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Translated from Amazon using Google translate: Melville starts from afar. Initiations, introductions, philosophical arguments about the benefits of sea voyages are, we note, from the first person, on behalf of Ishmael. Initially, Izmail appears before the reader is a mature, wise man. Then suddenly it turns out that Ishmael is a very young man, a romantic hero who wants to see the world. Behavior, words, deeds, thoughts vividly testify to this. His acquaintance with Quique, the entire length of time before getting on board the Pecoda, all this concerns young Ishmael. Here it becomes clear that the original "Ismail philosopher" is someone else, perhaps the author himself.
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Previews available in: Russian English Spanish German French
Subjects
American Sea stories, Mentally ill, Whaling, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Whales, great_books_of_the_western_world, Translations into French, Literature, Captain Ahab (Fictitious character), American Adventure stories, Sailors, Sea stories, Classic Literature, Whaling in literature, Young Adult Fiction, Open Library Staff Picks, open_syllabus_project, Fiction, Ship captains, Whaling ships, Juvenile fiction, Chasse, Whales in literature, Shipwrecks, Baleines, Long Now Manual for Civilization, General, Children: Grades 4-6, American fiction (fictional works by one author), Ahab, captain (fictitious character), fiction, Whaling, fiction, Children's fiction, Whales, fiction, Fiction, action & adventure, Fiction, psychological, Literature and fiction (general), Fiction, sea stories, Fiction, fantasy, epic, Poetry (poetic works by one author), Melville, herman, 1819-1891, American literature, history and criticism, Sea stories, history and criticism, Large type books, Literature and fiction, action and adventure, Illustrations, Pictorial works, Drama (dramatic works by one author), Picture-writing in literature, Readers (Primary), Readers for new literates, Adventure and adventurers, fiction, Ballenas, Ficción, Capitanes de barcos, Enfermos mentales, Naufragios, Cuentos de mar, Novela psicológica, Romance literature, Epic literature, Adventure fiction, Allegories, Whalers (Persons), Drama, Revenge, Prohibition, Achab (Personnage fictif), Romans, nouvelles, Capitaines de navire, Personnes vivant avec un trouble de santé mentale, Action & Adventure, Walfang, Moby Dick (Melville, Herman), Fiction, historical, general, Fiction, general, Moby Dick, Literatura infantil, Ahab, captain (fictitious character), Ahab, captain (fictitious character)--fiction, Whales--fiction, Whaling--fiction, Ps2384.m6 m45 1992, 813/.3, Whaling ships--fiction, Ship captains--fiction, Mentally ill--fiction, Ps2384 .m6 2001c, Shipwrecks--fiction, Sailors--fiction, Ps2384 .m6 2003b, Melville, herman , 1819-1891, Ps2384 .m6 2002, Comics & graphic novels, general, Comic books, strips, etc., Fate and fatalism, Symbolism, Récits de merPeople
Herman Melville (1819-1891)Places
Massachusetts, Nantucket IslandShowing 15 featured editions. View all 1116 editions?
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Moby Dick: die Jagd nach dem weissen Wal
1994, Ensslin und Laiblin
in German
- 175. - 177. Tsd.
3770901010 9783770901012
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Novel.
In Russian, translated from English.
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The Physical Object
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Work Description
"Command the murderous chalices! Drink ye harpooners! Drink and swear, ye men that man the deathful whaleboat's bow -- Death to Moby Dick!" So Captain Ahab binds his crew to fulfil his obsession -- the destruction of the great white whale. Under his lordly but maniacal command the Pequod's commercial mission is perverted to one of vengeance. To Ahab, the monster that destroyed his body is not a creature, but the symbol of "some unknown but still reasoning thing." Uncowed by natural disasters, ill omens, even death, Ahab urges his ship towards "the undeliverable, nameless perils of the whale." Key letters from Melville to Nathaniel Hawthorne are printed at the end of this volume. - Back cover.
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