Yousuf Shwiha
Class: ENG 522
Dr. Jessica Pressman
October 19, 2025
Importance of the Jacket
Early in Moby-Dick, Ishmael wanders into the Whaleman’s Chapel during stormy weather. The shift in atmosphere— “clear, sunny cold” turning to “driving sleet and mist” (39)—sets a tone of uncertainty and foreboding. This passage demonstrates how Melville uses natural imagery and religious setting to link the sea’s harshness with human fragility, creating a moment that dramatizes the spiritual and existential anxieties that underline the novel. Ishmael’s protective jacket, I argue represents safety from the uncontrollable forces of nature. The congregation of sailors and widows all work together to foreshadow the danger of whaling and the inevitability of death, suggesting that Melville uses these images not only as narrative detail, but also as symbolic warnings about the futility of resisting mortality in a profession built on peril.
“The sky had changed from clear, sunny cold, to driving sleet and mist” (39). Melville juxtaposes clarity and brightness with sudden storminess. The transformation reflects how quickly the sea—and life—can change. The diction (“driving sleet,” “mist”) conveys both physical struggle and obscurity of vision. The weather doesn’t just inconvenience Ishmael; it symbolically enacts the unpredictability of fate. The novel often links nature’s instability to human destiny. This foreshadows the Pequod’s doomed voyage and establishes an atmosphere of existential uncertainty. Ishmael’s perception of the storm becomes a metaphor for human attempts to navigate meaning in an unstable world. This sudden shift in weather also underscores the ever-present danger of whaling, where safety can collapse into catastrophe without warning. By casting the storm as both literal and symbolic, Melville reminds readers that mortality is never far from the sailors ‘reality. This, the storm becomes an early warning of the futility of resisting death in a profession defined by risk. My evidence from the Moby-Dick is the Storm “The sky had changed from clear, sunny cold, to driving sleet and mist” (p.39).
“Wrapping myself in my shaggy jacket of the cloth called bearskin, I fought my way against the stubborn storm.” (39) The “bearskin” jacket suggests both protection and a kind of animal disguise. The Jacket in Moby-Dick symbolizes Ishmael’s fragile protection against the immense, uncontrollable forces of nature. It represents the illusion of safety and human endurance in a world governed by chaos and fate. Through this small, personal object, Melville highlights how humans cling to material or spiritual defenses that ultimately cannot shield them from the vast power of the sea or mortality itself. “I wrapped myself in my jacket, and tucking my hands deep down into its pocket, sat down in a corner. I felt as though I had been sliding down into a hollow, dismal gulf.” (Ch. 7, p.38). Ishmael must armor himself against nature. The verbs “wrapping” and “fought” emphasize physical exertion, showing man’s effort to resist elemental power. This imagery raises questions about the human/animal divide. To survive, Ishmael doesn’t have an animal skin, blurring lines between civilization and primal endurance. This foreshadows how whalemen must constantly wrestle with their environment, often reduced to instinct and brute survival. Symbolically, it suggests that human resilience comes through merging with, rather than conquering, the natural world. Yet even this act of protection carries irony, since no jacket can ultimately shield a sailor from the inevitability of death at sea. The bearskin emphasizes how fragile human defenses truly are when confronted with the ocean’s vast and unpredictable force. Melville uses this detail as a symbolic warning that survival is temporary, and mortality remains inescapable despite every effort to resist it. My evidence from the Moby-Dick is the Jacket “The cold sleet and snow beat through my jacket as if it were paper” (39).
“Entering, I found a small, scattered congregation of sailors, and sailors’ wives and widows” (39). The shift indoors contrasts with the storm outside, yet the chapel carries its own storm: grief and absence. The description emphasizes sparsity (“small,” “scattered”) and loss (“widows”). It is not a triumphant congregation, but one marked by mourning. Melville links the physical storm to the spiritual storms faced by seafaring communities. The widows stand as living reminders of death at sea. This anticipates Father Maple’s sermon and the broader theme of whaling as not only economic labor but also a confrontation with mortality, sin, and divine justice. The very presence of widows underscores that death is not a distant threat, but a constant reality embedded in the lives of those tied to the sea. Their grief serves as a collective warning to many who venture on whaling voyages, by juxtaposing the chapel’s quiet sorrow with the violent unpredictability of the ocean, Melville reveals how mortality permeates both the spiritual and physical worlds. In this way, the congregation itself becomes a symbolic reminder that whaling is inseparable from loss and death, My evidence from the Moby-Dick is the Congregation “The chapel was not crowded, but silent and solemn” (p.40).
Through the storm, Ishmael’s bearskin jacket, and the mournful congregation of sailors and widows, Melville underscores both the peril of whaling and the certainty of death, using these images not merely as descriptive detail but as symbolic reminders of humanity’s fragile struggle against forces it can never ultimately escape. Melville crafts this brief passage to interlace natural imagery, bodily struggle, and communal mourning, thereby dramatizing the precariousness of human life in a world governed by both natural forces and spiritual anxieties. The passage exemplifies Moby-Dick’s broader concern with how individuals face overwhelming power—whether nature, fate, or God. The moment matters because it shows that before Ishmael even boards the Pequod, he is already immersed in an environment where storm and faith, survival and death, are inseparably entwined. It establishes the tension between man’s fragile defenses and the vastness of forces beyond his control, a theme that resonates throughout the novel. By linking the storm, Ishmael’s protective jacket, and the mourning congregation, Melville layers symbolic warnings that death is unavoidable in the whaling life. Each image reminds readers that human attempts to shield themselves-can never fully overcome mortality. Instead, these details foreshadow the Pequod’s doomed voyage, where resistance to fate only highlights its inevitability. In this way, Melville situates whaling as both a literal and existential struggle against forces far greater than man.