Pequod (Moby-Dick)

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The Pequod is the fictional 19th century Nantucket whaling ship that appears in the 1851 novel Moby-Dick by U.S. author Herman Melville. The Pequod and her crew, commanded by Captain Ahab, figure prominently in the story, which after the initial chapters takes place nearly entirely aboard the ship during a long three-year whaling cruise in the South Pacific and Indian Oceans. Most of the characters in the novel are part of the crew of the ship, including the narrator Ishmael.

Descriptions of the ship appear throughout the novel, with certain chapters devoted more specifically to the working of the ship and its crew. The depiction of life aboard the ship, although fictionalized, was based on Melville's own experiences in whaling (aboard the Achushnet in the 1840s) and thus can be taken in many ways as representative of mid-19th century Nantucket whaling. The ship is ostensively named for the Algonquian-speaking Pequot tribe of Native Americans who inhabited New England along Long Island Sound during the 17th century but who were annihilated during the Pequot War, "now extinct as the ancient Medes" (Ch. XVI). The reference to a doomed tribe highlights the fate of the ship and its crew in the novel. Melville somewhat based the story of the ship's ill-fated struggle with a sperm whale and its subsequent demise on that of the real-life Whaleship Essex.

[edit] Depictions of the ship from the novel

The ship is first encountered by Ishmael in Chapter XVI ("The Ship"), where Ishmael, after arriving in Nantucket with Queequeg, learns of three ships that are about to leave on three-year cruises (the other two are the Devil-Dam and the Titbit). Ishmael selects the Pequod among the three, and Queequeg ships with him, having already entrusted his own fate to Ishmael's decision. Ishmael initially describes the ship as old with advanced weathering from her many voyages. She is at least 50 years old, and was thus probably built in the 1790s. She is "of the old school, rather small if anything; with an old-fashioned claw-footed look about her." At the time of the story, the ship is already old and weathered by many voyages and encounters with typhoons: "her old hull's complexion was darkened like a French grenadier's, who has alike fought in Egypt and Siberia." Her decks appear "ancient..worn and wrinkled , like the pilgrim-worshipped flag-stone in Canterbury Cathedral where Beckett (sic) bled."

The ship is three-masted, like most Nantucket whalers of its day (and like the storm-tossed ship in the painting at the entrance of the Spouter Inn in New Bedford). The three masts of the ship are recent replacements, having been cut somewhere on the coast of Japan after the previous ones were lost overboard in a gale.

The ship is owned by a partnership among the Quaker captains Ahab, Bildad, and Peleg, as well as numerous other unspecified citizens of Nantucket, in particular "widows and orphans". Peleg has served as first mate for many years aboard her before obtaining his own command and later retiring from the sea.