{"id":"01KFNR84F3VYSKZ9XR316R4219","cid":"bafkreicvtp6efjqfbe3pgql4ckwdvedrfhjzdyjp3uuoml6urebhjmxhqe","type":"chapter","properties":{"description":"# Chapter 57 of *Moby Dick; Or, The Whale*\n\n## Overview  \nThis entity is Chapter 57 of the novel [Moby Dick; Or, The Whale](arke:01KFNR81RMVAX2BBMMBW51V97D), titled \"Of Whales in Paint; in Teeth; in Wood; in Sheet-Iron; in Stone; in Mountains; in Stars.\" It is one of 135 chapters in the novel and falls within the structured narrative of Herman Melville’s 1851 work. The chapter spans lines 10818 to 10918 in the source text file and is composed of two text chunks, [Chunk 0](arke:01KFNR88ARD5P84BD5JXYFE58C) and [Chunk 1](arke:01KFNR88B5TWR2YFM0N7H29KQ1), which together preserve the full textual content. It is part of the broader [Moby Dick](arke:01KFNR0H0Q791Y1SMZWEQ09FGV) collection in the archive.\n\n## Context  \nThis chapter appears in the middle of the novel, following [Chapter 56](arke:01KFNR8491EK6Y5M26G4QG1YCJ) and preceding [Chapter 58](arke:01KFNR849QWYF79X5WZM19CPPA), during a section that blends narrative progression with philosophical and observational digressions on whaling culture. It is contained within the full text of [Moby Dick; Or, The Whale](arke:01KFNR81RMVAX2BBMMBW51V97D), which is preserved in digital form in the [Moby Dick](arke:01KFNR0H0Q791Y1SMZWEQ09FGV) collection. The chapter was extracted and structured by an automated system and later manually reviewed for accuracy.\n\n## Contents  \nChapter 57 explores the representation of whales in human art and imagination across various media and scales. It begins with a description of a disabled beggar in London displaying a painted scene of a whale attack, then moves to the scrimshaw carvings of sailors on whale teeth and bone, highlighting their craftsmanship and patience. The narrator draws parallels between the whalemen and ancient savages in their artistic perseverance. The chapter expands to include depictions of whales in wood, brass door knockers, sheet-iron weather vanes on churches, and even natural rock formations that resemble whales. Finally, it ascends to the celestial, describing how whales and their pursuers can be imagined among the constellations, linking the whaling obsession to a cosmic scale. The chapter closes with a poetic desire to ride a whale beyond the visible heavens, underscoring the novel’s thematic fusion of physical pursuit and metaphysical inquiry.","description_generated_at":"2026-01-23T15:45:59.068Z","description_model":"Qwen/Qwen3-235B-A22B-Instruct-2507","description_title":"Chapter 57 of *Moby Dick; Or, The Whale*","end_line":10918,"extracted_at":"2026-01-23T15:40:57.884Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"57","source_file":"01KFNR0Z394A878Y5AQ63MQEM2","start_line":10818,"title":"57"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KFNR81RMVAX2BBMMBW51V97D","peer_label":"Moby Dick; Or, The Whale","peer_type":"novel","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KFNR81RMVAX2BBMMBW51V97D","peer_label":"Moby Dick; Or, The Whale","peer_type":"novel","predicate":"partOf"},{"peer":"01KFNR0H0Q791Y1SMZWEQ09FGV","peer_label":"Moby Dick","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KFNR88ARD5P84BD5JXYFE58C","peer_label":"Chunk 0","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"contains"},{"peer":"01KFNR88B5TWR2YFM0N7H29KQ1","peer_label":"Chunk 1","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"contains"},{"peer":"01KFNR849QWYF79X5WZM19CPPA","peer_label":"58","peer_type":"chapter","predicate":"next"},{"peer":"01KFNR8491EK6Y5M26G4QG1YCJ","peer_label":"56","peer_type":"chapter","predicate":"prev"}],"ver":3,"created_at":"2026-01-23T15:40:59.993Z","ts":"2026-01-23T15:45:59.368Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF5C36SQEVDHC9CBNZZJH9K"}}