He knowingly "murders"(depends on your view) the crew. He also challenges the gods saying "I now prophesy that I will dismember my dismemeberer". Ahab in my opinion is a great man but many say he is evil for ignoring vivid signs of certain death, he was a fatalist.
Some say that Ahab got eaten by Moby Dick, but some also say that a harpoon was shot into him, but however he did die, he was licked clean by dogs, so critically thinking that kind of rules out being eaten.
Captain Ahab dies during a final confrontation with Moby Dick, the white whale. Ahab becomes entangled in the harpoon lines attached to the whale and is then dragged underwater to his death.
Nope! He dies by his own harpoon but he still hits moby with it..but ahab dies while still attached to moby-dick underwater....read da book.
Captain Ahab is the character who hunted Moby Dick in the novel "Moby Dick" by Herman Melville.
Because Starbuck doesn't want Ahab to kill Moby Dick because Moby Dick didn't had the fault that Ahab lost his leg.
Captain Ahab commands the whaling ship Pequod in the novel "Moby-Dick" by Herman Melville. He leads the crew on a vengeful quest to hunt and kill the white whale, Moby Dick.
Captain Ahab was the captain of the Pequod in the novel Moby-Dick. He is on a quest for revenge against the white whale, Moby Dick, which leads to the tragic end of the ship and its crew.
Captain Ahab meets Moby Dick in Herman Melville's novel "Moby-Dick" only once. Their encounter is a critical moment in the story as Ahab seeks revenge on the white whale for taking his leg.
Starbuck asked Captain Ahab if Moby Dick had taken off his leg. Starbuck was concerned about Ahab's obsession with revenge and wanted him to give up his pursuit of the whale.
The ship Captain Ahab set sail in to hunt for Moby Dick was named the Pequod.
Moby Dick drags Ahab to the bottom of the sea.
Captain Ahab.
ahab
Captain Ahab is obsessed with hunting down and killing the white whale, Moby-Dick, who had injured him in a previous encounter. Ahab sees Moby-Dick as a representation of evil and a personal nemesis, driving his relentless pursuit despite the risks to his crew and ship. His obsession with Moby-Dick consumes him, leading to his ultimate downfall.
Captain Ahab devotes his life to catching the great whale, Moby Dick, in the book "Moby-Dick" by Herman Melville. Ahab's obsession with hunting the whale drives him to seek revenge for the injuries he suffered from Moby Dick, leading to a tragic and fateful pursuit.