-
Queequeg is a
character in the 1851
novel Moby-**** by
American author Herman Melville. The
story outlines his royal,
Polynesian descent, as well as his...
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Polynesian named Queequeg, a
harpooneer whose father was king of the
fictional island of Rokovoko. The next morning,
Ishmael and
Queequeg attend Father Mapple's...
-
subsequent story of the
Baudelaire orphans, who
discover the crew of the
Queequeg submarine searching for a
mysterious sugar bowl in the
eponymous grotto...
- (named for the
Biblical prophet Elijah), on
learning that
Ishmael and
Queequeg have
signed onto Ahab's ship, asks, "Anything down
there about your souls...
- and
Queequeg talk of
traveling together to his
native island.
Greenhorn wants to
learn Queequeg's language and
write down
their adventures.
Queequeg suddenly...
- cruises.
Tasked by his new friend, the
Polynesian harpooneer Queequeg (or more precisely,
Queequeg's idol-god, Yojo), to make the
selection for them both, Ishmael...
- the
tattooed Polynesian,
Queequeg, a
harpooneer whom
Ishmael ****umes to be a cannibal. Two days
later Ishmael and
Queequeg head for Nantucket. Ishmael...
-
later appeared in
Alexander the
Great (1955), and pla****
chief harpooneer Queequeg, a
South Sea chieftain, in the film Moby **** (1956). "Better a
sober cannibal...
- is
forced to
share his room with a
Pacific Islander and
harponeer named Queequeg, whom he
befriends after a
tense first meeting. The next morning, the two...
- Grotto, he and Phil
appear to
desert the
Queequeg. The
reason may have to do with a
woman who
approached the
Queequeg to tell
Captain Widdershins something...