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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/a15fd22c58f3f23a1f7cc00d929b9a4e.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:''Illustration by Rockwell Kent'']]
3
4->''"Call me Ishmael."''
5-->-- [[SignatureLine Opening line]]
6
7Widely considered as one of the [[UsefulNotes/GreatAmericanNovel greatest American novels]], ''Moby-Dick; [[EitherOrTitle or]], The Whale'', written by Creator/HermanMelville in 1851, is either a story about the hunt of a dangerous whale by a madman that shows Melville's work, or an encyclopedia on whaling and cetology with a FramingDevice. Or both.
8
9The plot follows a man named Ishmael, who, infatuated with the sea (apparently, it's a periodic thing), decides to sign on for a whaling ship's voyage to try out how whaling feels. He and his newly-met best friend Queequeg choose the ''Pequod'' under the command of the monomaniacal Captain Ahab, and he eventually finds himself in the middle of Ahab's mad hunt for Moby Dick, the eponymous "White Whale" that ate his leg. Tragedy ensues.
10
11''Moby-Dick'' is full of symbolism, and much more has been added by scholars and commentators. Common meanings for the whale, for instance, are: nature, fate, the ocean's fury itself, {{Satan}}, and {{God}} (as an invincible opponent who is never actually overcome at any point in the novel).
12
13This book is part of the Hollywoodian SmallReferencePools. Ignoring its real-life literary merits, it is a convenient shorthand for "huge boring {{doorstopper}} assigned for reading by high-school teachers" in any given kids series. Whether this also implicitly states that execs think that [[ViewersAreMorons Kids Are Morons]] is debatable. Referencing the book is often a shorthand signifier that a character is cultured (and possibly WickedCultured) in Hollywood and other American stories. While it's well-known elsewhere in the world, it doesn't have the same symbolic weight.
14
15''Film/MobyDick'' has been adapted to screen several times, the most famous version being with Creator/GregoryPeck as Ahab. Creator/PatrickStewart was inspired to play the role following an allegorical comparison to Ahab in [[Film/StarTrekFirstContact one of his movies.]] A concept album based on ''Moby-Dick'' called ''Leviathan'' was also made by prog-metal band Music/{{Mastodon}}. Also, German DoomMetal band Ahab not only take their name from the book, their [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYh25wOlmj0 first album,]] called "The Call of the Wretched Sea", is also based on ''Moby-Dick''. Also a common source of {{Homage}} or WholePlotReference stories, which are [[MobySchtick a trope of their own,]] ''Moby-Dick'' itself was partially inspired by a real life account of a whaling vessel, the ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essex_(1799_whaleship) Essex]]'', that was attacked and sunk by a sperm whale. The eponymous whale was also heavily inspired by a real whale known as [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mocha_Dick Mocha Dick,]] who lived off the western coast of Chile in the early 19th century, and was greatly feared by whalers of that era.
16
17There is a [[Characters/MobyDick characters page]].
18----
19!!''Moby-Dick'' provides examples of:
20%%
21%% YMMV tropes go on the YMMV tab -- site policy. Please do not return them to Main.
22%%
23* AdaptationInducedPlotHole: The first British print run of the book made what scholar Steven Olsen-Smith described as "unauthorized changes ranging from typographical errors and omissions to acts of outright censorship," most of them concerning religious and sexual references, criticism of the royals, and perceived grammatical mistakes by [[GrammarNazi a very British definition of proper grammar]]. Most critically, the British version cut the entire epilogue revealing how Ishmael survived, ending the book on a BolivianArmyEnding instead. Many British critics thus wondered who was telling the first-person story if the narrator implicitly died at the end, and American critics imitated their British counterparts because that was what people did in the 19th century if they wanted to be seen as having good taste.
24* AlasPoorVillain: [[spoiler:Captain Ahab]], at least if you consider him a villain.
25%% * AlbinosAreFreaks: The narrator, Ishmael, extensively discusses the fact that purely white things -- such as albinos or white whales -- are deeply unsettling even though white is the color of good in "The Whiteness of the Whale". In fact, it's suggested this psychological factor drove Ahab to hate the whale even before Moby Dick took his leg.
26-->"Is it that by its indefiniteness it shadows forth the heartless voids and immensities of the universe, and thus stabs us from behind with the thought of annihilation, when beholding the white depths of the milky way? Or is it, that as in essence whiteness is not so much a color as the visible absence of color; and at the same time the concrete of all colors; is it for these reasons that there is such a dumb blankness, full of meaning, in a wide landscape of snows — a colorless, all-color of atheism from which we shrink?"
27* AmbiguousSituation: Given the aggressive nature of lone bull sperm whales, it is left ambiguous whether Moby Dick is attacking ships out of self-preservation or just for no reason at all.
28* AmbiguousTimePeriod: The story begins "Some years ago—never mind how long precisely...", although various clues show that it's in the 1840s, probably early in the decade.
29* AnimalNemesis: It's practically the textbook for this trope. The Whale ''is'' responsible for the loss of one of Ahab's legs. Or its subversion, in that Ahab's rage has since become stock metaphor for revenge-seeking rage that defies merely human attempts to control or stop it.
30* AnnoyingArrows: Moby Dick's hide is covered in leftover harpoons from failed attempts to bag him.
31* AntiquatedLinguistics: Even for the time. There's a lot of "thee" and "thou" in this book, since most of the main characters are Quakers, who talked like that back then.
32* ArsonMurderAndJaywalking:
33-->"He's killed himself," she cried. "It's unfort'nate Stiggs done over again -- there goes another counterpane -- god pity his poor mother! -- it will be the ruin of my house. Has the poor lad a sister? Where's that girl? -- there, Betty, go to Snarles the Painter, and tell him to paint me a sign, with -- "no suicides permitted here, and no smoking in the parlor;" -- might as well kill both birds at once."
34* AttackTheInjury: Flask deals a particularly agonizing death to an old whale by stabbing it in an abscess. Two older harpoons found lodged nearby indicate that earlier whalers tried the same thing. The effort proves to be AllForNothing, though, as the carcass sinks too quickly for the ''Pequod'' to secure it without risk of capsizing.
35* AuthorFilibuster: Though he had reservations about killing whales ("So remorseless a havoc"), Melville had high regard for the brave whalers. In his generation, they were equivalent to cowboys and astronauts.
36* BadassBoast: Ahab utters quite a bit during the book. His dying speech is particularly memorable.
37-->'''Ahab:''' From hell's heart I stab at thee. For hate's sake, I spit my last breath at thee!!!
38%%* BadassCrew: The ''Pequod'''s crew, generally.
39* BigEater: Subverted in the case of Flask, because he's the last mate summoned to the dinner table and has to be the first to leave it and return to the deck. Played straight with the three harpooneers, who routinely eat vast amounts of food at mealtimes.
40* BrokeYourArmPunchingOutCthulhu: Ahab's quest to destroy what he sees as the mortal form of an EldritchAbomination goes poorly for every human character involved. The whale survives, apparently unscathed.
41* BullyingADragon: On the packet ship to Nantucket, Queequeg catches a man mocking him behind his back. Queequeg responds by tossing the man straight into the air, not harming him but putting some well-deserved fear into him.
42* ButtMonkey: One thing after another starts to go wrong for the ''Pequod'' as the voyage proceeds. Tashtego nearly drowns after falling into a whale's decapitated head; Queequeg nearly dies of a fever; the lifebuoy fails, leaving the ship unable to save a man gone overboard; the log and line used to measure sailing speed breaks; a thunderstorm causes the compasses to malfunction; and Ahab smashes the quadrant he uses as a navigational aid.
43* CareerRevealingTrait: Ishmael observes that veteran whalers often have toes missing, or even an outright peg leg. After a whale is killed, the crew has to strip off its blubber and cut it into small pieces for boiling. Each of these steps involves men using a long blade and trying to keep their balance -- first atop the slippery, rolling carcass, then later while standing on the huge blubber strips to chop them up. Add in a lurching ship and a deck spattered with seawater, blood, and entrails, and the likelihood of a missed swing taking off a toe or foot gets a lot higher.
44* ChekhovsGun: [[spoiler:Queequeg's coffin]] is used as a spare lifebuoy after the original is lost. [[spoiler:It saves Ishmael when the ship sinks.]]
45* CoolBoat: The ''Pequod'' is more than half a century old and covered in the bones of whales it's killed. None of this has any bearing on the rest of the story, it's just RuleOfCool as applied to a whaling ship.
46* CosmicHorrorStory: A proto-example. A simple story of whalers on a mission to hunt a single specific whale in the middle of the ocean gradually takes on aspects of supernatural horror. The crew hear strange noises they interpret as the wails of dead sailors, take the ramblings of a foreigner as predictions of the future, and realize their captain wants to kill the whale because of a vendetta towards the deceitful, sick nature of the cosmos and whatever is beyond it.
47-->"And when we consider that other theory of the natural philosophers, that all other earthly hues — every stately or lovely emblazoning — the sweet tinges of sunset skies and woods; yea, and the gilded velvets of butterflies, and the butterfly cheeks of young girls; all these are but subtile deceits, not actually inherent in substances, but only laid on from without; so that all deified Nature absolutely paints like the harlot, whose allurements cover nothing but the charnel-house within; and when we proceed further, and consider that the mystical cosmetic which produces every one of her hues, the great principle of light, for ever remains white or colorless in itself, and if operating without medium upon matter, would touch all objects, even tulips and roses, with its own blank tinge — pondering all this, the palsied universe lies before us a leper; and like wilful travellers in Lapland, who refuse to wear colored and coloring glasses upon their eyes, so the wretched infidel gazes himself blind at the monumental white shroud that wraps all the prospect around him. And of all these things the Albino whale was the symbol. Wonder ye then at the fiery hunt?"
48* CurbStompBattle: How every encounter against Moby Dick goes, whether in tales from other ships or for all three attempts by the crew of the ''Pequod''.
49* DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment: "Stubb was the second mate. He was a native of Cape Cod; and hence, according to local usage, was called a Cape-Cod-man."
50* DespairSpeech: Ahab makes such speeches almost constantly.
51* DissonantSerenity: Stubb is described as being perpetually irreverent even when killing whales.
52* DominanceThroughFurniture: Ishmael is surprised when his new companion Queequeg arranges a nearby drunk to serve as a suitable chair to sit on. Queequeg explains that this is common in his tribe, wherein suitably fluffy men and women are actually cultivated to serve as mobile furniture for high ranking members.
53* {{Doorstopper}}: Ishmael doesn't even see the ''Pequod'' for the first time until Chapter 16. The ship actually sets sail in Chapter 22, and Ahab doesn't show himself on the deck until Chapter 28.
54* TheDreaded: Half of chapter 41 is spent establishing Moby Dick (and to a lesser extent, all sperm whales) as this.
55* DyingDeclarationOfHate: Captain Ahab says: "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."
56* EitherOrTitle: ''Moby-Dick; or, The Whale''
57* EldritchAbomination: The White Whale is a large albino that has resisted several attempts to harpoon it (it is still covered with harpoons from the last people who tried) and when it finally turns up, [[spoiler:it destroys and crushes the ''Pequod'' leaving only one survivor]]. The RuleOfSymbolism implies that in fighting the Whale, Ahab is essentially fighting life, nature or God.
58* EverybodyDiesEnding: Everyone except [[spoiler:Ishmael. And perhaps Moby Dick.]]
59-->"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."
60* ExactWords: "Hemp only can kill thee," part of Fedallah's prophecy to Ahab. [[spoiler:It comes true during the chase after Moby Dick, when a harpoon line wraps around Ahab's neck and pulls him overboard.]]
61* {{Fingore}}: Downplayed but still present in Ishmael's description of the blubber room. Due to the motion of the ship, the sailors who chop up the blubber sometimes slip with their blades and cut off a toe.
62* FirstPersonPeripheralNarrator: Ishmael tells the story, and at first appears to be the main character, but as the story goes on he becomes more and more peripheral to the story to the point that he almost disappears while Captain Ahab and the eponymous whale take center stage as the main characters.
63* {{Foil}}: Captain Boomer to Captain Ahab. Both have lost a limb to Moby Dick (Boomer lost his arm whereas Ahab lost his leg), but Boomer has decided that fighting the white whale once was enough, while Ahab is absolutely obsessed with him.
64* FoodPorn: Chapter 15 is about eating ... chowder. Will they have clam chowder or cod chowder? [[spoiler:[[TakeAThirdOption Or maybe BOTH]]?]]
65%%* {{Foreshadowing}}: Chapter 40, "The Line".
66* FreudianTrio: Starbuck as Ego; Ahab as Superego; Stubb as Id.
67* FunetikAksent: Fleece's form of speech.
68--> '''Fellow-critters:''' I'se ordered here to say dat you must stop dat dam noise dare. You hear? Stop dat dam smackin' ob de lips! Massa Stubb say dat you can fill your dam bellies up to de hatchings, but by Gor! you must stop dat dam racket!
69* FunWithForeignLanguages: Stubb's conversation with the captain of the ''Rosebud''.
70* GiantSquid: The crew of the ''Pequod'' once gets to spot a giant squid, and find it even scarier than Moby Dick himself. Of course, they haven't met Moby Dick by this point.
71-->Almost forgetting for the moment all thoughts of Moby Dick, we now gazed at the most wondrous phenomenon which the secret seas have hitherto revealed to mankind. A vast pulpy mass, furlongs in length and breadth, of a glancing cream-color, lay floating on the water, innumerable long arms radiating from its centre, and curling and twisting like a nest of anacondas, as if blindly to clutch at any hapless object within reach. No perceptible face or front did it have; no conceivable token of either sensation or instinct; but undulated there on the billows, an unearthly, formless, chance-like apparition of life.\
72As with a low sucking sound it slowly disappeared again, Starbuck still gazing at the agitated waters where it had sunk, with a wild voice exclaimed -- "Almost rather had I seen Moby Dick and fought him, than to have seen thee, thou white ghost!"
73** Queequeg, though, considers the squid to be a sign that sperm whales are in the vicinity.
74* GoodScarsEvilScars: In addition to his peg-leg, Ahab also has a livid scar extending from his hairline and disappearing into his collar, the extent of which is unclear -- some members of the crew believe it marks him "from sole to crown", but this is never shown.
75* HaveAGayOldTime:
76** "The Town-Ho's Story" has nothing to do with TheOldestProfession. The probably-deliberate homoerotica between Ishmael and Queequeg doesn't help any.
77** "The Crotch" is about a storage device for harpoons, not sexual.
78** There are ''dozens'' of examples of "queer" meaning "strange." Here's Stubb talking about Ahab:
79--->It's queer; very queer; and he's queer too; aye, take him fore and aft, he's about the queerest old man Stubb ever sailed with. How he flashed at me! -- his eyes like powder-pans! is he mad!
80* HeterosexualLifePartners: Ishmael and Queequeg's relationship is either this or HoYay. Given the latter's claim that "now we are married" after they bunk together (with Queequeg [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything clutching his harpoon]] throughout the night), it's probably the latter.
81* HeWhoFightsMonsters: Captain Ahab, while not exactly evil, seeks to kill a whale that (probably?) acted out of instinct.
82* HoistByHisOwnPetard: [[spoiler:Ahab is dragged underwater and killed after the rope attached to his harpoon wraps around his neck.]]
83* HopeSpot: Two, in fact:
84** Chapter 123 has Starbuck think about shooting Ahab with a musket before his RevengeBeforeReason gets the whole ship killed. Sadly, Starbuck can't bring himself to do it.
85** Chapter 132 has Ahab consider Starbuck's idea to turn back home to Nantucket. He doesn't go through with it.
86* HumanNotepad:
87** In Chapter 102 ("A Bower in the Arsacides"), Ishmael mentions having the dimensions of a whale skeleton tattooed on his arm, "as in my wild wanderings at that period, there was no other secure way of preserving such valuable statistics." (He omits the inches, as he was saving room for a poem.)
88** Captain Ahab's peg leg has a specially prepared flat patch that he uses as a slate for working out navigational sightings.
89* IgnoredEpiphany: Ahab briefly reconsiders chasing Moby Dick. Briefly.
90* IHaveAFamily: Ahab and Starbuck both have a wife and son. Chapter 132 has the two discuss it.
91* ImprobableAimingSkills: Queequeg manages to harpoon a drop of tar floating near a dock.
92* InconsistentSpelling:
93** ''Incredibly'' pedantic example, but for whatever reason the whale's name is hyphenated only in the book's title, while in the actual text it's always spaced out as "Moby Dick".
94** Depending on the edition, Queequeg's homeland may be referred to as both Kokovoko and Rokovoko at various points.
95* InspiringSermon: Father Mapple gives a sermon that sums up the themes of the novel, with discussions on facing the truth, no matter how appalling, avoiding blasphemy, and that repentance means acceptance of one's punishment.
96* ItCanThink: Moby Dick has moments where it seems to show genuine tactical thinking.
97* KarmicDeath: [[spoiler:Ahab]] drowns when he is pulled underwater by Moby Dick.
98* KnowWhenToFoldEm: Captain Boomer lost his arm to Moby Dick, but unlike Ahab is smart enough to realize going for round two isn't a good idea and just moved on.
99* LightIsNotGood: Discussed, as in the "paradox" of the creepiness of albinos in spite of the positive symbolism of white.
100* LightningCanDoAnything: Ahab certainly believes so, and his scar is likened by the author to a tree split down the grain by lightning. He uses the "power" imbued in him by the bolt to bless the mates' lances.
101* LudicrousPrecision: The question of whether the whale's spout is water or vapour has lasted from the beginning of history down to "this blessed minute (fifteen and a quarter minutes past one o'clock P.M. of this sixteenth day of December, A.D. 1851)".
102%% * ManlyMenCanHunt
103* ManlyTears: Starbuck gives us a classic example.
104-->'''Starbuck''': Oh my Captain! My Captain! Noble heart go not -- go not, see its brave man that weeps; how great the agony of the persuasion then!
105* MeaningfulName: Most of them [[Literature/TheBible Biblically]]-derived.
106** Ahab's parents named him after the Old Testament king who is prophesied to die in battle.
107** When Ishmael is warned about Ahab's madness by a man named Elijah (which was also the name of the Biblical prophet who predicted Ahab's death), the symbolism is not lost on him. Notably, in Jewish folklore, the prophet Elijah ''is'' considered to be immortal and prone to wandering and turning up in unexpected places.
108** Assuming that Ishmael is, indeed, the narrator's name, then he's an example of this as well, being eternally cast out and alone. Some readers have noted that nobody ever actually ''calls'' him Ishmael over the course of the story, so the famous opening line might just be him informing the reader that his story resembles that of the Biblical Ishmael.
109** The ''Rachel'', a ship encountered late in the book, is searching for the lost son of the captain, and eventually saves Ishmael -- also a lost son, after a fashion -- when the ''Pequod'' is wrecked. In the Old Testament, Rachel is the devoted mother of Joseph, whom she loses when he is sold to slavers.
110** Starbuck's name is not biblical, but it is no less meaningful. As the ship's navigator, he [[ShapedLikeItself guides the ship by the stars]].
111** Along the way, the ''Pequod'' encounters a ship that's failed to harpoon any whales. It's called the ''Jungfrau'', translated in the chapter title as "Virgin."
112* MediumBlending: Owing to the obvious Shakespearean influence on the novel, some of the chapters are written as a play script.
113* MonsterWhale: Moby Dick, natch. He's undoubtedly one of the most iconic examples of this trope, if not the Trope Codifier. He's an incredibly destructive and fearsome albino sperm whale who's so notorious for killing whalers and destroying their vessels that he's speculated in-universe to be some kind of malevolent supernatural entity.
114* MotiveRant: Ishmael does this sometimes regarding his seeming need to go to sea, and Ahab does this ''constantly''.
115* MultinationalTeam: The crew of the ''Pequod'' consists of sailors from all over the world, including Italians, Africans, Brits, Danes and Americans of all ethnicities.
116** The harpoon team in particular are an example of this, consisting of Queequeg (from the fictitious Pacific island of Rokovoko), Tashtego (a Native American, of the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head[[note]]The Wampanoag people are native to what is now Massachusetts. They were frequently employed in the early days of the Nantucket whaling industry, although this was becoming less common when the book was written, as Wampanoag numbers were in decline[[/note]]), Daggoo (a West African), and Fedallah (a Persian Zoroastrian).
117* TheMutiny:
118** Chapter 54 describes one on a whaling ship, the ''Town-Ho'', caused basically by office politics getting out of hand. It starts with an argument between one of the mates and an exhausted deckhand that escalates to a physical assault on the mate, and it gets worse from there. The mate is eventually killed by Moby Dick, and nearly the entire crew deserts the ship once it reaches a harbor to undergo repairs.
119** The ''Jeroboam'', a ship encountered in Chapter 71, nearly falls victim to this. One sailor declares himself to be an angel and gains a powerful influence over the rest of the crew. Learning that the captain plans to put the man off the ship at the nearest port, the crew threaten to desert if he does so. (He doesn't.)
120** It's also a theme, as Starbuck is constantly tempted to usurp Ahab but his conscience restrains him from doing so.
121* NarrativeProfanityFilter: Ishmael mentions that he has censored out a lot of Ahab's dialogue because nobody "living under the light of the Evangelical land" needs to hear that.
122* NoFullNameGiven: Practically ubiquitous -- of the main characters whom we can presume have both a given name and surname (Ishmael, Ahab, Starbuck, Stubb, etc.), all of them are known either by one or the other.
123* NoManOfWomanBorn: Fedallah tells Ahab that he can only be killed by hemp; and even then, Fedallah will go before him. Ahab thinks this means he can only die by being hanged. [[spoiler:Fedallah is killed on the second day of the three-day chase, and Ahab is killed on the last when the harpoon line wraps around his neck.]]
124* NoodleIncident: "That deadly skrimmage with the Spaniard afore the altar in Santa."
125* NotHyperbole: Borders on a running gag with Queequeg, starting with him ''literally'' being off selling shrunken heads as the innkeeper said.
126* NotWhatISignedOnFor: Starbuck is on the ''Pequod'' to hunt whales for business, not assist his captain in his mad obsession for one specific whale that obviously wants to be left alone. He certainly thinks this, and in some adaptations voices this very phrase. Only his [[HonorBeforeReason sense of duty]] keeps him from mutinying.
127* OnlySaneMan: Starbuck is the only one to speak out against Ahab's vendetta.
128-->'''Starbuck:''' I came here to hunt whales, not my commander's vengeance.
129* PetTheDog: Ahab to Pip, in Chapter 125, "The Log and Line", where he sympathizes with him over his madness.
130* PhantomLimbPain: Captain Ahab complains about he still feels pain in the leg that got bitten off by the titular whale. This serves to intensify his rage at the whale and drive him towards a mad attempt at revenge.
131* PlagueOfGoodFortune: A subtle example of type 4: Once Ahab has decided to destroy Moby Dick, a lot of good things (for a superior spirit, of course) happened to him: he discovers the beauty of nature, he appreciates the loyalty of his crew, he rediscovers love and charity again when he befriends Pip, Starbuck reminds him of his wife and son, the captain of the ''Rachel'' begs him to save his son... It's like the whole universe conspires to save Ahab from his self-imposed doom, to convince him to abandon his philosophy of RageAgainstTheHeavens. He only can blame himself.
132* PowerBornOfMadness: "If such a furious trope may stand, his special lunacy stormed his general sanity, and carried it, and turned all its concentred cannon upon its own mad mark; so that far from having lost his strength, Ahab, to that one end, did now possess a thousand fold more potency than ever he had sanely brought to bear upon any one reasonable object." -- Chapter 33.
133* ProfaneLastWords: Captain Ahab accept his own damnation with his last words on the condition that he can commit one more act of hatred.
134-->"From hell's heart, I stab at thee; for hate's sake I spit my last breath at thee."
135* RecycledInSpace:
136** A French comic book reuses the story in, well, space. The whalers are AsteroidMiners, the harpoons are ''nuclear warheads'', the kraken is a dwarf star, and Moby Dick is a (possibly) sentient comet.
137** ''Film/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan'' also uses Ahab's obsession with the white whale as a metaphor for Khan's self-destructive appetite for revenge. Khan even quotes the book itself.
138** ''Film/StarTrekFirstContact'' has Picard become similarly obsessed with stopping the Borg, though he subverts the usual story progression (while also quoting the book) by being able to force himself off the course he's on, which is of course why his fate is different than Khan's and Ahab's.
139* RedRightHand: Ahab's iconic peg-leg, made of [[ScavengedPunk a sperm whale's jawbone.]]
140* {{Revenge}}: The core of the book's narrative.
141* RevengeBeforeReason: Ahab is probably the quintessential example of this. His mad bid for vengeance against Moby Dick costs him his ship, nearly all of his crew, and his life.
142* RippedFromTheHeadlines:
143** The whale was based off of a similarly destructive albino sperm whale named Mocha Dick that plagued the waters off Chile.
144** The events depicted in ''The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex'' were another major inspiration.
145* RiverOfInsanity: Despite being set on the high seas, the story gradually becomes this as everything seems to conspire against them, which only makes Ahab more determined to push on.
146* RousingSpeech: Several, but the most notable and dramatic happens with the St. Elmo's Fire scene, where the crew swears loyalty to their captain after seeing how [[NervesOfSteel fearless]] he is.
147* RuleOfThree: Lampshaded. On the third day of the chase, Ahab cheers the crew by telling them all drowning beings come up twice before sinking for the final time, vowing to kill Moby Dick. [[spoiler:He's forgotten that he himself went overboard both days.]]
148* SavedByTheCoffin: Ishmael survives the sinking of the ''Pequod'' by clinging to the coffin intended for Queequeg.
149* ScavengedPunk:
150** Crossed with CreepyAwesome. Ahab asks the ship's blacksmith to build him a harpoon with a shaft forged from a bunch of horse-shoe nails used in races and the cutting edge from straight-razor blades, and he quenches it in the harpooneers' blood.
151** The ''Pequod'' itself, to an extent. Large parts of the bulwarks (side railings) are made from the bones of whales, and instead of a wheel, it has a tiller made from a whale's jaw.
152--->"A cannibal of a craft, tricking herself forth in the chased bones of her enemies."
153* ShoutOut: To ''Theatre/TheTempest'', when the sailors are discussing whether they will drown sooner or later, or live long enough to get hanged.
154* ShownTheirWork: The novel frequently digresses into the study of whales and the details of whaling -- everything from preparing the boats and harpoon lines to cooking the blubber down for its oil. The chapters can be separated into two groups, one forming a mini-encyclopedia of whaling and the other an adventure story (with a little of the encyclopedia still mixed in).
155* ShrunkenHead: The innkeeper tells Ishmael that Queequeg is off selling his shrunken heads, but Ishmael doesn't get it and freaks out when Queequeg shows up in the shared bedroom with one.
156* SpareAMessenger: Ishmael the mariner ponders being the sole survivor of the doomed whaler ''Pequod'', and concludes that he was spared by the vengeful behemoth precisely to pen the tale as a warning to all others that would think to pursue the Great White Whale.
157* StrangerSafety: Ishmael isn't too put off by having to share a bed with a complete stranger, until he discovers the stranger in question is a WildSamoan. Note that that was how inns and guest houses worked back then. A bed to yourself was very, very expensive. It only gets truly homoerotic when they start spooning and Queequeg insists on grasping his harpoon all night.
158* SuddenlyEthnicity: Toyed with. Ishmael is shocked to discover that "the harpooner" is a South Seas native, but accepts it just as easily.
159* SuperPersistentPredator: Captain Ahab. A human version.
160* TakeThat: The novel has a few of these, generally presented in a very subtle fashion. Chapter 25, for example, gets in a few digs at kings and queens by comparing the anointment ritual at their coronation with putting oil on salad or lubricating a machine to make it run better. (This chapter was completely cut out of the first British edition of the novel, since it was seen as critical of the royal family.)
161* TakingYouWithMe:
162** Ahab makes his last attempt to kill the whale once his ship begins to sink and all is lost. The whale reverses things on him when trailing rope catches Ahab around the neck and drags him under.
163** The sinking ship does this to all the crew except Ishmael; one of the doomed crewmen does this to a frigatebird in his final seconds, causing it to go under as well. The narrative attributes the bird's death to the malice of the ship.
164--->[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.
165* TalkLikeAPirate: {{Justified|Trope}}. "Avast" is an actual period nautical command, and it (and a few others) are used correctly in the story. There is no "Arr", though, because that's a Bristol accent and these guys are mostly American.
166* ThinkingOutLoud: Nearly every character with dialogue makes at least one such speech.
167* TitleDropChapter: When Moby Dick, the legendary whale, finally appears in chapter 41 of the eponymous book after much anticipation, the chapter pays service to this fact by bearing the title "Moby-Dick".
168* TomSwifty: "For hate's sake I spit my last breath at thee!", he wailed.
169* TruthInTelevision: Believe it or not, this book was based very heavily on a true story. Although, the story of ''Moby-Dick'' is quite a "softened" version of the actual events -- the ''real'' tale is far more gruesome and chilling. [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essex_%28whaleship%29 Read for yourself]]. Also, it should be noted the angry ship-sinking cetacean was actually a sperm whale. Chapter XLV of the novel itself cites the real-life story as evidence that a sperm whale can indeed sink a ship.
170%%** The entire crew to Ahab.
171* {{Tuckerization}}:
172** At one point, Ishmael recounts the career of a sea captain named D'Wolf, mentioning that "I have the honor to be a nephew of his". John D'Wolf was a real person, and Herman Melville was actually his nephew.
173** Starbuck gets his name from a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starbuck_(whaling_family) prominent line]] of Nantucket whalers.
174* UnreliableNarrator: A particular problem for critics is that Ishmael is a mere sailor on the ''Pequod'', quite distant from Stubb, Starbuck and Ahab, certainly not on a FirstNameBasis with them, but somehow he relates actions and incidents where he could not possibly have been present and gone acknowledged. The shift in style is also part of it. This blending of narration is one reason why the book is a perennial favorite, especially for people interested in {{Deconstruction}} and PostModernism.
175* VillainousVow: Captain Ahab swears that he will kill the eponymous white whale Moby Dick at any cost, and will chase him to hell and back before he gives him up. It doesn't end well.
176* WhatDidYouExpectWhenYouNamedIt: The ''Pequod'' is named after the Pequot Indians, who at the time of the story were "now extinct as the ancient Medes".
177* WhoNamesTheirKidDude: Lampshaded. When Ishmael hears the captain's name for the first time, he asks why anyone would name their kid Ahab. The crewman notes that Ahab's mother was a religious type whose sanity was questionable.
178* WhyDontYouJustShootHim: Starbuck wrestles with this, as he considers just shooting Ahab to save everyone else, but murder and mutiny are against his principles.
179* WoodenShipsAndIronMen: Complete with cries of "Avast!"
180* WorkingClassHero: The crew of the ''Pequod'' are placed in an epic tradition that goes back to ''Literature/TheOdyssey'' and Jason and the Argonauts, but all of them are simply whalers and fishermen, as the endless technical description of whaling bring forth. Captain Ahab is often described as the first working-class TragicHero in the epic tradition of Achilles, Hamlet and Milton's Satan.
181-->"Bear me out in it, thou great democratic God! who didst not refuse to the swart convict, Bunyan, the pale, poetic pearl; Thou who didst clothe with doubly hammered leaves of finest gold, the stumped and paupered arm of old Cervantes; Thou who didst pick up Andrew Jackson from the pebbles; who didst hurl him upon a war-horse; who didst thunder him higher than a throne! Thou who, in all Thy mighty, earthly marchings, ever cullest Thy selectest champions from the kingly commoners; bear me out in it, O God!"
182* YouCantFightFate: Played with in all sorts of ways. Ahab's quest to Moby Dick could have been forgone several times, and Ahab himself could have been mutinied or stopped anytime, but despite these temptations and brief moments of reason, they press on to the doomed quest against the Whale.
183* YouCannotGraspTheTrueForm: The White Whale is deliberately portrayed in the narrative as enigmatic, its symbolism is not wasted on Captain Ahab. Ishmael describes the whale's forehead as having wrinkles and scars on it that look like ''hieroglyphics'', implying it's some kind of ancient forgotten deity. He muses on the difficulty of understanding what he saw. The mystical yet ineffable nature of the beast haunts him for the rest of his life.

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