Monday, November 28, 2022

Moby Dick

"And I only am escaped alone to tell ye." Job

That's done, then. After three attempts throughout my life, I have finally read Melville's epic tale to completion.
I will say that I’ve been of mixed mind about it while at it. I pondered, as I plodded through, that I must be in error in my opinion; greater minds than mine, Harold Bloom's for instance, extoll the virtues of this American masterpiece. But despite repeated rereading I found the prose to be perplexing, inscrutable, and exhaustingly difficult, and passages, if not whole chapters, unfathomable. Just words. There were, to my mind, a great number of inexplicably pointless chapters, at the end of each, I've paused and wondered what I'd just read. Descriptions of paintings, erroneous exclamations on anatomy and history, pontification, passages describing the hunt, the tools of the trade, the skinning the whales, none of which I could actually picture by means of the text.
Yet, there are passages that are fluid, truly brilliant: The rift and struggle between Ahab and Starbuck, for instance. Yet these are widely spaced by those inexplicable chapters noted above that have nothing to do with the narrative of the tale.
There are aspects of its being a masterpiece, which I cannot deny: It's positively Shakespearian in its scope and its climax. Indeed, it's replete with soliloquies towards the end, Ahab's, Starbuck's, Stubb's, even Pip's; but none from Ishmael, not a one.
My criticism, if I may be so presumptuous, is in its voice: Ishmael is its initial narrator, and he remains as much, mostly; yet there are whole passages where he could never be; and by the novel's end, Ishmael is but an afterthought, the voice having passed to third-person omnipotence. Ishmael and Queequeg, who loomed so large in the first 150 pages are all but abandoned for the greater and decidedly more important tale: Ahab's blind obsession, and Starbuck's opposition to it.
How would I, in my hubris, have imagined this epic saga? I'd have kept Ishmael's voice and woven the tale of Ahab's obsession and his seduction of the crew as it unfolds from Starbuck's whaling boat and crew, seeing that Ishmael was Starbuck's oarsman, and Queequeg, Starbuck's harpooner. Why should Starbuck confide in so lowly an oarsman? Because Ishmael is a New Yorker, an educated man by all accounts, and he would appear worldly to a Nantucketer. Thus, we are given insight into Starbuck's views, just as we experience Ahab's monomaniacal obsession from afar, looming large and increasingly shadowing their limited macrocosmic view of the world, that of the microcosmic deck of the ship.
Shall I revisit this American masterpiece? I shall. Immediately, in fact, albeit more slowly, even if this rereading takes a year (although, I doubt that will be the case). I've only done this once before, with Falkner's "As I Lay Dying," which I found as equally incomprehensible as this book until its very end. Then, as now, I plumbed the final chapter, closed the covers, and then cracked them again, at the beginning, with an understanding that enlightens the text that was altogether shrouded in its initial unfolding.

House of Leaves

  “Maturity, one discovers, has everything to do with the acceptance of ‘not knowing.” ―  Mark Z. Danielewski,  House of Leaves Once you rea...