Moby Dick | The Narrator of Moby-Dick

William B. Dillingham, in the following excerpt, sees the novel’s narrator, Ishmael, as a character who represents Melville’s theme of the isolation of individuals from the rest of humanity.

Throughout Moby-Dick, the theme of human isolation is prevalent. Each character exists as an island. While they influence each others’ lives, they can never fully understand each other or experience a merger of souls. This is one reason Ishmael admits to a “strange sort of insanity” when he tells how he felt when squeezing the sperm in Chapter 94. He wanted then to say to his companions: “Come; let us squeeze hands all round; nay, let us all squeeze ourselves … universally into the very milk and sperm of kindness.” His was, indeed, a “strange sort of...

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