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Ahab’s Evil Quest: Melville’s Symbols In Moby-Dick

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 7.5
  Total Words: 1874
  Total Characters: 9885
  Number of Sentences: 151


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 12.41
  Characters per Words: 5.27


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 61.38
  Fog Scale Level: 10.36
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 7.78  

Ahab’s Evil Quest: Melville’s Symbols In Moby-Dick

Ahab’s Evil Quest:
Melville’s Symbols in Moby-Dick
     Herman Melville began working on his epic novel Moby-Dick in 1850, writing it
primarily as a report on the whaling voyages he undertook in the 1830s and early 1840s.
Many critics suppose that his initial book did not contain characters such as Ahab,
Starbuck, or even Moby Dick, but the summer of 1850 changed Melville’s writing and
his masterpiece.  He became friends with author Nathaniel Hawthorne and was greatly
influenced by him.  He also read Shakespeare and Milton’s Paradise Lost (Murray 41).
These influences lead to the novel Melville completed and published in 1851.  Although
shunned by critics after its release, Moby-Dick enjoyed a critical renaissance in the 1920s
and as assumed its rightful place in the canons of American and world literature as a
great classic.  Through the symbols employed by Melville, Moby-Dick studies man’s
relationship with his universe, his fate, and his God.  Ahab represents the league humans
make with evil when they question the fate God has willed upon them, and God is
represented by the great white whale, Moby Dick.  In Moby-Dick, Herman Melville uses
a vast array of symbols and allegories in the search for the true explanation of man’s
place in the universe and his relationship with his fate and his God.
     The focus of cruel fate and evil symbols is placed on the head of Ahab, captain of
the Pequod.  Ishmael, though narrator of the story, is not the center of Moby-Dick after
Captain Ahab is introduced onto the deck of the ship and into action.  The focus of the
novel shifts from the freshman whaler to experienced Ahab, an “ungodly, god-like man”
(Melville 82).  Having been a whaler for many years, he is a well respected captain, yet
his previous voyage has left him without a limb, and in its place is a peg leg carved from
whale ivory.  Ahab remains below decks shadowed in obscuri...

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