Moby Dick; Or, The Whale cover
Adventure Stories

Moby Dick; Or, The Whale

Melville, Herman · 2001 · 31 min

Half the Crew Dances to Tambourine

As the dancing intensifies, the Azore sailor encourages Pip with energetic nonsense phrases—“rig it, dig it, stig it, quig it”—commanding the bell-boy to “make fire-flies; break the jinglers!” The dancing segment captures the wild, carefree energy of the crew at midnight.

Pip Plays Tambourine as Crew Teases Him

Pip reluctantly plays the tambourine while a Chinese sailor tells him to “rattle thy teeth, then, and pound away; make a pagoda of thyself.” When Pip asks about “jinglers,” the sailors tease him further, and the French sailor demands “hold up thy hoop, Pip, till I jump through it!” ordering everyone to “split jibs! tear yourselves!”

French Sailor Urges Wild Jig Dancing

The French sailor pushes the revelry toward “merry-mad” heights, ordering Pip to hold up his tambourine hoop for him to jump through. His increasingly frantic commands drive the crew’s wild dancing energy.

Tashtego Scoffs at White Men’s Dancing

Tashtego, quietly smoking, dismisses the dancing as mere “white man” fun. He offers a brief but pointed commentary—“That’s a white man; he calls that fun: humph! I save my sweat”—suggesting his preference for conserving energy rather than frivolous amusement.

Old Manx Sailor Dances Over Imagined Graves

The old Manx sailor contemplates what the jolly dancers are actually dancing over, musing that he’s “dancing over your grave.” He references an old threat from women, calling to mind “green navies and green-skulled crews.” He accepts the world’s nature as a ball, making it a ballroom, but notes his own youth has passed—“I was once.”

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