Page:Moby-Dick (1851) US edition.djvu/188

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Cetology.

horn was in ancient days regarded as the great antidote against poison, and as such, preparations of it brought immense prices.  It was also distilled to a volatile salts for fainting ladies the same way that the horns of the male deer are manufactured into hartshorn.  Originally it was in itself accounted an object of great curiosity.  Black Letter tells me that Sir Martin Frobisher on his return from that voyage, when Queen Bess did gallantly wave her jewelled hand to him from a window of Greenwich Palace, as his bold ship sailed down the Thames; “when Sir Martin returned from that voyage,” saith Black Letter, “on bended knees he presented to her highness a prodigious long horn of the Narwhale, which for a long period after hung in the castle at Windsor.”  An Irish author avers that the Earl of Leicester, on bended knees, did likewise present to her highness another horn, pertaining to a land beast of the unicorn nature.

The Narwhale has a very picturesque, leopard-like look, being of a milk-white ground color, dotted with round and oblong spots of black.  His oil is very superior, clear and fine; but there is little of it, and he is seldom hunted.  He is mostly found in the circumpolar seas.

BOOK II. (Octavo), Chapter IV. (Killer).—Of this whale little is precisely known to the Nantucketer, and nothing at all to the professed naturalists.  From what I have seen of him at a distance, I should say that he was about the bigness of a grampus.  He is very savage—a sort of Feegee fish.  He sometimes takes the great Folio whales by the lip, and hangs there like a leech, till the mighty brute is worried to death.  The Killer is never hunted.  I never heard what sort of oil he has.  Exception might be taken to the name bestowed upon this whale, on the ground of its indistinctness.  For we are all killers, on land and on sea; Bonapartes and Sharks included.

BOOK II. (Octavo), Chapter V. (Thrasher).—This gentleman is famous for his tail which he uses for a ferule in thrashing his foes.  He mounts the Folio whale’s back, and as he swims,