Chapter 14
Nantucket
Nantucket. Nothing more happened on the passage worthy the mentioning; so, after a fine run, we safely arrived in Nantucket. Nantucket! Take out your map and look at it. See what a real corner of the world it occupies; how it stands there, away off shore, more lonely than the Eddystone lighthouse. Look at it—a mere hillock, and elbow of sand; all beach, without a background. There is more sand there than you would use in twenty years as a substitute for blotting paper. Some gamesome wights will tell you that they have to plant weeds there, they don’t grow…
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Now let's explore the literary elements.
Key Quotes & Analysis
"more lonely than the Eddystone lighthouse."
Context: Ishmael asks the reader to look at Nantucket on the map
Geography sets tone. The island is corner, sand, and isolation before it is town.
In Today's Words:
Melville wants you to see Nantucket as a speck offshore more alone than a lighthouse on a reef. Before whaling fortune arrives, it is sand, distance, and scarcity that shape the people who will hunt leviathan for a living from this lonely beach elbow of sand.
"But these extravaganzas only show that Nantucket is no Illinois."
Context: After comic hyperboles about sand, weeds, and clams on furniture
Humor underlines difference. Inland abundance is unimaginable here.
In Today's Words:
All the jokes about imported thistles and precious wood mean one thing: this is not farmland America. Nantucket's poverty of land is the joke and the reason its people went to sea instead of planting fields the way inland Illinois would allow them to do.
"everlasting war with the mightiest animated mass that has survived the flood"
Context: Nantucket's navy circling the globe to hunt the whale
Whaling becomes permanent cosmic conflict, not a single voyage.
In Today's Words:
From clams on the beach they built ships for permanent war against the biggest living thing left from ancient seas. The hunt is not a job season; it is an endless campaign against a force of nature that survived Noah's flood and still roams the deep.
"The Nantucketer, he alone resides and riots on the sea"
Context: Contrasting whalemen with merchants and pirates who only cross the ocean
Ownership defines identity. Others use the sea; Nantucketers live in it.
In Today's Words:
Merchants cross the water like a bridge and pirates raid ships, but the Nantucketer lives out there and feasts on it. His home and farm are the waves themselves, not the land he left behind on the sand elbow of the island he was born on.
Thematic Threads
Geographic Scarcity
In This Chapter
Sand, imported wood, planted weeds, clams on chairs; Nantucket is no Illinois
Development
Explains why this island breeds whalemen rather than farmers
In Your Life:
Place shapes what work is possible when the land offers almost nothing
Founding Legend
In This Chapter
Eagle, canoe chase, ivory casket and infant skeleton on the beach
Development
Myth frames Nantucket as fated to the sea before economics do
In Your Life:
Every company town has a story for why it ended up here
Escalating Harvest
In This Chapter
Crabs to quohogs to mackerel to cod to global whale war
Development
Shows industry scale from shore foraging to leviathan hunt
In Your Life:
Small local trades can grow into industries that reshape the world
Sea Ownership
In This Chapter
Nantucketer alone resides on the deep; merchants are bridges, pirates raiders
Development
Sets cultural stakes before Ishmael ships from the island
In Your Life:
Some people live inside the system others merely pass through
You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.
Discussion Questions
This is not a test. Five prompts guide you through the chapter, from how it opens to how it closes, so you notice context and rhythm rather than facts to memorize. Sit with each question in your own words. When you see "One way to read it," treat it as a starting point, not the only answer.
- 1
Why does Ishmael ask us to look at Nantucket on the map before telling its story?
analysis • surfaceOne way to read it
Geography comes first: a lonely sand elbow offshore explains the culture that follows.
- 2
How does the eagle legend connect to Nantucketers taking the sea for a livelihood?
analysis • mediumOne way to read it
Myth frames the island as reached through water and loss; born on the beach, they naturally escalate from shellfish to whale war.
- 3
When have you seen a place's scarcity shape its main industry?
application • mediumOne way to read it
Nantucket's lack of land mirrors towns or trades built because the surrounding medium was the only resource.
- 4
How is the Nantucketer different from merchant sailors and pirates in Melville's account?
application • deepOne way to read it
Merchants cross the sea and pirates plunder ships; only the Nantucketer resides on the deep and draws living from it.
- 5
What does the closing image of walruses under the pillow suggest about whaleman's life?
reflection • deepOne way to read it
Sleep happens inside the harvest medium; home and work are the waves, not the sand left behind.
Critical Thinking Exercise
Map Place to Trade
Pick one town or region you know. List what the land or water offers and what main industry grew from it. Compare to Nantucket's path from sand to whale navy. Note one extravagance locals joke about that reveals scarcity.
Consider:
- •What does Nantucket lack that Illinois has?
- •How does legend reinforce economics?
- •Who lives in the medium versus crossing it?
Journaling Prompt
Write about a place whose geography obviously shaped how people there make a living.
Coming Up Next...
Chapter 15: Chowder
On Nantucket Ishmael and Queequeg hunt supper and find every chowder house closed. Where do you eat when the island runs on clam broth and mystery?





