Good and evil in the Beluga world Unrelated universe In the Melville white whale, the moral ambiguity of the universe is universal. These personality does not represent pure evil or pure goodness. Even in Ahab's explanation by Melville, he repeatedly mentioned "single" and suggested an opportunity to be regarded as immoral or psychotic, weak, sympathetic. When Ahab's "fanatical" destiny is aligned with the fate of Ishmael, this moral ambiguity deepens and leaves the most extreme principle to the reader.
The end of the novel does not seem to answer the question "who won: good or bad". Moby Dick did not destroy Ahab nor Moby Dick. Therefore, it is not clear what kind of benefits the world has. The battle between good and evil is not over yet - it is not the last point. Indeed, Melville reflects the reality and chose the ending for such a novel. Is there a key to understand and decide the ambiguous boundary between good and evil key to know the meaning of life? Or are these two concepts very supernaturally so human beings are never too close to understanding them? References: Originally obtained from: www.americanliterature.com Abertina, R., Fleija, Dz. , Misane, A .; , English literature, Zvaigzne, 1976
Herman Melville's "Moby Dick" is a novel using various forms of religious images. We explore the adventure of Beluga through Captain Ahab explaining the evil forces of the devil and the fight between God and Jesus' goodness. In this parable, the devil is in captain Ahab, God is in nature, Jesus is seen in the silkworm, and human is represented by the crew of Pekod. Pecod's voyage represents a human journey on Earth until the death of Jesus.
The blue whale is a burning allegory about the tragedy of revenge and obsession, the power of good and evil. In this story, Beluga attacks Ahab against a whale. Like the Bible, good at defeating evil, in this case, the evil madness of Ahab himself is his ultimate failure. You will not lose the evil spirit like a devil