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Moby Dick


             The novel Moby Dick, by Herman Melville, is one of American Literatures most .
             The novel is bold and intriguing, captivating the reader with it's intense .
             emotion and strong personalities. With this emotion and power of character, Herman .
             Melville's Moby Dick, nakedly exposes raw humanity in all its glory and fault. The .
             shadows of the soul with in Ishmael, Queequeg, and Ahab are illuminated, revealing their .
             everlasting internal battles regarding religion, life, and the great white Whale. .
             The three characters, Ahab, Ishmael, and Queequeg all have a religious .
             component woven into their complex personas which become the novel's most striking .
             quality. Ishmael, a Christian young man with an open mind and Queequeg, a pagan .
             Polynesian harpooner, share a similar foundation consisting of their belief in one God.
             Ishmael worships the god common to his home and heritage, Christianity. Queequeg, .
             being pagan, devotes his faith life to a black wood idol, Yojo. Though their God's do not .
             share the same name and composition, they both serve as examples pure and divine with in .
             their hearts. Together they discover that "a man's soul is more important than his .
             appearance or denomination" (cliff), they closer through spirituality. A deep trust is shown .
             through Ishmael's expression of his hearts deepest inquiry when he and Queequeg grow .
             in spirituality together through worshipping Yojo over a smoke. .
             " Do you suppose now, Ishmael, that the magnanimous God of heaven and earth- .
             pagans and all include- can worship?- to do the will of God- that is worshiped. And what .
             is the will of God?- to do to my fellow man what I would have fellow man to do to me- .
             that is the will of God." (Melville, p.57).
             Divergent to the religious practices of Ishmael of Queequeg, Ahab, doesn't show .
             an unconditional, dependence upon one divine being, or any for that matter. His faith in a .
             higher being is subdued do to his unhealthy belief in the idea that he is a God.


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