Moby Dick; Or, The Whale cover
Adventure Stories

Moby Dick; Or, The Whale

Melville, Herman · 2001 · 31 min

Digression on the Dignity of Common Men and Democratic Equality

The chapter contains an impassioned digression on the dignity of common men and democratic equality. The narrator expresses that while men may seem detestable, foolish, or mean, the ideal of man is noble and grand. When witnessing the fall of valor in any soul, one should feel keen anguish and rush to cover such weakness with dignity. This dignity, the narrator argues, is not the dignity of kings and robes but the democratic dignity radiating from God Himself—the center and circumference of all democracy. The narrator invokes the Spirit of Equality, declaring that the divine has always chosen champions from among common men: Bunyan, Cervantes, Andrew Jackson, all raised from humble or broken circumstances to greatness. The passage serves as a philosophical justification for the narrator’s intent to portray high qualities in even the meanest mariners and outcasts.

Knights and Squires

This chapter introduces the principal officers and harpooneers of the Pequod, drawing an extended analogy between whaling crews and medieval knights and their squires. The three mates—Starbuck, Stubb, and Flask—command the ship’s boats as “headsmen,” while dedicated harpooneers serve as their “squires.” The chapter details the distinctive characters of the second and third mates, profiles the three harpooneers, and concludes with observations about the multinational composition of whaling crews.

Second Mate Stubb: Character and Demeanor

Stubb, a native of Cape Cod, is described as a “happy-go-lucky” individual who is neither craven nor valiant. He approaches danger with an indifferent air, remaining calm and collected even during the most critical moments of the whale chase. His demeanor is compared to that of a journeyman joiner going about his daily work, and he presides over his whale-boat as though a deadly encounter were merely a dinner party. Stubb is particular about the comfortable arrangement of his part of the boat, similar to how a stage-driver values the snugness of his box. When confronting whales, he handles his lance coolly and off-handedly, often humming tunes while engaged in the fight. The text suggests he rarely contemplates death, viewing it, if at all, as merely another duty to be performed when the time comes.

The original text of this work is in the public domain. This page focuses on a guided summary article, reading notes, selected quotes, and visual learning materials for educational purposes.

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