As our main characters, Ishmeal and Queequeg finally board the ship, we eagerly await the reveal of the mystical captain Ahab. Thus far in the novel, Ahab has only been introduced through the perspective of other characters—but has yet to be witnessed in person.
His character not being seen but only speculated about, creates a mysterious and intriguing aura that suggests the importance of Ahab as a character to the story’s ultimate driving direction. I would even go as far as to say Ahab is a representation of the Prophet that will guide the crew to their destiny on their journey through the ocean. Much like Jesus Christ guiding the direction of the religious experience for his disciples. However, this ultimately leads me to believe that his fate, and that of his crew will end in the same tragic style of the death of Jesus.
This is hinted at in the subtle allusion to biblical text and the relation to his status and royalty. The power of God is built upon faith, and in many aspects, this is similar to the role of a ship captain—the crew must put their faith in the captain’s ability to lead them.
IF we consider the Ocean as a sort of religious experience, it opens the possibility for those who are conduits of this experience to guide this journey. In this case the captain becomes a prophet dedicated to the ocean, a status that is indirectly above regality.
“He who is the rightly regal and intelligent spirits presides over his own private dinner table of invited guests, that man’s unchallenged power and dominion of individual influences for the time; that man’s royalty of state transcends Beshazzar’s [King of Bablyon]” (162).
This sentiment encapsulates the idea of the captain holding a higher rank than even that of royalty. Considering that royalty is a God given state, it positions God above the royals—and in this sentiment, the captain is above them as well. The language used to describe this state is also specifically biblical, showing that the power is that of a spiritual nature as well as the hierarchy of roles. This situates the status of captain as being that of something godly but not all power. As the story progresses, Ahab will be the one to lead them on the hunt—with the power to steer the direction of their destinies. The question now, is whether he’ll lead them towards glory and heaven or hardship and hell.