not solicited a boat’s crew from them, nor had
he in any way hinted his desires on that head.
Nevertheless he had taken private measures of his own
touching all that matter. Until Cabaco’s
published discovery, the sailors had little foreseen
it, though to be sure when, after being a little while
out of port, all hands had concluded the customary
business of fitting the whaleboats for service; when
some time after this Ahab was now and then found bestirring
himself in the matter of making thole-pins with his
own hands for what was thought to be one of the spare
boats, and even solicitously cutting the small wooden
skewers, which when the line is running out are pinned
over the groove in the bow: when all this was
observed in him, and particularly his solicitude in
having an extra coat of sheathing in the bottom of
the boat, as if to make it better withstand the pointed
pressure of his ivory limb; and also the anxiety he
evinced in exactly shaping the thigh board, or clumsy
cleat, as it is sometimes called, the horizontal piece
in the boat’s bow for bracing the knee against
in darting or stabbing at the whale; when it was observed
how often he stood up in that boat with his solitary
knee fixed in the semi-circular depression in the cleat,
and with the carpenter’s chisel gouged out a
little here and straightened it a little there; all
these things, I say, had awakened much interest and
curiosity at the time. But almost everybody supposed
that this particular preparative heedfulness in Ahab
must only be with a view to the ultimate chase of
Moby Dick; for he had already revealed his intention
to hunt that mortal monster in person. But such
a supposition did by no means involve the remotest
suspicion as to any boat’s crew being assigned
to that boat.
Now, with the subordinate phantoms, what wonder remained
soon waned away; for in a whaler wonders soon wane.
Besides, now and then such unaccountable odds and
ends of strange nations come up from the unknown nooks
and ash-holes of the earth to man these floating outlaws
of whalers; and the ships themselves often pick up
such queer castaway creatures found tossing about
the open sea on planks, bits of wreck, oars, whaleboats,
canoes, blown-off Japanese junks, and what not; that
Beelzebub himself might climb up the side and step
down into the cabin to chat with the captain, and it
would not create any unsubduable excitement in the
forecastle.
But be all this as it may, certain it is that while
the subordinate phantoms soon found their place among
the crew, though still as it were somehow distinct
from them, yet that hair-turbaned Fedallah remained
a muffled mystery to the last. Whence he came
in a mannerly world like this, by what sort of unaccountable
tie he soon evinced himself to be linked with Ahab’s
peculiar fortunes; nay, so far as to have some sort
of a half-hinted influence; Heaven knows, but it might
have been even authority over him; all this none knew.
But one cannot sustain an indifferent air concerning