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Women In Moby Dick By F. Scott Fitzgerald

297 Words2 Pages
The only other women mentioned in Moby Dick are simply objects from the sailors memories. Starbuck and Ahab are both married and have children, but they rarely talk about their families. The one time they do speak of their families is right before they spot Moby Dick. The two stare at the sunrise, and think back to their families in Nantucket. Ahab begins to cry regretting his mistreatment of his wife over the years, saying that by marrying her, he widowed her. Starbuck goes on to beg Ahab to return to the "wife and child of thy loving, longing, paternal old age," and how he himself desires the "wife and child of his brotherly, sisterly play-fellow youth." (pg 444). At this point in the voyage, all these women and children are simply figures
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