Chapter 133 The Chase. First Day
Abridged
Text, followed by Abridger Notes, followed by multimedia, followed by Original
Text with deletions.
Chapter 133 The Chase. First Day
That night, in the mid-watch, the old man 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, then ascertaining the bearing of the odor as nearly as possible, Ahab rapidly ordered the ship’s course to be altered, and the sail to be shortened.
The acute policy dictating these movements was vindicated at daybreak, by the sight of a long sleek on the sea directly and lengthwise ahead.
“Man the mast-heads! Call all hands! 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, 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. The whale was now seen some mile or so ahead, 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.
“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. 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! 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. At length the breathless hunter saw the vast, involved wrinkles of the slightly projecting head beyond. Before it went the broad, milky forehead, and behind, the blue waters interchangeably flowed over into the moving valley of his steady wake. But these were broken by the light toes of hundreds of gay fowl softly feathering the sea, and like some flag-staff rising from the hull of an argosy, the tall but shattered pole of a recent lance projected from the white whale’s back.
A gentle joyousness—a mighty mildness of repose in swiftness, invested the glorified White Whale as he so divinely swam, 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.
It was only an instant; for the breeze now freshened; the sea began to swell.
“The birds!—the birds!” cried Tashtego.
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 as he peered down into its depths, he 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. 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.
Now, by this spinning round the boat its bow 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, in an instant, shooting his pleated head lengthwise beneath the boat.
Through and through every plank and each rib, it thrilled for an instant, the whale obliquely, 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.
As the whale dallied with the doomed craft in this devilish way, then it was that monomaniac Ahab, furious and helpless in the very jaws he hated, seized the long bone with his naked hands, and wildly strove to wrench it from its gripe. As now both jaws, like an enormous shears, bit the craft completely in twain.
At that preluding moment, ere the boat was yet snapped, Ahab, the first to perceive the whale’s intent, loosed his hold for the time 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 and at the same time slowly revolving his whole spindled body. But soon resuming his horizontal attitude, Moby Dick swam swiftly round and round the wrecked crew; sideways churning the water in his vengeful wake. Meanwhile Ahab could keep afloat, even in the heart of such a whirlpool as that.
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; 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 whale!—Drive him off!”
The Pequod’s prow was 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 long tension of Ahab’s bodily strength did crack, and helplessly lying crushed in the bottom of Stubb’s boat, like one trodden under foot of herds of elephants.
But this intensity of
his physical prostration did but so much the more abbreviate it.
“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, I see him! 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. But under these
circumstances, pushed on, the chase would prove an indefinitely prolonged, if
not a hopeless one. The ship itself, then, 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, 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 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, then
pacing the deck, watch in hand, so soon as the last second of the allotted hour
expired, his voice was heard.—“D’ye see him?” In this way the day wore on;
Ahab, now unrestingly pacing the planks.
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.
“Good! he will travel slower now ’tis night. 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!”
Link to Chapter 134 The Chase. Second Day.
Abridger Notes
I deleted the final paragraph from the original.
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.
Interestingly, it refers to Ahab’s hat, which was taken by a sea hawk three chapters earlier. Of course, Ahab might have gotten another, but a finer grained edit would have certainly gotten rid of the hat reference, an inconsistency that would have been more apparent, even if uncertain, in an abridgement.
Stanley Baldwin (Cliff Notes, p. 102) says
“The last three chapters of the novel contain some of the finest descriptions of dramatic action in American literature. They should be read as a unit.”
And I think that’s right, at least in my wealth of experience.
“The birds!—the birds!” cried Tashtego.
is something I always remember from the 1956 movie too, though in the film, its Ahab (Gregory Peck) who calls it out.
Multimedia Chapter 133 The Chase. First Day
Original Chapter 133 The Chase. First Day.
with
Deletions
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.
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.
[Melville's Note] 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. [end Note]
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 prow was 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.

Comments
Post a Comment