leg to the White Whale during his previous voyage, he found his agonies, both physical and mental, unbearable, and his mates had no choice but to âlace him fast, . . . raving in his hammock.â As the ship pounded through a succession of terrible gales and Ahab swung back and forth, writhing and screaming within his makeshift straitjacket, a terrible transformation took place within him: â[H]is torn body and gashed soul bled into one another; and so interfus-ing, made him mad.â
In his madness, Ahab came to see Moby Dick as more than a mere whale; he was âthe monomaniac incarnation of all those malicious agencies which some deep men feel eating in them, till they are left living on with half a heart and half a lung.... [A]ll evil, to crazy Ahab, [was] visibly personified, and made practically assailable in Moby Dick.â Once back on Nantucket, Ahab seemed to have fully recovered his senses. In truth, âhis hidden self, raved on,â and he resolved to set out on another voyage and kill the White Whale.
To assist him in his deranged quest, Ahab decided to enlist his own whaleboat crew made up of four oarsmen from Manila (âa race,â Ishmael claims, ânotorious for a certain diabolism of subtilty, and . . . supposed to be the paid spies and secret confidential agents . . . of the devilâ) and the harpooneer Fedallah, âtall and swart, with one white tooth evilly protruding from [his] steel-like lips.â Hidden in the Pequod âs hold, Fedallah and his four oarsmen are not revealed to the rest of the shipâs crew until the first whale is sighted long after theyâve left Nantucket.
I must admit that it wasnât until my most recent reading of Moby-Dick that I came to appreciate the importance of Fedallah. He and his men from Manila are much more than infernal window dressing. They are essential to what makes Ahab Ahab because no leader, no matter how deranged, is without his inner circle of advisers, the handlers who keep him on task.
We never find out the details of how Ahab first met Fedallah, but we do learn that something unspeakably strange happened to the Pequod âs captain prior to the shipâs departure from Nantucket. Ishmael reports that he was found lying on the ground, with his whalebone leg âviolently displacedâ and driven âstake-wiseâ into his groin. The victim of an apparent accident, Ahab in his agonizing helplessness has yet another debilitating injury to blame on Moby Dick. Whether or not this humiliating mishap convinced him that he needed supernatural support, one thing does become clear: no crew member aboard the Pequod is more important to Ahab than the turbaned soothsayer Fedallah.
8
The Anatomy of a Demagogue
T o be in the presence of a great leader is to know a blighted soul who has managed to make the darkness work for him. Ishmael says it best: âFor all men tragically great are made so through a certain morbidness. Be sure of this, O young ambition, all mortal greatness is but disease.â In chapter 36, âThe Quarter-Deck,â Melville shows us how susceptible we ordinary people are to the seductive power of a great and demented man.
At the beginning of the chapter, Ahab seethes with barely contained energy as he paces back and forth across the deck, the point of his whalebone leg leaving the wood âdented, like geological stones.â Stubb, the second mate, observes that âthe chick thatâs in him pecks the shell.â And then it begins, Ahabâs version of a command performance. Until this point, he has not revealed the secret purpose of the voyage. What he wants to do is illegal. He has not been hired by the Pequod âs owners to revenge himself on a white whale. However, if he can win the crew and his pliable second and third mates to his purpose, perhaps he can bulldoze the first mate, Starbuck, into accepting the inevitable.
He orders Starbuck to âsend