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The real whale that inspired "Moby-Dick"

"Call me Ishmael" is the legendary first line of Moby-Dick, but the protagonist's name is hardly the most famous in Herman Melville's 1851 novel.

"Moby-Dick" was inspired by a real whale named Mocha Dick.

Arts & Culture

"C all me Ishmael" is the legendary first line of Moby-Dick, but the protagonist's name is hardly the most famous in Herman Melville's 1851 novel. Indeed, he's probably a distant third to both Captain Ahab and the eponymous whale himself, who was based on a real albino sperm whale named Mocha Dick. Named for the Chilean island near which his decades-long reign of terror took place, Mocha is said to have destroyed more than 20 whaling ships in addition to escaping 80 or so before finally being felled in 1838. His story was told by explorer and newspaper editor J.N. Reynolds, whose article "Mocha Dick: Or the White Whale of the Pacific" was published by The Knickerbocker the following year.

Described by Reynolds as "an old bull whale, of prodigious size and strength," whose albinism made him "white as wool," Mocha was made even more fearsome by the fact that his head was covered in barnacles. He was actually quite docile until he was attacked, and measured 70 feet long at the time of his unjust and untimely passing. As for why Melville changed the name from Mocha to Moby when he wrote his novel, no one knows. The author never revealed his reasoning, and no one has been able to figure it out.

By the Numbers

Harpoons lodged in Mocha Dick's side at the time of his death

20+

Copies of Moby-Dick sold during Melville's lifetime

3,715

Depth (in feet) a sperm whale can dive

9,800

Words in Moby-Dick

206,052

Did you know?

"Moby-Dick" inspired the name of Starbucks.

Before it was the world's largest chain of coffee shops, Starbucks was a humble startup in Seattle — and it needed a name. Pequod, the name of the ship where most of Moby-Dick takes place, was suggested by co-founder Gordon Bowker during a fateful meeting in 1971, but was quickly dismissed because it didn't sound appetizing. An advertising executive had advised the group to look for names that started with "St," supposedly a powerful letter combination. Terry Heckler, an artist hired to help the company define its branding, came up with Starbo, the name of a mining camp on Mount Rainier. This led them back to Moby-Dick and its first mate, Starbuck, who became the company's namesake in order to evoke "the romance of the high seas and the seafaring tradition of the early coffee traders."

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