Chapter 134: Seeking the Thing That Could Destroy

Towards the beginning of chapter 134 I read this part which had their impending doom coming for them. “Clinging to a spar with one hand some reached for the other with impatient wavings; others, shading their eyes from the vivid sunlight, sat far out on the rocking yards; all the spars in full bearing of mortals, ready and ripe for their fate. Ah! how they still strove through that infinite blueness to seek out the thing that might destory them.” This foreshadows what is to come of their fates in just one more chapter as they finally come across the whale.

These lines prove that these men were ready for what was to come upon them with this mission to find and kill this whale. “Clining to a spar” illustrates that these men were armed with the means to kill this whale with their harpoons. “Impatient wavings” shows that their are waiting to see this whale so they can kill him immediately and get this mission over so that they can get their money that Ahab promised them. Some of their other crewmates waited patiently as they were “shading their eyes from the vivid sunlight” showing that they were waiting for the sun to go down as they were in their positions waiting to see the whale breech in the water. They were very adamant about finding this whale as this was Ahab’s wish, to find and kill the whale even if it was dangerous. The line “all the spars in full bearing of mortals, ready and ripe for their fate” shows that these men were in a vulnerable position abord the Pequod as they were hunting down the thing that would surely destory them easily. They were all in their designated spots in case the whale was seen to that they can easily take him down. Ahab was so crazy that they did all of this for a whale that he was so passionate about killing that they “strove through that infinate blueness” the world’s many oceans so that he can take vengance against this whale. This Moby Dick is the most dangerous and powerful creature in this ocean and they wanted “to seek out the thing that might destory them” which again proves they would do all of this for money and passion.

Ahab and these men were so adamant about finding this whale that it does lead to their destruction in the end. This foreshadowing shows us that they are doomed in the end. They won’t return home, Ahab won’t get his victory, but they did so much to get to this point.

Chapter One-Hundred Thirty Five

In Chapter 135, “The Chase—The Third Day”, Ahab’s final cry, “Towards thee I roll, thou all-destroying but unconquering whale … from hell’s heart I stab at thee; for hate’s sake I spit my last breath at thee”, serves as the ultimate expression of his monomaniacal defiance. It reveals how his Obsession transforms him into a tragic figure who seeks meaning in a universe that offers none. Spoken in the climactic moment of the final chase, the passage occurs at the precise point where Ahab’s quest can no longer be sustained by rhetoric, willpower, or self-mythologizing, he is quite literally being pulled toward death, yet he insists on framing his struggle as an extraordinary battle. The language of the passage shows how completely Ahab’s identity has collapsed into hatred, spitting verbs such as grapple, stab, and spit form a relentless chain of physical aggression that contrasts with his powerlessness. By calling the whale “all destroying but conquering,” Ahab asserts a moral victory even as he is defeated, clinging to the belief that his refusal to yield to the whale makes him superior to the indifferent force that has destroyed him. This is crucial because the whale itself is not malicious, it’s the people surrounding the whale that are malicious, making the whale a representation to the impersonal vastness of nature or fate. Ahab’s language with “from hell’s heart” echoes defiance, reinforcing the idea that he casts himself as a cosmic rebel battling an order he perceives as unjust. The final command with “Sink all coffins and all hearses to one common pool!, dramatizes his rejection of human mortality and meaning. He calls for the destruction of all symbols of orderly death, signaling his desire to obliterate the structures that deny him control. This moment is important not only as the climax of this event but it also culminates many themes that are important to the novel like the self-destruction inherent in obsession and the tragic futility of attempting to impose human meaning onto nature. This passage represents Ahab’s transformation into the embodiment of his own rage; an extraordinary but doomed figure who mistakes defiance for victory as he plunges to his death.