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I remember, from when I read Moby-Dick a few years back, how Melville intersperses philosophy with his narrative. This passage is an example of that. He's reflecting on the experience of sitting in a whale-boat, before the harpoon has been hurled, setting its barb in the whale's body. Once the harpoon-thrower does his work, the whale will instantly react, pulling the small boat and its occupants on a wild and deadly journey. The sailor is looking down at the coil of line in the bottom of the boat. In a matter of seconds, he knows it will unwind, becoming completely taut. But for now, there is a deceptive calm...
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[Moby-Dick, chapter 60.]
Melville's right - we all live "enveloped in whale-lines." In this modern era, when our ever-expanding medical knowledge is beating back so many deadly diseases, some of us may be forgiven for imagining that death is not a possibility for us - or, at least, so distant a possibility that we bear it no mind. As a cancer survivor, I can no longer think that way. Things are relatively calm in my life, right now. The boat is bobbing on a peaceful sea. The harpoon-line is benignly coiled at my feet.
Yet, I'm aware that circumstances can change very quickly. A week from today, I'll go for my combined CT Scan and PET Scan. Things will probably turn out just fine. But, you never know...
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