Captain Ahab and the carpenter have a professional relationship aboard the Pequod. The carpenter is responsible for repairing and maintaining the ship, while Captain Ahab is focused on hunting the white whale, Moby Dick. Although they don't have a personal connection, the carpenter's work indirectly supports Ahab's pursuit of his obsession.
Starbucks did not have a direct reaction to Captain Ahab as it is a coffee company and not a character from literature. There is no record of any specific interaction between Starbucks and Captain Ahab from the novel Moby Dick.
Very little communication.
Ahab was a powerful king in biblical times, and Ahab was a captain in fiction.
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.
The antagonist of the novel Moby Dick is Captain Ahab, the obsessed and vengeful captain of the whaling ship Pequod who seeks revenge on the white whale, Moby Dick, for taking his leg during a previous encounter.
Ahab is the captain of the Pequod, the ship going out to hunt Moby-Dick, the white whale.
In the 1956 movie adaptation of Moby Dick, Gregory Peck plays Captain Ahab.
Captain Ahab is dragged into the sea by the harpoon rope attached to Moby Dick and drowns as the whale swims away, taking him with it. This occurs during the final battle between Ahab and the whale in Herman Melville's novel Moby Dick.
Captain Ahab is the character who hunted Moby Dick in the novel "Moby Dick" by Herman Melville.
The name of Captain Ahab's first mate was Starbuck. Which is where Starbucks got their name for their coffee.
Help him find his missing son who was on a whale boat
the caption told ahab that he did not believe the white whale exsisted