Lyrics Chapter 003 - Herman Melville
Chapter
1 Loomings.
Call
me
Ishmael.
Some
years
ago—never
mind
how
long
precisely—having
little
or
no
Money
in
my
purse,
and
nothing
particular
to
interest
me
on
shore,
I
thought
I
would
sail
about
a
little
And
see
the
watery
part
of
the
world.
It
is
a
way
I
have
of
driving
off
the
Spleen
and
regulating
the
circulation.
Whenever
I
find
myself
growing
grim
about
the
mouth;
Whenever
it
is
a
damp,
drizzly
November
in
my
soul;
Whenever
I
find
myself
involuntarily
pausing
before
coffin
warehouses,
And
bringing
up
the
rear
of
every
funeral
I
meet;
And
especially
whenever
my
hypos
get
such
an
upper
hand
of
me,
That
it
requires
a
strong
moral
principle
to
prevent
me
from
Deliberately
stepping
into
the
street,
And
methodically
knocking
people's
hats
off—then,
I
account
it
high
time
to
get
to
sea
as
soon
as
I
can.
This
is
my
substitute
for
pistol
and
ball.
With
a
philosophical
flourish
Cato
throws
Himself
upon
his
sword;
I
quietly
take
to
the
ship.
T
here
is
nothing
surprising
in
this.
If
they
but
knew
it,
almost
all
men
in
their
degree,
Some
time
or
other,
Cherish
very
nearly
the
same
feelings
towards
the
ocean
with
me.
T
here
now
is
your
insular
city
of
the
Manhattoes,
Belted
round
by
wharves
as
Indian
isles
by
Coral
reefs—commerce
surrounds
it
with
her
surf.
Right
and
left,
the
streets
takeyou
waterward.
Its
extreme
downtown
is
the
battery,
Where
that
noble
mole
is
washed
by
waves,
And
cooled
by
breezes,
Which
a
few
hours
previous
were
out
of
sight
of
land.
Look
at
the
crowds
of
water-gazers
there.
Circumambulate
the
city
of
a
dreamy
Sabbath
afternoon.
Go
from
Corlears
Hook
to
Coenties
Slip,
And
from
thence,
by
Whitehall,
northward.
What
do
you
see?—Posted
like
silent
sentinels
all
around
the
town,
Stand
thousands
upon
thousands
of
mortal
men
fixed
in
ocean
reveries.
Some
leaning
against
the
spiles;
some
seated
upon
the
pier-heads;
Some
looking
over
the
bulwarks
of
ships
from
China;
Some
high
aloft
in
the
rigging,
As
if
striving
to
get
a
still
better
seaward
peep.
But
these
are
all
landsmen;
Of
week
days
pent
up
in
lath
and
plaster—tied
To
counters,
nailed
to
benches,
clinched
to
desks.
How
then
is
this?
Are
the
green
fields
gone?
What
do
they
here?
But
look!
Here
come
more
crowds,
Pacing
straight
for
the
water,
and
seemingly
bound
for
a
dive.
Strange!
Nothing
will
content
them
but
the
extremest
limit
of
the
land;
Loitering
under
the
shady
lee
of
yonder
warehouses
will
not
suffice.
No.
They
must
get
just
as
nigh
the
water
As
they
possibly
can
without
falling
in.
And
there
they
stand—miles
of
them—leagues.
Inlanders
all,
they
come
from
lanes
and
alleys,
Streets
and
avenues—north,
east,
south,
and
west.
Yet
here
they
all
unite.
Tell
me,
does
the
magnetic
virtue
of
the
needles
of
The
compasses
of
all
those
ships
attract
them
thither?
Once
more.
Say
you
are
in
the
country;
in
some
high
land
of
lakes.
Take
almost
any
path
you
please,
and
ten
to
One
it
carries
you
down
in
a
dale,
And
leaves
you
there
by
a
pool
in
the
stream.
There
is
magic
in
it.
Let
the
most
absentminded
of
men
be
plunged
in
his
deepest
Reveries—stand
that
man
on
his
legs,
set
his
feet
a-going,
And
he
will
infallibly
lead
you
to
Water,
if
water
there
be
in
all
that
region.
Should
you
ever
be
athirst
in
the
great
American
desert,
Try
this
experiment,
If
your
caravan
happen
to
be
supplied
with
a
metaphysical
professor.
Yes,
as
every
one
knows,
meditation
and
water
are
wedded
for
ever.
But
here
is
an
artist.
He
desires
to
paint
you
the
dreamiest,
shadiest,
quietest,
Most
enchanting
bit
of
romantic
Landscape
in
all
the
valley
of
the
Saco.
What
is
the
chief
element
he
employs?
There
stand
his
trees,
each
with
a
hollow
trunk,
As
if
a
hermit
and
a
crucifix
were
within;
and
here
sleeps
his
meadow,
And
there
sleep
his
cattle;
And
up
from
yonder
cottage
goes
a
sleepy
smoke.
Deep
into
distant
woodlands
winds
a
mazy
way,
Reaching
to
overlapping
spurs
of
Mountains
bathed
in
their
hill-side
blue.
But
though
the
picture
lies
thus
tranced,
And
though
this
pine-tree
shakes
down
its
sighs
like
leaves
upon
this
Shepherd's
head,
yet
all
were
vain,
Unless
the
shepherd's
eye
were
Fixed
upon
the
magic
stream
before
him.
Go
visit
the
Prairies
in
June,
When
for
scores
on
scores
of
miles
you
wade
knee-deep
among
Tiger-lilies—what
is
the
one
charm
wanting?
—Water—there
is
not
a
drop
of
water
there!
Were
Niagara
but
a
cataract
of
sand,
Would
you
travel
your
thousand
miles
to
see
it?
Why
did
the
poor
poet
of
Tennessee,
Upon
suddenly
receiving
two
handfuls
of
silver,
Deliberate
whether
to
buy
him
a
coat,
which
he
sadly
needed,
Or
invest
his
money
in
a
pedestrian
trip
to
Rockaway
Beach?
Why
is
almost
every
robust
healthy
boy
with
a
robust
Healthy
soul
in
him,
at
some
time
or
other
crazy
to
go
to
sea?
Why
upon
your
first
voyage
as
a
passenger,
Did
you
yourself
feel
such
a
mystical
vibration,
When
first
told
that
you
and
your
ship
were
now
out
of
sight
of
land?
Why
did
the
old
Persians
hold
the
sea
holy?
Why
did
the
Greeks
give
it
a
separate
deity,
and
own
brother
of
Jove?
Surely
all
this
is
not
without
meaning.
And
still
deeper
the
meaning
of
that
story
of
Narcissus,
Who
because
he
could
not
grasp
the
tormenting,
Mild
image
he
saw
in
the
fountain,
plunged
into
it
and
was
drowned.
But
that
same
image,
we
ourselves
see
in
all
rivers
and
oceans.
It
is
the
image
of
the
ungraspable
Phantom
of
life;
and
this
is
the
key
to
it
all.
Now,
when
I
say
that
I
am
in
the
habit
of
going
to
sea
whenever
I
Begin
to
grow
hazy
about
the
eyes,
And
begin
to
be
over
conscious
of
my
lungs,
I
do
not
mean
to
have
it
inferred
That
I
ever
go
to
sea
as
a
passenger.
For
to
go
as
a
passenger
you
must
needs
have
a
purse,
And
a
purse
is
but
a
rag
unless
you
have
something
in
it.
Besides,
passengers
get
sea-sick—grow
quarrelsome—don't
sleep
of
Nights—
do
not
enjoy
themselves
much,
as
a
general
thing;—no,
I
never
go
as
a
passenger;
nor,
Though
I
am
something
of
a
salt,
Do
I
ever
go
to
sea
as
a
Commodore,
or
a
Captain,
or
a
Cook.
I
abandon
the
glory
and
distinction
Of
such
offices
to
those
who
like
them.
For
my
part,
I
abominate
all
honourable
respectable
Toils,
trials,
and
tribulations
of
every
kind
whatsoever.
It
is
quite
as
much
as
I
can
do
to
take
care
of
myself,
Without
taking
care
of
ships,
Barques,
brigs,
schooners,
and
what
not.
And
as
for
going
as
cook,
—Though
I
confess
there
is
considerable
glory
in
that,
A
cook
being
a
sort
of
officer
on
ship-board—yet,
somehow,
I
never
fancied
broiling
fowls;—though
once
broiled,
Judiciously
buttered,
and
judgmatically
salted
and
peppered,
There
is
no
one
who
will
speak
more
respectfully,
Not
to
say
reverentially,
of
a
broiled
fowl
than
I
will.
It
is
out
of
the
idolatrous
dotings
of
the
old
Egyptians
upon
broiled
Ibis
and
roasted
river
horse,
That
you
see
the
mummies
of
those
Creatures
in
their
huge
bake-houses
the
pyramids.
No,
when
I
go
to
sea,
I
go
as
a
simple
sailor,
right
before
the
mast,
Plumb
down
into
the
forecastle,
aloft
there
to
the
royal
mast-head.
True,
they
rather
order
me
about
some,
And
make
me
jump
from
spar
to
spar,
Like
a
grasshopper
in
a
May
meadow.
And
at
first,
this
sort
of
thing
is
unpleasant
enough.
It
touches
one's
sense
of
honour,
Particularly
if
you
come
of
an
old
established
family
in
The
land,
the
Van
Rensselaers,
or
Randolphs,
or
Hardicanutes.
And
more
than
all,
if
just
previous
to
putting
your
hand
into
the
Tar-pot,
you
have
been
lording
it
as
a
country
Schoolmaster,
making
the
tallest
boys
stand
in
awe
of
you.
The
transition
is
a
keen
one,
I
assure
you,
From
a
schoolmaster
to
a
sailor,
And
requires
a
strong
decoction
of
Seneca
and
The
Stoics
to
enable
you
to
grin
and
bear
it.
But
even
this
wears
off
in
time.
What
of
it,
if
some
old
hunks
of
a
sea-captain
Orders
me
to
get
a
broom
and
sweep
down
the
decks?
What
does
that
indignity
amount
to,
weighed,
I
mean,
in
the
scales
of
the
New
Testament?
Do
you
think
the
archangel
Gabriel
thinks
anything
the
less
of
me,
Because
I
promptly
and
respectfully
obey
That
old
hunks
in
that
particular
instance?
Who
ain't
a
slave?
Tell
me
that.
Well,
then,
however
the
old
seacaptains
may
order
me
about—however
They
may
thump
and
punch
me
about,
I
have
the
satisfaction
of
knowing
that
it
is
all
right;
That
everybody
else
is
one
way
or
other
served
in
much
the
same
Way—either
in
a
physical
or
metaphysical
point
of
view,
that
is;
And
so
the
universal
thump
is
passed
round,
And
all
hands
should
rub
each
Other's
shoulder-blades,
and
be
content.
Again,
I
always
go
to
sea
as
a
sailor,
Because
they
make
a
point
of
paying
me
for
my
trouble,
Whereas
they
never
pay
passengers
A
single
penny
that
I
ever
heard
of.
On
the
contrary,
passengers
themselves
must
pay.
And
there
is
all
the
difference
in
The
world
between
paying
and
being
paid.
The
act
of
paying
is
perhaps
the
most
uncomfortable
Infliction
that
the
two
orchard
thieves
entailed
upon
us.
But
BEING
PAID,—what
will
compare
with
it?
The
urbane
activity
with
which
a
man
receives
money
is
really
Marvellous,
considering
that
we
so
earnestly
believe
money
to
be
the
Root
of
all
earthly
ills,
And
that
on
no
account
can
a
monied
man
enter
heaven.
Ah!
How
cheerfully
we
consign
ourselves
to
perdition!
Finally,
I
always
go
to
sea
as
a
sailor,
Because
of
the
wholesome
exercise
And
pure
air
of
the
fore-castle
deck.
For
as
in
this
world,
Head
winds
are
far
more
prevalent
than
winds
from
astern
(that
is,
If
you
never
violate
the
Pythagorean
maxim),
So
for
the
most
part
the
Commodore
on
the
quarter-deck
gets
His
atmosphere
at
second
hand
from
the
sailors
on
the
forecastle.
He
thinks
he
breathes
it
first;
But
not
so.
In
much
the
same
way
do
the
commonalty
lead
their
leaders
in
many
Other
things,
at
the
same
time
that
the
leaders
little
suspect
it.
But
wherefore
it
was
that
after
having
repeatedly
smelt
the
sea
as
a
Merchant
sailor,
I
should
now
take
it
into
my
head
to
go
on
a
whaling
Voyage;
this
the
invisible
police
officer
of
the
Fates,
Who
has
the
constant
surveillance
of
me,
and
secretly
dogs
me,
And
influences
me
in
some
unaccountable
Way—he
can
better
answer
than
any
one
else.
And,
doubtless,
my
going
on
this
whaling
voyage,
Formed
part
of
the
grand
programme
of
Providence
that
was
drawn
up
a
long
time
ago.
It
came
in
as
a
sort
of
brief
interlude
And
solo
between
more
extensive
performances.
I
take
it
that
this
part
of
the
bill
Must
have
run
something
like
this:
'
GRAND
CONTESTED
ELECTION
FOR
THE
PRESIDENCY
OF
THE
UNITED
STATES.
'
WHALING
VOYAGE
BY
ONE
ISHMAEL.
'
BLOODY
BATTLE
IN
AFFGHANISTAN.
' T
hough
I
cannot
tell
why
it
was
exactly
that
those
stage
managers,
The
Fates,
put
me
down
for
this
shabby
part
of
a
whaling
voyage,
When
others
were
set
down
for
magnificent
parts
in
high
tragedies,
And
short
and
easy
parts
in
genteel
comedies,
And
jolly
parts
in
farces—though
I
cannot
tell
why
this
was
exactly;
Yet,
now
that
I
recall
all
the
circumstances,
I
think
I
can
see
a
little
into
the
springs
and
motives
which
being
Cunningly
presented
to
me
under
various
disguises,
Induced
me
to
set
about
performing
the
part
I
did,
Besides
cajoling
me
into
the
delusion
that
it
was
a
choice
Resulting
from
my
own
unbiased
freewill
and
discriminating
judgment.
Chief
among
these
motives
was
the
Overwhelming
idea
of
the
great
whale
himself.
Such
a
portentous
and
mysterious
monster
roused
all
my
curiosity.
Then
the
wild
and
distant
seas
where
he
rolled
his
island
bulk;
The
undeliverable,
nameless
perils
of
the
whale;
these,
With
all
the
attending
marvels
of
a
thousand
Patagonian
sights
and
sounds,
helped
to
sway
me
to
my
wish.
With
other
men,
perhaps,
such
things
would
not
have
been
inducements;
But
as
for
me,
I
am
tormented
with
an
everlasting
itch
for
things
remote.
I
love
to
sail
forbidden
seas,
and
land
on
barbarous
coasts.
Not
ignoring
what
is
good,
I
am
quick
to
perceive
a
horror,
And
could
still
be
social
with
it—would
they
let
me—since
it
is
but
Well
to
be
on
friendly
terms
with
all
The
inmates
of
the
place
one
lodges
in.
By
reason
of
these
things,
then,
the
whaling
voyage
was
welcome;
The
great
flood-gates
of
the
wonder-world
swung
open,
And
in
the
wild
conceits
that
swayed
me
to
my
purpose,
Two
and
two
there
floated
into
my
inmost
soul,
Endless
processions
of
the
whale,
and,
Mid
most
of
them
all,
One
grand
hooded
phantom,
like
a
snow
hill
in
the
air.

1 Chapter 003
2 Prologue
3 Chapters 051 - 053
4 Chapters 036 - 040
5 Chapters 026 - 027
6 Chapters 045 - 047
7 Chapters 068 - 071
8 Chapters 008 - 009
9 Chapters 055 - 058
10 Chapter 054
11 Chapters 033 - 035
12 Chapter 032
13 Chapters 064 - 067
14 Chapters 022 - 025
15 Chapter 041
16 Chapters 048 - 050
17 Chapters 017 - 021
18 Chapters 004 - 007
19 Chapters 010 - 012
20 Chapters 059 - 063
21 Chapter 016
22 Chapters 072 - 073
23 Chapters 013 - 015
24 Chapters 001 - 002
25 Chapters 074 - 077
26 Chapters 042 - 044
27 Chapters 028 - 031
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