Page:Moby-Dick (1851) US edition.djvu/179

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Cetology.
147

promise nothing complete; because any human thing supposed to be complete must for that very reason infallibly be faulty.  I shall not pretend to a minute anatomical description of the various species, or—in this space at least—to much of any description.  My object here is simply to project the draught of a systematization of cetology.  I am the architect, not the builder.

But it is a ponderous task; no ordinary letter-sorter in the Post-Office is equal to it.  To grope down into the bottom of the sea after them; to have one’s hands among the unspeakable foundations, ribs, and very pelvis of the world; this is a fearful thing.  What am I that I should essay to hook the nose of this leviathan!  The awful tauntings in Job might well appal me.  “Will he (the leviathan) make a covenant with thee?  Behold the hope of him is vain!”  But I have swam through libraries and sailed through oceans; I have had to do with whales with these visible hands; I am in earnest; and I will try.  There are some preliminaries to settle.

First: The uncertain, unsettled condition of this science of Cetology is in the very vestibule attested by the fact, that in some quarters it still remains a moot point whether a whale be a fish.  In his System of Nature, A.D. 1776, Linnæus declares, “I hereby separate the whales from the fish.”  But of my own knowledge, I know that down to the year 1850, sharks and shad, alewives and herring, against Linnæus’s express edict, were still found dividing the possession of the same seas with the Leviathan.

The grounds upon which Linnaeus would fain have banished the whales from the waters, he states as follows:  “On account of their warm bilocular heart, their lungs, their movable eyelids, their hollow ears, penem intrantem feminam mammis lactantem,” and finally, “ex lege naturae jure meritoque.”  I submitted all this to my friends Simeon Macey and Charley Coffin, of Nantucket, both messmates of mine in a certain voyage, and they united in the opinion that the reasons set forth were