Raw Animal Instinct Of Moby Dick example essay topic
Starbuck and Ahab are looking at a map that shows all the whales paths, feeding, and breeding grounds, and tells when, and what kind of whales will be there. This map could lead them to thousands of whales, but Ahab puts this gigantic opportunity aside saying, No, we are hunting for Moby Dick. This map could make every person on the boat rich, they would not have to work another day in their lives. But Ahab is so obsessed with killing Moby he turns it all down. Additional substantiation is that at least three times throughout the story, when Ahab gets a clue as to where Moby is, the first question he asks is Did you kill him. This demonstrates his madness in that it would not be good enough if Moby is dead, unless Ahab kills him himself.
Further confirmation of Mobys innocence, and Ahabs diablerie, is found when Ahab leaves a hunt of what is said to be over two hundred whales, because he gets a tip about the whereabouts of Moby Dick. Ahab is so vengeful he avers that he would strike the sun if it wronged him. When the men final find Moby, Ahab literally ties himself to the whale and stabs his harpoon in and out of the whales flesh. One of the very few arguments opposing the ingenuousness of Moby is the fact that, after being stabbed by Ahab, he destroys The Peqoud seemingly making sure to kill everyone on it.
This, however, is hardly an argument against Moby because it is a pure animal instinct, and it was well provoked. The book Moby Dick is intended to be a very real story, and the only truly, evil animals exist in fiction (take for example Disney Movies). The great white whale, Moby Dick, in Melvilles book Moby Dick, exemplifies the twisting of facts, and the bias of man against animals. Moby Dick was only hunted by Ahab because of Ahabs evil, not Mobys. Moby Dick displayed no proof of his evil, and in fact displayed proof of his innocence. Kevin Cook.