Frequently Asked Questions about Chapter 126 - The Life-Buoy from Moby-Dick; or, The Whale
What are the mysterious cries the crew hears at night in Chapter 126?
The crew hears eerie, plaintive wailing sounds while sailing past a cluster of rocky islets in the predawn darkness. The Christian sailors believe the sounds are mermaids, while the old Manxman declares they are the voices of newly drowned men. Ahab later explains rationally that they were young seals that had lost their mothers, or mother seals that had lost their cubs. However, the superstitious crew remains unsettled because seals have human-like faces and voices, and mariners have traditionally regarded them with dread.
How does a sailor die in Chapter 126 of Moby-Dick?
At sunrise, a sailor goes from his hammock to his watch post at the foremast head, possibly still half-asleep. Shortly after reaching his perch, he falls— describes "a cry and a rushing" and then "a falling phantom in the air" followed by "a little tossed heap of white bubbles in the blue of the sea." The crew drops the ship's life-buoy after him, but the long slender cask has been dried and warped by the sun and fills with water, sinking after the sailor rather than saving him. He is the first man of the Pequod to die on the White Whale's own hunting ground.
Why does the life-buoy fail to save the drowning sailor?
The life-buoy is a long slender cask that hangs at the stern on a spring-loaded mechanism. Although it deploys as designed, the cask has been exposed to prolonged tropical sun, causing the wood to shrink and dry out. When it hits the water, the parched wood absorbs water through every pore, and the iron-bound cask slowly fills and sinks. No hand rises from the sea to seize it, and the cask follows the sailor to the bottom "as if to yield him his pillow, though in sooth but a hard one."
Why is Queequeg's coffin turned into a life-buoy?
After the original life-buoy sinks, Starbuck is ordered to find a replacement. However, no cask of sufficient lightness can be found aboard the Pequod, and the crew is too preoccupied with the approaching climax of the whale hunt to fashion a new one. Queequeg then hints—through "strange signs and inuendoes"—that his coffin could serve the purpose. The coffin had been built earlier in the voyage when Queequeg was gravely ill, but he recovered and no longer needed it. The carpenter is ordered to seal it: nail the lid, caulk the seams, and coat them with pitch, transforming the death-vessel into a potential instrument of salvation.
What is the significance of the coffin-to-life-buoy transformation?
The conversion of Queequeg's coffin into a life-buoy is one of the most symbolically rich moments in Moby-Dick. It embodies the novel's philosophical preoccupation with the inseparability of life and death. An object constructed in anticipation of death is repurposed as an instrument of survival. This transformation also foreshadows the novel's conclusion, where the coffin-buoy is the very object that saves Ishmael after the Pequod sinks—making it the mechanism by which the story itself can be told. Starbuck's exclamation, "A life-buoy of a coffin!" captures the paradox at the heart of the symbol.
What role does the carpenter play in Chapter 126?
The carpenter is ordered to convert Queequeg's coffin into a life-buoy by nailing down the lid, caulking the seams, and paying them over with pitch. He delivers a lengthy comic monologue grumbling about the undignified nature of the work, calling it a "cobbling sort of business" beneath his skills. He prefers "clean, virgin, fair-and-square mathematical jobs" that proceed logically from beginning to end. Despite his complaints, he resolves to do the work and plans to attach thirty Turk's-headed life-lines around the coffin so that if the ship sinks, "there'll be thirty lively fellows all fighting for one coffin."