
boy's hand on the hill?—Crazed;—aloft there!—keep thy keenest eye upon the
boats:—mark well the whale!—Ho! again!—drive off that hawk! see! he pecks—he
tears the vane”—pointing to the red flag flying at the main-truck—“Ha! he soars
away with it!—Where's the old man now? see'st thou that sight, oh
Ahab!—shudder, shudder!”
The
boats had not gone very far, when by a signal from the mast-heads—a downward
pointed arm, Ahab knew that the whale had sounded; but intending to be near him
at the next rising, he held on his way a little sideways from the vessel; the
becharmed crew maintaining the profoundest silence, as the head-beat waves
hammered and hammered against the opposing bow.
“Drive,
drive in your nails, oh ye waves! to their uttermost heads drive them in! ye
but strike a thing without a lid; and no coffin and no hearse can be mine:—and
hemp only can kill me! Ha! ha!”
Suddenly
the waters around them slowly swelled in broad circles; then quickly upheaved,
as if sideways sliding from a submerged berg of ice, swiftly rising to the
surface. A low rumbling sound was heard; a subterraneous hum; and then all held
their breaths; as bedraggled with trailing ropes, and harpoons, and lances, a
vast form shot lengthwise, but obliquely from the sea. Shrouded in a thin
drooping veil of mist, it hovered for a moment in the rainbowed air; and then
fell swamping back into the deep. Crushed thirty feet upwards, the waters
flashed for an instant like heaps of fountains, then brokenly sank in a shower
of flakes, leaving the circling surface creamed like new milk round the marble
trunk of the whale.
“Give
way!” cried Ahab to the oarsmen, and the boats darted forward to the attack;
but maddened by yesterday's fresh irons that corroded in him, Moby Dick seemed
combinedly possessed by all the angels that fell from heaven. The wide tiers of
welded tendons overspreading his broad white forehead, beneath the transparent
skin, looked knitted together; as head on, he came churning his tail among the
boats; and once more flailed them apart; spilling out the irons and lances from
the two mates' boats, and dashing in one side of the upper part of their bows,
but leaving Ahab's almost without a scar.
While
Daggoo and Queequeg were stopping the strained planks; and as the whale
swimming out from them, turned, and showed one entire flank as he shot by them
again; at that moment a quick cry went up. Lashed round and round to the fish's
back; pinioned in the turns upon turns in which, during the past night, the
whale had reeled the involutions of the lines around him, the half torn body of
the Parsee was seen; his sable raiment frayed to shreds; his distended eyes
turned full upon old Ahab.
The
harpoon dropped from his hand.
“Befooled,
befooled!”—drawing in a long lean breath—“Aye, Parsee! I see thee again.—Aye,
and thou goest before; and this, this then is the hearse that thou didst
promise. But I hold thee to the last letter of thy word. Where is the second
hearse? Away, mates, to the ship! those boats are useless now; repair them if
ye can in time, and return to me; if not, Ahab is enough to die—Down, men! the
first thing that but offers to jump from this boat I stand in, that thing I
harpoon. Ye are not other men, but my arms and my legs; and so obey me.—Where's
the whale? gone down again?”
But
he looked too nigh the boat; for as if bent upon escaping with the corpse he
bore, and as if the particular place of the last encounter had been but a stage
in his leeward voyage, Moby Dick was now again steadily swimming forward; and
had almost passed the ship,—which thus far had been sailing in the contrary direction
to him, though for the present her headway had been stopped. He seemed swimming
with his utmost velocity, and now only intent upon pursuing his own straight
path in the sea.
“Oh!
Ahab,” cried Starbuck, “not too late is it, even now, the third day, to desist.
See! Moby Dick seeks thee not. It is thou, thou, that madly seekest him!”
Setting
sail to the rising wind, the lonely boat was swiftly impelled to leeward, by
both oars and canvas. And at last when Ahab was sliding by the vessel, so near
as plainly to distinguish Starbuck's face as he leaned over the rail, he hailed
him to turn the vessel about, and follow him, not too swiftly, at a judicious
interval. Glancing upwards, he saw Tashtego, Queequeg, and Daggoo, eagerly
mounting to the three mast-heads; while the oarsmen were rocking in the two
staved boats which had but just been hoisted to the side, and were busily at
work in repairing them. One after the other, through the port-holes, as he
sped, he also caught flying glimpses of Stubb and Flask, busying themselves on
deck among bundles of new irons and lances. As he saw all this; as he heard the
hammers in the broken boats; far other hammers seemed driving a nail into his
heart. But he rallied. And now marking that the vane or flag was gone from the
main-mast-head, he shouted to Tashtego, who had just gained that perch, to
descend again for another flag, and a hammer and nails, and so nail it to the
mast.
Whether
fagged by the three days' running chase, and the resistance to his swimming in
the knotted hamper he bore; or whether it was some latent deceitfulness and
malice in him: whichever was true, the White Whale's way now began to abate, as
it seemed, from the boat so rapidly nearing him once more; though indeed the
whale's last start had not been so long a one as before. And still as Ahab
glided over the waves the unpitying sharks accompanied him; and so
pertinaciously stuck to the boat; and so continually bit at the plying oars,
that the blades became jagged and crunched, and left small splinters in the
sea, at almost every dip.
“Heed
them not! those teeth but give new rowlocks to your oars. Pull on! 'tis the
better rest, the shark's jaw than the yielding water.”
“But
at every bite, sir, the thin blades grow smaller and smaller!”
“They
will last long enough! pull on!—But who can tell”—he muttered—“whether these
sharks swim to feast on the whale or on Ahab?—But pull on! Aye, all alive,
now—we near him. The helm! take the helm! let me pass,”—and so saying two of
the oarsmen helped him forward to the bows of the still flying boat.
At
length as the craft was cast to one side, and ran ranging along with the White
Whale's flank, he seemed strangely oblivious of its advance—as the whale
sometimes will—and Ahab was fairly within the smoky mountain mist, which,
thrown off from the whale's spout, curled round his great, Monadnock hump; he
was even thus close to him; when, with body arched back, and both arms
lengthwise high-lifted to the poise, he darted his fierce iron, and his far
fiercer curse into the hated whale. As both steel and curse sank to the socket,
as if sucked into a morass, Moby Dick sideways writhed; spasmodically rolled
his nigh flank against the bow, and, without staving a hole in it, so suddenly
canted the boat over, that had it not been for the elevated part of the gunwale
to which he then clung, Ahab would once more have been tossed into the sea. As
it was, three of the oarsmen—who foreknew not the precise instant of the dart,
and were therefore unprepared for its effects—these were flung out; but so
fell, that, in an instant two of them clutched the gunwale again, and rising to
its level on a combing wave, hurled themselves bodily inboard again; the third
man helplessly dropping astern, but still afloat and swimming.
Almost
simultaneously, with a mighty volition of ungraduated, instantaneous swiftness,
the White Whale darted through the weltering sea. But when Ahab cried out to
the steersman to take new turns with the line, and hold it so; and commanded
the crew to turn round on their seats, and tow the boat up to the mark; the
moment the treacherous line felt that double strain and tug, it snapped in the
empty air!
“What
breaks in me? Some sinew cracks!—'tis whole again; oars! oars! Burst in upon
him!”
Hearing
the tremendous rush of the sea-crashing boat, the whale wheeled round to
present his blank forehead at bay; but in that evolution, catching sight of the
nearing black hull of the ship; seemingly seeing in it the source of all his
persecutions; bethinking it—it may be—a larger and nobler foe; of a sudden, he
bore down upon its advancing prow, smiting his jaws amid fiery showers of foam.
Ahab
staggered; his hand smote his forehead. “I grow blind; hands! stretch out
before me that I may yet grope my way. Is't night?”
“The
whale! The ship!” cried the cringing oarsmen.
“Oars!
oars! Slope downwards to thy depths, O sea, that ere it be for ever too late,
Ahab may slide this last, last time upon his mark! I see: the ship! the ship!
Dash on, my men! Will ye not save my ship?”
But
as the oarsmen violently forced their boat through the sledge-hammering seas,
the before whale-smitten bow-ends of two planks burst through, and in an
instant almost, the temporarily disabled boat lay nearly level with the waves;
its half-wading, splashing crew, trying hard to stop the gap and bale out the
pouring water.
Meantime,
for that one beholding instant, Tashtego's mast-head hammer remained suspended
in his hand; and the red flag, half-wrapping him as with a plaid, then streamed
itself straight out from him, as his own forward-flowing heart; while Starbuck
and Stubb, standing upon the bowsprit beneath, caught sight of the down-coming
monster just as soon as he.
“The
whale, the whale! Up helm, up helm! Oh, all ye sweet powers of air, now hug me
close! Let not Starbuck die, if die he must, in a woman's fainting fit. Up
helm, I say—ye fools, the jaw! the jaw! Is this the end of all my bursting
prayers? all my life-long fidelities? Oh, Ahab, Ahab, lo, thy work. Steady!
helmsman, steady. Nay, nay! Up helm again! He turns to meet us! Oh, his
unappeasable brow drives on towards one, whose duty tells him he cannot depart.
My God, stand by me now!”
“Stand
not by me, but stand under me, whoever you are that will now help Stubb; for
Stubb, too, sticks here. I grin at thee, thou grinning whale! Who ever helped
Stubb, or kept Stubb awake, but Stubb's own unwinking eye? And now poor Stubb
goes to bed upon a mattrass that is all too soft; would it were stuffed with
brushwood! I grin at thee, thou grinning whale! Look ye, sun, moon, and stars!
I call ye assassins of as good a fellow as ever spouted up his ghost. For all
that, I would yet ring glasses with ye, would ye but hand the cup! Oh, oh! oh,
oh! thou grinning whale, but there'll be plenty of gulping soon! Why fly ye
not, O Ahab! For me, off shoes and jacket to it; let Stubb die in his drawers!
A most mouldy and over salted death, though;—cherries! cherries! cherries! Oh,
Flask, for one red cherry ere we die!”
“Cherries?
I only wish that we were where they grow. Oh, Stubb, I hope my poor mother's
drawn my part-pay ere this; if not, few coppers will now come to her, for the
voyage is up.”
From
the ship's bows, nearly all the seamen now hung inactive; hammers, bits of
plank, lances, and harpoons, mechanically retained in their hands, just as they
had darted from their various employments; all their enchanted eyes intent upon
the whale, which from side to side strangely vibrating his predestinating head,
sent a broad band of overspreading semicircular foam before him as he rushed.
Retribution, swift vengeance, eternal malice were in his whole aspect, and
spite of all that mortal man could do, the solid white buttress of his forehead
smote the ship's starboard bow, till men and timbers reeled. Some fell flat
upon their faces. Like dislodged trucks, the heads of the harpooneers aloft
shook on their bull-like necks. Through the breach, they heard the waters pour,
as mountain torrents down a flume.
“The
ship! The hearse!—the second hearse!” cried Ahab from the boat; “its wood could
only be American!”
Diving
beneath the settling ship, the whale ran quivering along its keel; but turning
under water, swiftly shot to the surface again, far off the other bow, but
within a few yards of Ahab's boat, where, for a time, he lay quiescent.
“I
turn my body from the sun. What ho, Tashtego! let me hear thy hammer. Oh! ye
three unsurrendered spires of mine; thou uncracked keel; and only god-bullied
hull; thou firm deck, and haughty helm, and Pole-pointed prow,—death-glorious
ship! must ye then perish, and without me? Am I cut off from the last fond
pride of meanest shipwrecked captains? Oh, lonely death on lonely life! Oh, now
I feel my topmost greatness lies in my topmost grief. Ho, ho! from all your
furthest bounds, pour ye now in, ye bold billows of my whole foregone life, and
top this one piled comber of my death! Towards thee I roll, thou all-destroying
but unconquering whale; to the last I grapple with thee; from hell's heart I
stab at thee; for hate's sake I spit my last breath at thee. Sink all coffins
and all hearses to one common pool! and since neither can be mine, let me then
tow to pieces, while still chasing thee, though tied to thee, thou damned
whale! Thus, I give up the spear!”
The
harpoon was darted; the stricken whale flew forward; with igniting velocity the
line ran through the groove;—ran foul. Ahab stooped to clear it; he did clear
it; but the flying turn caught him round the neck, and voicelessly as Turkish
mutes bowstring their victim, he was shot out of the boat, ere the crew knew he
was gone. Next instant, the heavy eye-splice in the rope's final end flew out
of the stark-empty tub, knocked down an oarsman, and smiting the sea,
disappeared in its depths.
For
an instant, the tranced boat's crew stood still; then turned. “The ship? Great
God, where is the ship?” Soon they through dim, bewildering mediums saw her
sidelong fading phantom, as in the gaseous Fata Morgana; only the uppermost
masts out of water; while fixed by infatuation, or fidelity, or fate, to their
once lofty perches, the pagan harpooneers still maintained their sinking
lookouts on the sea. And now, concentric circles seized the lone boat itself,
and all its crew, and each floating oar, and every lance-pole, and spinning,
animate and inanimate, all round and round in one vortex, carried the smallest
chip of the Pequod out of sight.
But
as the last whelmings intermixingly poured themselves over the sunken head of
the Indian at the mainmast, leaving a few inches of the erect spar yet visible,
together with long streaming yards of the flag, which calmly undulated, with
ironical coincidings, over the destroying billows they almost touched;—at that
instant, a red arm and a hammer hovered backwardly uplifted in the open air, in
the act of nailing the flag faster and yet faster to the subsiding spar. A
sky-hawk that tauntingly had followed the main-truck downwards from its natural
home among the stars, pecking at the flag, and incommoding Tashtego there; this
bird now chanced to intercept its broad fluttering wing between the hammer and
the wood; and simultaneously feeling that etherial thrill, the submerged savage
beneath, in his death-gasp, kept his hammer frozen there; and so the bird of
heaven, with archangelic shrieks, and his imperial beak thrust upwards, and his
whole captive form folded in the flag of Ahab, went down with his ship, which,
like Satan, would not sink to hell till she had dragged a living part of heaven
along with her, and helmeted herself with it.
Now
small fowls flew screaming over the yet yawning gulf; a sullen white surf beat
against its steep sides; then all collapsed, and the great shroud of the sea
rolled on as it rolled five thousand years ago.
Epilogue
“AND
I ONLY AM ESCAPED ALONE TO TELL THEE.” Job.
The
drama's done. Why then here does any one step forth?—Because one did survive
the wreck.
It
so chanced, that after the Parsee's disappearance, I was he whom the Fates
ordained to take the place of Ahab's bowsman, when that bowsman assumed the
vacant post; the same, who, when on the last day the three men were tossed from
out of the rocking boat, was dropped astern. So, floating on the margin of the
ensuing scene, and in full sight of it, when the halfspent suction of the sunk
ship reached me, I was then, but slowly, drawn towards the closing vortex. When
I reached it, it had subsided to a creamy pool. Round and round, then, and ever
contracting towards the button-like black bubble at the axis of that slowly
wheeling circle, like another Ixion I did revolve. Till, gaining that vital
centre, the black bubble upward burst; and now, liberated by reason of its
cunning spring, and, owing to its great buoyancy, rising with great force, the
coffin life-buoy shot lengthwise from the sea, fell over, and floated by my
side. Buoyed up by that coffin, for almost one whole day and night, I floated
on a soft and dirgelike main. The unharming sharks, they glided by as if with
padlocks on their mouths; the savage sea-hawks sailed with sheathed beaks. On
the second day, a sail drew near, nearer, and picked me up at last. It was the
devious-cruising Rachel, that in her retracing search after her missing
children, only found another orphan.
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