Ishmael himself--and I firmly believe that Melville, here, is speaking through him--begs us not to relegate his story to a "detestable, a hideous and intolerable allegory." The metaphors in Moby Dick are NOT rigid; the ocean may mean one thing in one chapter and something entirely different elsewhere. Pay attention to what the book is saying at any given time, and at the end, simply marvel everything that it has accomplished. Ishmael struggles throughout the entire book to make meaning of everything that he sees, and he never entirely decides; you must decide for yourself.
In "Moby Dick," one ship, the Pequod, is destroyed.
The ship's name - "Pequod" .
Captain Ahab's ship, the one he hunts for Moby Dick in, is called the Pequod.
1) Captain Ahab wants to kill Moby Dick because Moby Dick sunk his ship.
In the 1956 film Moby Dick , Ahab was played by actor Gregory Peck .
Ishmeal is the common person; the follower, not the leader.
It is the Rachel that rescues Ishmael at the end of 'Moby Dick'.
He attacks the ship.
The Bachelor is a ship from Nantucket, Massachusetts in the book Moby-Dick. It is captained by Captain Mayhew.
The ship sinks after striking the white whale, Moby Dick. The crew's pursuit of the whale leads to a climactic encounter where Moby Dick rams into the ship, causing it to take on water and ultimately sink.
The whale sinks the ship, Ahab is killed trying kill Moby Dick, one survives to tell the tale..
The ship's name - "Pequod" .