1. How does one come
to know the unknowable?
Copy !req
2. "What faculties must a man possess?
Copy !req
3. "Since it was discovered that whale oil
Copy !req
4. "could light our cities
in ways never achieved before,
Copy !req
5. "it created global demand.
Copy !req
6. "It has pushed man to venture
further and further
Copy !req
7. "into the deep blue unknown.
Copy !req
8. "We know not its depths,
Copy !req
9. "nor the host of creatures
that live there.
Copy !req
10. "Monsters.
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11. "Are they real?
Copy !req
12. "Or do the stories exist only to make us
respect the sea's dark secrets?
Copy !req
13. "The question both vexes and excites me
Copy !req
14. "and is the reason
I've written you a second time
Copy !req
15. "to request a meeting.
Copy !req
16. "A conversation with you, sir,
I believe will serve me well
Copy !req
17. "for the novel I intend to write,
Copy !req
18. "currently entitled Moby Dick.
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19. "I hope you will reconsider my offer.
Copy !req
20. "The unknown.
Copy !req
21. "That is where my imagination
yearns to venture.
Copy !req
22. "And so the question plagues me still.
Copy !req
23. "How does a man come to know
the unknowable?
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24. "Sincerely, Herman Melville."
Copy !req
25. We're closed.
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26. No boarders after 8:00.
Copy !req
27. You came.
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28. Someone here for you, my love.
Copy !req
29. Tom Nickerson?
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30. Herman Melville.
Copy !req
31. We received your letter.
Copy !req
32. You're either a desperate man
Copy !req
33. or a fool to come
all the way to Nantucket.
Copy !req
34. Well, my offer still stands.
Copy !req
35. Three months' lodgings
for a single night's talk.
Copy !req
36. All I have in the world.
Copy !req
37. But I prefer to think of it
as an investment.
Copy !req
38. I want you to tell me
what happened to the Essex.
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39. What do you think happened?
Copy !req
40. There are rumblings.
Rumors that the Essex was...
Copy !req
41. What do you want?
Copy !req
42. What story do you expect to hear?
Copy !req
43. That of the whale.
Copy !req
44. The Essex ran aground.
There was a full inquiry.
Copy !req
45. I believe the inquiry
was less than truthful.
Copy !req
46. Get out.
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47. You are the last survivor
of the Essex, sir.
Copy !req
48. If you won't talk, who will?
Copy !req
49. Did you not hear me? Leave. Now.
Copy !req
50. - No. You mustn't go. Please.
- He is in no mind to talk.
Copy !req
51. And I haven't come all this way
to be humiliated and waste my time.
Copy !req
52. Please, Mr. Melville.
Copy !req
53. He won't talk about the Essex to me.
Copy !req
54. To anyone. Never has. Never.
Copy !req
55. There's an agony about him.
Copy !req
56. His soul is in torment,
Copy !req
57. and in need of confession.
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58. Please, just let me talk to him.
Copy !req
59. Please.
Copy !req
60. Love.
Copy !req
61. I believe it would do you good
to talk to the man.
Copy !req
62. No.
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63. You listen well.
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64. Who holds this place together
while you drink yourself to death?
Copy !req
65. You will talk with this man
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66. as much as is necessary to keep the money.
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67. You know our circumstances, Thomas.
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68. Only as much as is necessary.
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69. I'll get whiskey.
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70. I neglected to mention it
in my letter,
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71. but I was a whaler once.
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72. One trip, I mean.
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73. Green hand.
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74. So, you've seen it all.
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75. My wife read your books.
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76. She enjoyed them.
Copy !req
77. I'm happy to hear it.
Copy !req
78. I've had good sales.
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79. And I think this story
could surpass the success
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80. of even my first novel,
which did quite well.
Copy !req
81. Another of your seafaring yarns?
Copy !req
82. Have you read Hawthorne, Mr. Melville?
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83. Now there's a writer.
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84. Great writer.
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85. He is.
Copy !req
86. But he is not here. And I am.
Copy !req
87. For my own particular reasons.
Copy !req
88. I will tell you of the Essex.
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89. I believe you will be disappointed.
Copy !req
90. But every word I say will be true.
Copy !req
91. Story of the Essex
is the story of two men.
Copy !req
92. Captain George Pollard and his first mate,
Copy !req
93. Owen Chase.
Copy !req
94. Owen. You don't wanna be late.
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95. I'll be there.
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96. Besides, can't have our daughter
sleeping under a leaky roof, can we?
Copy !req
97. What makes you so sure it's a girl?
Copy !req
98. Well, it has to be.
Copy !req
99. So she can remind me
Copy !req
100. why I still love you
when you're being stubborn.
Copy !req
101. Well, if it's to be a daughter,
she'll be a version of you, not me.
Copy !req
102. Blond locks and determined
to conquer the world.
Copy !req
103. I suppose after today,
Copy !req
104. you'll be trading in
that tunic for a uniform.
Copy !req
105. That's right.
Copy !req
106. Finally out of this patch of dirt,
Copy !req
107. into a captain's house like you deserve.
Copy !req
108. I don't need one of those houses
in town with stuffy neighbors.
Copy !req
109. There's plenty of room here
for the three of us.
Copy !req
110. You know, sometimes your kind heart
and good nature
Copy !req
111. is just unbearable.
Copy !req
112. Go get your captaincy.
Copy !req
113. - What's your bid?
- I'll have $1.90.
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114. I've got 1,000 gallons at $2!
Copy !req
115. I'll take 40 shares!
Copy !req
116. Seller! Seller! Over here!
Copy !req
117. Criterion's back with a fine haul.
Copy !req
118. 1,600 barrels.
Copy !req
119. A new record.
Copy !req
120. £50 sterling for head matter
on the London market.
Copy !req
121. Congratulations.
Copy !req
122. - Good morning, Mr. Chase.
- Mr. Mason.
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123. Come in, please.
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124. My partner, Benjamin Fuller.
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125. Good morning, sir.
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126. Do sit down.
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127. Mr. Chase.
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128. I do hope you realize how satisfied we are
Copy !req
129. with the work you've done for us
over the years.
Copy !req
130. Thank you, sir.
Copy !req
131. Now, one of our ships, the Essex,
Copy !req
132. has just been refitted at great expense
Copy !req
133. and is to go to sea.
Copy !req
134. Now, having made
such an investment in her,
Copy !req
135. we want to be sure
she's in the best possible hands.
Copy !req
136. So, it gives us great pleasure
to offer you a position aboard her.
Copy !req
137. As first mate.
Copy !req
138. As first mate?
Copy !req
139. Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
140. Mr. Mason, you promised me
command of a ship after my last voyage
Copy !req
141. when I brought you back 1,500 barrels.
Copy !req
142. Do you remember?
You gave me your word.
Copy !req
143. That promise must now be deferred.
Copy !req
144. Like everyone else,
we've had a lean time recently.
Copy !req
145. No, never on my watch.
Copy !req
146. Nantucket now dominates the world market.
Copy !req
147. That must not change.
Copy !req
148. This is no time for experimentation.
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149. The Essex will be captained
by George Pollard,
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150. scion of a great whaling family.
Copy !req
151. His father also happens to be our patron.
Copy !req
152. Blood, Mr. Chase.
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153. You can have all the voyages
under your belt you want,
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154. but blood will always win out.
Copy !req
155. Yes, well, blood is not gonna fill
a ship with oil, Mr. Mason.
Copy !req
156. To successfully command,
a captain needs respect.
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157. Now, what if the men don't respect him?
Copy !req
158. You will make sure that they do.
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159. Ah, good day, gentlemen.
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160. I understand your disappointment,
Copy !req
161. so, a one-fifteenth lay.
Copy !req
162. That's more than
I've ever paid any first officer.
Copy !req
163. And if you bring back
2,000 barrels of oil,
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164. I give you my word,
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165. next time, you will have your captaincy.
Copy !req
166. You've given me
your word before, Mr. Mason.
Copy !req
167. No, this time, I'll take it in writing.
Copy !req
168. Captain Pollard.
Copy !req
169. We've just had a most
agreeable conversation with Mr. Chase.
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170. He'll be honored to serve under you.
Copy !req
171. I'm glad to hear it.
Copy !req
172. Now I'm to babysit a greenhorn.
Copy !req
173. Some chinless Nantucketer
Copy !req
174. born with a damn silver spoon
in his mouth.
Copy !req
175. You know, I should've thrown
the offer back in their faces.
Copy !req
176. Why? You now have
the offer of command in writing.
Copy !req
177. Yes, well, a liar's word is worthless,
Copy !req
178. even on paper.
Copy !req
179. You know, I'd love you just as much
if you were a merchant captain.
Copy !req
180. And you wouldn't be gone for two years.
Copy !req
181. I won't be gone two years.
Copy !req
182. A Bedford whaler came back
last week who was gone three.
Copy !req
183. She lost two men
and still with her hull half empty.
Copy !req
184. Yeah, well, they were from Bedford,
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185. and they didn't have me on board.
Copy !req
186. Son of a bitch!
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187. I will captain my own ship!
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188. A whaling ship.
Copy !req
189. Up to them, all we'd ever have
is this patch of dirt,
Copy !req
190. and that's not gonna happen, Peggy.
Copy !req
191. Those are your father's words, not yours.
Copy !req
192. What's wrong with his words?
Copy !req
193. He wanted things
for his family, for himself.
Copy !req
194. He was a dreamer, Owen.
Copy !req
195. Yes, he was.
Copy !req
196. Dreamed of the sea
and never got to sail it
Copy !req
197. because of men like them.
Copy !req
198. At least he got to see his children born.
Copy !req
199. It's all I know.
Copy !req
200. I'm sorry.
Copy !req
201. I married a whaleman.
Copy !req
202. Hey.
Copy !req
203. I'll come back as quick
as a summer's night, I swear.
Copy !req
204. Just come back.
Copy !req
205. Promise me.
Copy !req
206. I already swore to you.
Now you want me to promise, too?
Copy !req
207. I promise.
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208. Son, a word With you.
Copy !req
209. To be a captain, you cannot be a friend.
Copy !req
210. You are their superior.
Copy !req
211. Never forget that.
Never let them forget that.
Copy !req
212. Thank you, sir.
Copy !req
213. Your great-grandfather and a few others
created this industry.
Copy !req
214. Without us, without you,
the world plunges into darkness.
Copy !req
215. I hope to bring honor to
the Pollard family name, sir.
Copy !req
216. "Thou didst, O Lord,
create the mighty whale
Copy !req
217. "That wondrous monster of a mighty length
Copy !req
218. "Beyond conception his unmeasured strength
Copy !req
219. "But, everlasting God, thou dost ordain
Copy !req
220. "That we, poor feeble mortals
should engage
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221. "Ourselves, our wives
and children to maintain
Copy !req
222. "This dreadful monster
with a martial rage"
Copy !req
223. O Father, grant that your glorious light
shine on these men.
Copy !req
224. Ensure them a prosperous voyage,
Copy !req
225. that they may return safely
and with a full ship,
Copy !req
226. so that the white flames
of Nantucket whale oil
Copy !req
227. may continue to keep light in our homes,
Copy !req
228. city streets safe from sin in the night,
Copy !req
229. and to fuel the machines of industry
Copy !req
230. that drive our great nation forward
Copy !req
231. as our noble species evolves.
Copy !req
232. In your name, we pray.
Copy !req
233. - So, what month was this?
- Late in the year.
Copy !req
234. We were one of the last ships to go out,
Copy !req
235. which is why my friend
Barzillai and I got a berth.
Copy !req
236. You know, I was 14.
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237. Fourteen.
Copy !req
238. Nickerson, you're standing
around, boy. Move!
Copy !req
239. First time to sea.
Scared, but more scared to show it.
Copy !req
240. Barzillai was 17.
Copy !req
241. Orphans. Grew up on the wharf.
Copy !req
242. Both in a hurry to be called men.
Copy !req
243. Grubs, what are those pins
they're wearing?
Copy !req
244. They're whale pins, Thomas.
Copy !req
245. How do I get one of them?
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246. Well, you gotta thrust the killing lance
Copy !req
247. Into the largest beast that
ever breathed on this Earth.
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248. Nickerson, get the green stuff
to Mr. Bond, there.
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249. Make it quick, damn it.
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250. I shall have 12 of those one day.
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251. Windlass is ready
and sails are loose, sir.
Copy !req
252. Mr. Joy,
this is only half my order!
Copy !req
253. Put them over the ground tier casks.
Copy !req
254. Well, well, you being on board
means only one thing.
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255. Yeah, at least there's
one person on this ship
Copy !req
256. who knows the truth about Owen Chase.
Copy !req
257. No, that all the other ships
have already crewed up.
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258. Now, now.
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259. I'm a reformed man, Owen.
Copy !req
260. Question is, are you?
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261. Don't tell me Matthew Joy's
put down the bottle.
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262. Dry as sand.
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263. Has Owen Chase put down his temper?
Copy !req
264. Ah, serene as the church.
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265. I'll believe that when I see it.
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266. And given our captain,
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267. I'll give your serenity about 48 hours?
Copy !req
268. Good luck.
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269. Pollard. George Pollard.
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270. Owen Chase.
Copy !req
271. "Chase."
That's an off-island name, isn't it?
Copy !req
272. Yes, it is.
Copy !req
273. And very shortly, we will be
off-island for some time,
Copy !req
274. and I'll be very much at home.
Copy !req
275. Must say I was surprised.
Copy !req
276. Normally, a captain gets
to choose his first mate.
Copy !req
277. An experienced captain, yes.
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278. 'Course, you can understand
from the owners' point of view,
Copy !req
279. they want to feel their investment's
in the hands of men.
Copy !req
280. Indeed.
Copy !req
281. They probably want a little
extra reassurance, that's all.
Copy !req
282. Well, do keep an eye on me
Copy !req
283. and let me know
if I'm doing anything wrong.
Copy !req
284. Oh, I know no other way, Captain.
Copy !req
285. Hmm.
Copy !req
286. Mr. Chase, haul short the anchor.
Copy !req
287. Yank to the wind!
There's topmen aloft.
Copy !req
288. - Aye!
- Mr. Lawrence, take the helm.
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289. - Aye, sir.
- Mr. Joy, make sail.
Copy !req
290. Mr. Cole! Mr. Chappel!
Stand by the spanker.
Copy !req
291. Set your fore staysail
and your fore and main topsails.
Copy !req
292. Come on, look lively, you lads.
Copy !req
293. Come on, Nickerson!
While we're young!
Copy !req
294. Let fall clews
and bunts and sheet ho!
Copy !req
295. Set topsails and topgallants.
Copy !req
296. - Heave away on the windlass.
- Heave away on the windlass.
Copy !req
297. Set topgallants.
Copy !req
298. Let go clew lines and sheet ho!
Copy !req
299. There's a snarl in the gasket, sir.
Copy !req
300. Mr. Chappel, take the helm.
Copy !req
301. It won't clear, Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
302. Come on! Why aren't those braces laid out?
Copy !req
303. Mr. Ray, where are my headsails?
Copy !req
304. Aye, sir!
Copy !req
305. Crank away on the windlass!
Copy !req
306. Crank away on the windlass, sir!
Copy !req
307. Nickerson, pull!
Copy !req
308. Make sail, God damn it!
Copy !req
309. God and all of Nantucket
is watching, men.
Copy !req
310. Anchor's trim!
Copy !req
311. Captain! Head down!
Copy !req
312. Mind your head, Captain.
Copy !req
313. What's the matter, Mr. Sheppard?
Copy !req
314. Gasket's fouled the sheet, sir.
Copy !req
315. It won't clear, Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
316. Topgallant sheet is jammed!
Copy !req
317. The gasket still won't clear!
Copy !req
318. We don't have enough sail on yet.
Copy !req
319. Still won't clear!
Copy !req
320. Watch your step!
Copy !req
321. It's the gasket, Owen!
Copy !req
322. Stand clear.
Copy !req
323. Whoa! Bloody hell!
Copy !req
324. - Let fall your course!
- Heave!
Copy !req
325. Make fast!
Copy !req
326. Nice piece of work, Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
327. If we make Cape Verdes
in the next two weeks,
Copy !req
328. we'll have a decent chance
of reaching the Pacific on schedule.
Copy !req
329. Corn, Mr. Chase?
Copy !req
330. Oh, no, thank you, sir.
Copy !req
331. Never did have much of a taste for it.
Copy !req
332. That's odd.
Copy !req
333. Told your father grew corn on Cape Cod.
Copy !req
334. That's right. He did.
Copy !req
335. As you can imagine,
Copy !req
336. I certainly grew tired
of eating it every day.
Copy !req
337. Corn.
Copy !req
338. - Okra. Beans, I believe?
- Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
339. Before he went to jail.
Copy !req
340. Are you familiar with this story, Mr. Joy?
Copy !req
341. Sir?
Copy !req
342. Were you aware that
Copy !req
343. Mr. Chase was effectively orphaned
due to his father's incarceration?
Copy !req
344. Well, we all have our own paths to sea.
Copy !req
345. As a rule, we tend
not to ask too many questions.
Copy !req
346. Hmm.
Copy !req
347. Can't have been easy, though.
Copy !req
348. Yet
Copy !req
349. you had Nantucket's great seafaring family
to adopt you.
Copy !req
350. This is far from the first time
Copy !req
351. I've been called a landsman
or an off-islander
Copy !req
352. by some Nantucketer,
Copy !req
353. reminding me how I am not
a part of that family.
Copy !req
354. Now, if the Captain will excuse me,
Copy !req
355. there are whaleboats
and watches to assign.
Copy !req
356. No, sir. Not for me.
Copy !req
357. - Not a drop?
- No, sir.
Copy !req
358. Like I said,
Copy !req
359. sometimes the fewer questions one asks,
the better.
Copy !req
360. Serve that food up.
Copy !req
361. Getting this
slop on the first day?
Copy !req
362. Cheap bastards. Where's the meat?
Copy !req
363. That's a gorgeous girl,
Mr. Chappel.
Copy !req
364. A vision of beauty, that.
Carved on a varnished whale bone.
Copy !req
365. - Let me have a touch.
- Don't touch.
Copy !req
366. I thought you were married, anyway.
Copy !req
367. I am, and there she is.
Copy !req
368. Well, that's her nose, anyway.
Copy !req
369. Congratulations, ladies.
Copy !req
370. That was a fine job trimming sails today.
Copy !req
371. A sorrier pack of deck wallopers
I don't think I've ever seen.
Copy !req
372. Mr. Chappel.
Copy !req
373. - Sir!
- You're Captain's harpooner.
Copy !req
374. Mr. Lawrence, you'll be mine.
Copy !req
375. Aye, sir.
Copy !req
376. And Mr. Peterson.
Copy !req
377. Second mate's harpooner.
Copy !req
378. Aye, sir.
Copy !req
379. There'll be six men to a boat.
Copy !req
380. First drills are tomorrow.
Six bells sharp.
Copy !req
381. We're not even east of Halifax, sir.
Copy !req
382. What's your name?
Copy !req
383. Coffin. Henry Coffin.
Copy !req
384. He's the Captain's cousin, sir.
Copy !req
385. Well, well, Mr. Coffin.
Copy !req
386. You think a whale knows
if it's east of Halifax?
Copy !req
387. I don't know who all of you are
or how you got here.
Copy !req
388. Some of you probably have felonies to hide
and you're on the run.
Copy !req
389. That's fine. I don't give a damn.
Copy !req
390. But in return, you exist for one thing
Copy !req
391. and one thing only.
Copy !req
392. And that is whale oil.
Copy !req
393. I intend to fill our 2,000 barrels
Copy !req
394. and be home as quickly as possible.
Copy !req
395. And even when the weather is fine
Copy !req
396. and there are no whales, Mr. Coffin,
Copy !req
397. we will lower the boats
and practice all maneuvers
Copy !req
398. necessary in the capture of a whale.
Copy !req
399. And any man who is idle
will find himself swimming home.
Copy !req
400. Is that understood?
Copy !req
401. Aye, sir.
Copy !req
402. Sir.
Copy !req
403. Greenhorn.
Copy !req
404. On deck.
Copy !req
405. On you go.
Copy !req
406. Aye, aye, landsman.
Copy !req
407. Thomas Nickerson, right?
Copy !req
408. Aye, sir.
Copy !req
409. You know, some feel sick at first.
Copy !req
410. Please, pull me back up!
Copy !req
411. Best way to square it
with King Neptune, boy!
Copy !req
412. Please bring me up!
Copy !req
413. Better now?
Copy !req
414. Ah, shit.
Copy !req
415. Sir, I am so sorry.
Copy !req
416. Well, now you got something
to write home to your mother about.
Copy !req
417. My mother's buried up in Smith's Hill.
Copy !req
418. There's a stone for my father, too.
Copy !req
419. He was lost at sea before I was born.
Copy !req
420. Here, give me that.
Copy !req
421. Well, this is your family now, boy.
Copy !req
422. For better or for worse.
Copy !req
423. Worse, mostly.
Copy !req
424. Swab the deck, kid.
Copy !req
425. Dogwatch! You're gonna learn
what it takes to be Whalers today, mates.
Copy !req
426. Aye, sir!
Copy !req
427. You led that line wrong, Nickerson.
Copy !req
428. Aye, sir.
Copy !req
429. We'll stay at this
till sundown if we have to.
Copy !req
430. Aye, Mr. Joy, sir!
Copy !req
431. Main topsail leech lines!
Copy !req
432. Harpooner, make ready to boat!
Copy !req
433. - Aye, sir!
- Aye, Mr. Joy!
Copy !req
434. Go main topsail leech lines.
Copy !req
435. Too slow, you damn coofs!
Copy !req
436. The bailing piggins.
Copy !req
437. You will learn
every inch of this ship
Copy !req
438. - before you return to your bunks.
- Aye, sir!
Copy !req
439. Sweat that line, Barz.
Copy !req
440. You need to move quicker, Mr. Ray.
Copy !req
441. Aye, Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
442. Ain't no greenhorns
no more, Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
443. You're a sailor now!
Copy !req
444. Not bad, Mr. Ray. Well done.
Copy !req
445. - Forecourse bunts!
- Aye, sir.
Copy !req
446. Get used to it, lads.
You're gonna work like horses.
Copy !req
447. Mr. Chase?
Copy !req
448. Sir.
Copy !req
449. Set stunsails.
Copy !req
450. Is that wise, sir?
We're nearing the Gulf Stream.
Copy !req
451. Best keep it five knots
till we can see the weather.
Copy !req
452. We are two days behind.
Copy !req
453. We need to make up the time
if we're to catch the easterlies.
Copy !req
454. Set stunsails.
Copy !req
455. - Set stunsails.
- Aye, Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
456. - Come on, move.
- Belay that! Set stunsails!
Copy !req
457. Get aloft, Mr. Coffin.
Copy !req
458. - The captain wants speed.
- Aye, sir.
Copy !req
459. Look for braces, lads.
Copy !req
460. - Trim for speed.
- Aye, sir.
Copy !req
461. Set fore the main topsail
and topgallant stunsails, men. Move it.
Copy !req
462. Make fast your stunsail halyard.
Copy !req
463. Make fast stunsail halyard, sir.
Copy !req
464. Stunsail boom ready, sir!
Copy !req
465. Bracing fore topsail, sir.
Copy !req
466. Hey!
Copy !req
467. The captain's got us moving now!
Copy !req
468. We're finally getting somewhere!
Copy !req
469. She may be old,
but she can still roll, boys!
Copy !req
470. Sir, a squall on the starboard bow.
Copy !req
471. We must shorten sail immediately.
Copy !req
472. Not just yet, Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
473. Sir, we are headed into a squall
at more than 8 knots,
Copy !req
474. and it's moving faster than that.
Copy !req
475. Let it come.
The men are soft from months on land.
Copy !req
476. They need a good baptism.
Copy !req
477. Let them know our work has begun.
Copy !req
478. If we don't shorten sail and bear off,
it'll catch us on the beam.
Copy !req
479. Mr. Chase, we will stand on.
Copy !req
480. Mr. Lawrence?
Copy !req
481. Hold our course.
Copy !req
482. Holding course, sir.
Copy !req
483. We'll lose half a day running
like that. We'll skirt the edge of it.
Copy !req
484. If the men can't handle a gust like this,
then God help us all.
Copy !req
485. Best secure for heavy weather.
Copy !req
486. Rough weather coming up, boys.
Copy !req
487. Get this deck secure.
Copy !req
488. Double gripes on the boats!
Copy !req
489. Best prepare for weather, Mr. Bond.
Copy !req
490. We're headed into a squall.
Copy !req
491. Secure the main hatch!
Copy !req
492. She's moving fast!
Copy !req
493. We must fall off and run with it.
Copy !req
494. We will stand on, Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
495. Mr. Lawrence!
Copy !req
496. - Hold your course.
- Holding course, sir.
Copy !req
497. Sea's coming aboard!
Copy !req
498. Hold on!
Copy !req
499. Shorten sail, Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
500. - Climb to weather and grab the shrouds!
- Climb to weather!
Copy !req
501. Get to windward and hold on!
Copy !req
502. - We need to get those sails down!
- Go lee!
Copy !req
503. Nickerson, hold fast!
Copy !req
504. Hold steady lines!
Copy !req
505. Hold fast!
Copy !req
506. Turn the ship!
Copy !req
507. Turn to leeward!
Copy !req
508. No! The damage is done!
Copy !req
509. - Strike topgallants. Let fly sheets!
- No, turn the ship!
Copy !req
510. Veer off, Mr. Lawrence.
Copy !req
511. It's too late! It's too goddamn late!
Copy !req
512. - We'll be broadsided!
- Turn this ship!
Copy !req
513. - Hold on!
- Turn!
Copy !req
514. Strike those damn topgallants!
Copy !req
515. Hold on!
Copy !req
516. Look out!
Copy !req
517. Mr. Joy!
Copy !req
518. - We have to cut away the topgallants!
- Topgallants away!
Copy !req
519. We have to get her upright!
Copy !req
520. You wish to see me, sir?
Copy !req
521. At six bells tomorrow,
Copy !req
522. you will assemble the crew.
Copy !req
523. Inform them that we will be returning
to Nantucket for repairs.
Copy !req
524. You will then apologize to them
Copy !req
525. for interfering with a captain's order,
Copy !req
526. which nearly cost the lives
of every man on this ship today.
Copy !req
527. What?
Copy !req
528. I'll accept your resignation
upon our return to port.
Copy !req
529. That will be all.
Copy !req
530. - It was your order to set stunsails, sir.
- That decision was sound.
Copy !req
531. The men needed testing.
Copy !req
532. So you send them into a storm?
Copy !req
533. That was unlucky.
Copy !req
534. No, it was bad seamanship.
Copy !req
535. And blaming misfortune
is just plain weakness.
Copy !req
536. Damn your impertinence!
Copy !req
537. Do you know who you're speaking to?
Copy !req
538. My name is Captain George Pollard.
Copy !req
539. Pollard!
Copy !req
540. And you, Mr. Chase,
no matter how many whale pins
Copy !req
541. you may have on your lapel,
Copy !req
542. are nothing more than the son of a farmer
Copy !req
543. who's managed to bully his way
into an officer's tunic.
Copy !req
544. Now get out.
Copy !req
545. To return to port
without a single barrel of oil
Copy !req
546. would be a mistake, sir.
Copy !req
547. And not behoove a man
whose name is Pollard.
Copy !req
548. Or Chase, for that matter.
Copy !req
549. And the best thing for both of us
Copy !req
550. would be to work all hours God sends us,
Copy !req
551. fill this ship with oil
and be home inside a year
Copy !req
552. and rid of one another
as quickly as possible.
Copy !req
553. Trust me, I am every bit
as desirous of that as you.
Copy !req
554. Of course, that is a captain's decision.
Copy !req
555. They were like an ill-married couple.
Copy !req
556. An ill-married couple
will tolerate each other, Mr. Melville.
Copy !req
557. But an ill-married couple
can also bring down a ship.
Copy !req
558. Are you married, Mr. Melville?
Copy !req
559. - I am.
- God have mercy on you.
Copy !req
560. First child on the way, too.
Copy !req
561. So, does your good wife
know that you've brought
Copy !req
562. all you have in the world here tonight
Copy !req
563. and given it to a stranger?
Copy !req
564. No, sir.
Copy !req
565. You're full of surprises, aren't you?
Copy !req
566. So,
Copy !req
567. the Essex did not return to port.
Copy !req
568. She did not.
Copy !req
569. - She continued out to sea.
- Yes, she did.
Copy !req
570. And before long,
Copy !req
571. we heard that call
Copy !req
572. that all whalemen pray for.
Copy !req
573. "Blows."
Copy !req
574. Blows!
Copy !req
575. To windward!
Copy !req
576. There she blows!
Copy !req
577. Right or sperm, Mr. Ramsdell?
Copy !req
578. Sperm whales they are!
Copy !req
579. There go the flukes!
Copy !req
580. Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
581. Hoist and swing boats.
Copy !req
582. All hands! All hands on deck!
Copy !req
583. All hands on deck!
Copy !req
584. Away the boats.
Copy !req
585. Lower away!
Copy !req
586. Straight! Crack them backbones.
Copy !req
587. Aye, sir!
Copy !req
588. Give way all.
Copy !req
589. Spring those oars till your arms fall off.
Copy !req
590. There they breach!
Copy !req
591. Thataway, boys! Full pressure!
Copy !req
592. Aye, sir!
Copy !req
593. Come on! Put your back into it.
Copy !req
594. Pull!
Copy !req
595. Pull like a vengeance!
Copy !req
596. There she blows!
Copy !req
597. - That's a calf.
- Whoo-hoo!
Copy !req
598. That's the calf?
Copy !req
599. That's the cow.
Copy !req
600. And that's our boy!
That's the money.
Copy !req
601. - Nickerson, push!
- Sorry, sir.
Copy !req
602. Forty-barreler?
Copy !req
603. Fifty.
Copy !req
604. Oh, he's a buster!
Copy !req
605. Bite the oars, lads.
Copy !req
606. Blister your goddamn lungs!
Copy !req
607. Full pressure!
Copy !req
608. Smartly, lads! Smartly!
Copy !req
609. Mind your oars!
Copy !req
610. - Mr. Ramsdell, prepare the line.
- Aye, sir.
Copy !req
611. Mr. Lawrence, the first one's mine.
Copy !req
612. Take me to the pretty spot.
Copy !req
613. - Pull!
- Come on. Stay on him.
Copy !req
614. You're on your first
Nantucket sleigh ride, boy.
Copy !req
615. Oh, my God!
Copy !req
616. Whoo!
Copy !req
617. Look at him!
Copy !req
618. The most fearsome creature
ever to live on this Earth.
Copy !req
619. He sounds.
Copy !req
620. My hands!
Copy !req
621. We need
to wet the line, Nickerson.
Copy !req
622. Give way, lads. Give way.
Copy !req
623. Got 140 fathoms
of line left, Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
624. Eighty fathoms of line left, sir!
Copy !req
625. He's gonna pull us under!
Copy !req
626. Matthew, I need your line!
Copy !req
627. Keep going!
Copy !req
628. - Peterson, give me the line.
- Aye, sir.
Copy !req
629. Give me that line, Mr. Peterson.
Copy !req
630. We're down
to 60 fathoms of line left, sir!
Copy !req
631. - Twenty fathoms, Mr. Chase.
- Tie it off!
Copy !req
632. - Safe!
- Go!
Copy !req
633. - Peterson, lay out.
- Aye, sir.
Copy !req
634. How many fathoms can he go?
Copy !req
635. 70 fathoms left, sir.
Copy !req
636. No, no, no, wait.
Copy !req
637. - Owen!
- No, no! Not yet!
Copy !req
638. Don't touch that line!
Copy !req
639. Down to 50 fathoms, sir.
Copy !req
640. Owen, God damn it!
Copy !req
641. I said don't touch it!
Copy !req
642. 30 fathoms left, Mr. Joy.
Copy !req
643. Ten fathoms left, sir!
Copy !req
644. Backwater!
Copy !req
645. Push!
Copy !req
646. Chimney's afire!
Copy !req
647. Chimney's afire!
Copy !req
648. Afire!
Copy !req
649. Hurry it along, lads.
Copy !req
650. God! Get out, you bastards.
Copy !req
651. Blubber in the Oil.
Copy !req
652. Smell that, boys!
That's us making money!
Copy !req
653. Get out of there,
you sons of bitches.
Copy !req
654. - There, you got it?
- There's not a chance.
Copy !req
655. - How's it looking?
- It's not good.
Copy !req
656. That's it.
Copy !req
657. - Mr. Chase, sir.
- Yeah?
Copy !req
658. That's all of it, sir.
We can't get any more out.
Copy !req
659. That's the gold in there, boys.
Come on, keep digging.
Copy !req
660. We're too big to wriggle down there.
Copy !req
661. Then find someone who can.
Copy !req
662. Nickerson! Come here, boy.
Copy !req
663. Hey! I said come here.
Copy !req
664. Climb on into him.
Copy !req
665. Come on, Thomas.
Copy !req
666. What's in there is worth
a hell of a lot more
Copy !req
667. than what they're boiling down.
Copy !req
668. Sir!
Copy !req
669. I can't, I'm...
Copy !req
670. I'm sorry. I can't.
Copy !req
671. You get down there,
or I'll have you sleep down there.
Copy !req
672. You best put that between your teeth, boy.
Copy !req
673. Stinks worse than
the devil's asshole down there.
Copy !req
674. Thanks.
Copy !req
675. Sorry.
Copy !req
676. Here, Nickerson,
take my pillow with you.
Copy !req
677. Down you go.
Copy !req
678. A man gets to know himself down there.
Copy !req
679. - They ever send you into a whale's head?
- No.
Copy !req
680. I was spared.
Copy !req
681. Well, that's where the treasure is.
Copy !req
682. I'll never forget that first bull.
Copy !req
683. Forty-seven barrels.
Copy !req
684. 'Course, the happiness was short-lived.
Copy !req
685. The waters there had all been fished out?
Copy !req
686. That they had.
Copy !req
687. So, we headed further out.
Copy !req
688. Yeah.
Copy !req
689. Took us a month to round the Horn.
Copy !req
690. Left the South Atlantic behind
with a sliver of hope
Copy !req
691. that things could change for the better.
Copy !req
692. But making the Pacific
didn't improve our lot.
Copy !req
693. Whale sightings were too damn scarce.
Copy !req
694. After nearly a year at sea,
Copy !req
695. the temperaments of our captain
and first mate grew more strained.
Copy !req
696. Captain Pollard spent most
days and nights in his cabin,
Copy !req
697. afraid to look his crew in the eye.
Copy !req
698. Our hold was almost empty.
Copy !req
699. And to gaze upon our paltry efforts
Copy !req
700. only served as a reminder
Copy !req
701. that we were a long way from going home.
Copy !req
702. No, no. I don't talk that talk.
Copy !req
703. - Speak English.
- Offer me more.
Copy !req
704. - Here, sir.
- This, Nantucket whale oil.
Copy !req
705. - Ain't no skinny hog worth more than that.
- More!
Copy !req
706. Capitán. Excuse me.
Copy !req
707. The locals told me your voyage
was waylaid, sir.
Copy !req
708. Captain George Pollard. The Essex.
Copy !req
709. Capitán Clemente Pelaez, the Santa Maria.
Copy !req
710. Would you buy a colleague a drink?
Copy !req
711. No, no.
Copy !req
712. Bad luck? How far out?
Copy !req
713. Far enough for only a fool to go.
Copy !req
714. How far would that be?
Copy !req
715. A thousand leagues along the equator.
Copy !req
716. The Offshore Grounds.
Copy !req
717. Were there whales there?
Copy !req
718. More than you've ever dreamed.
Copy !req
719. Hundreds.
Copy !req
720. Fields of flukes far as the eye can see.
Copy !req
721. Could have filled up 3,000 barrels
in the space of a day.
Copy !req
722. What do you mean, "could have"?
Copy !req
723. If it weren't for that demon.
Copy !req
724. A whale.
Copy !req
725. White as alabaster.
Copy !req
726. Hundred feet long.
Copy !req
727. Sent six of my crew to their graves.
Copy !req
728. And the rest of us,
something to remember him by.
Copy !req
729. Now, this white whale,
Copy !req
730. did he dance a jig
and pick your pocket as well?
Copy !req
731. Hmm?
Copy !req
732. Gracias.
Copy !req
733. You believe that?
Copy !req
734. If we set sail now,
catch the south easterlies
Copy !req
735. at their best time and fill our belly,
Copy !req
736. we could be home in six months.
Copy !req
737. What say you, Mr. Chase?
Copy !req
738. No need to endure our predicament
Copy !req
739. for a moment longer than necessary.
Copy !req
740. Amen to that.
Copy !req
741. Amen.
Copy !req
742. Greed took hold
of our captain and first mate.
Copy !req
743. So we headed out.
Copy !req
744. A thousand leagues along the equator.
Copy !req
745. Where knowledge ended, speculation began.
Copy !req
746. That's where the whales had gone to hide.
Copy !req
747. As far from man as they could possibly go.
Copy !req
748. But we hunted them down.
Copy !req
749. Centuries before,
Copy !req
750. sailors feared
sailing off the edge of the Earth.
Copy !req
751. But we were headed for the edge of sanity.
Copy !req
752. Trust gave way to doubt.
Copy !req
753. Hope to blind superstition.
Copy !req
754. Captain, the men are talking.
Copy !req
755. That's what men do.
Copy !req
756. They aren't happy with your decision
to sail out this far.
Copy !req
757. Well, did you correct them?
Copy !req
758. Did you remind them of our purpose
to fill this ship with whale oil,
Copy !req
759. and if the whales are 1,000 leagues out,
that that is where we will go?
Copy !req
760. Cousin, please.
Copy !req
761. This is madness.
Copy !req
762. You have let yourself
be influenced by that man.
Copy !req
763. You must turn this ship back.
Copy !req
764. I suggest you go back down,
Copy !req
765. reassure the men, be a leader
Copy !req
766. and don't ever, ever abuse
the privilege of family with me again.
Copy !req
767. Mr. Coffin.
Copy !req
768. What is it?
Copy !req
769. Listen.
Copy !req
770. Mr. Chase?
I see some white water.
Copy !req
771. - Where?
- Portside!
Copy !req
772. - We're away!
- Portside, Captain!
Copy !req
773. - Where are they?
- You see anything?
Copy !req
774. Lower away!
Copy !req
775. Lower away! Lower away!
Copy !req
776. The devil take the Mexican grounds!
Copy !req
777. Peak oars!
Copy !req
778. Give it to him, Mr. Chappel!
Copy !req
779. Stick him, man! Stick him!
Copy !req
780. Dead ahead, Peterson!
Copy !req
781. Don't let him chew your oars, boys.
Back to it.
Copy !req
782. - The whale?
- Yes.
Copy !req
783. - So it's true?
- Yes.
Copy !req
784. Too much is true.
Copy !req
785. Get it up!
Copy !req
786. Full pressure!
Copy !req
787. Mr. Bond!
Copy !req
788. Back the foreyard, lower the tackle!
Copy !req
789. Aye, sir!
Copy !req
790. Here she comes, Peterson. Now, now!
Copy !req
791. Mr. Lawrence, take us leeward,
head us straight for the school.
Copy !req
792. Aye, sir.
Copy !req
793. - Hot tar, sir.
- We'll find him.
Copy !req
794. We're boat to black skin.
Copy !req
795. Beach us on her!
Copy !req
796. She's ours, men!
Copy !req
797. What was that, Mr. Lawrence?
Copy !req
798. Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
799. God damn it.
Copy !req
800. Find Mr...
Copy !req
801. Mr. Easton!
Copy !req
802. Get Mr. Lawrence
to man the pumps!
Copy !req
803. Where is he?
Copy !req
804. Port bow!
Copy !req
805. Get me the biggest irons we have.
Copy !req
806. He wants a fight?
Copy !req
807. Never seen a whale do that.
Copy !req
808. Mr. Lawrence,
take the wheel.
Copy !req
809. Mr. Ramsdell,
secure the other end of the line
Copy !req
810. - to the foremast.
- Aye, sir.
Copy !req
811. As I live and breathe, he's mine.
Copy !req
812. Ah!
Copy !req
813. - Cut the line!
- Look out!
Copy !req
814. - Captain!
- What?
Copy !req
815. The Essex! She's listing.
Copy !req
816. Turn this boat around!
Copy !req
817. - Help me!
- Nickerson!
Copy !req
818. - Mr. Joy!
- Here!
Copy !req
819. - Give me your hand!
- Help!
Copy !req
820. Nickerson!
Copy !req
821. Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
822. A whale, sir.
Copy !req
823. It stove the ship.
Copy !req
824. What?
Copy !req
825. We lost Easton and Sanborn.
Copy !req
826. The pumps are useless, sir.
Copy !req
827. Prepare to abandon ship.
Copy !req
828. We can't row our way home.
Copy !req
829. We'll have to strip her of her sails
Copy !req
830. - and jimmy-rig something.
- Aye, sir.
Copy !req
831. Gather as much food
and water as you can carry.
Copy !req
832. We're gonna need
all the fresh water you can find.
Copy !req
833. Nickerson,
you grab as much as you can.
Copy !req
834. Barz, come with me.
Copy !req
835. Sweet Lord!
Copy !req
836. First, the sails,
then the provisions.
Copy !req
837. Get as much food
as you can carry, lad.
Copy !req
838. Make haste, boys!
Copy !req
839. Nickerson, there are
more casks in steerage.
Copy !req
840. - Got it?
- Hardtack is dry.
Copy !req
841. Move sprightly, gentlemen.
Copy !req
842. Lower away!
Copy !req
843. - Take those tack lines.
- Up aloft!
Copy !req
844. Lower away! Bring it down!
Copy !req
845. Mr. Cole, get that yard down.
Copy !req
846. Bring it down. Keep it coming!
Copy !req
847. Hold off!
Copy !req
848. - Come on, Nickerson!
- Get those sails!
Copy !req
849. There you go.
Copy !req
850. Get that yard down!
Copy !req
851. We need the sails. Not enough water.
Copy !req
852. Get the barrels, now!
Copy !req
853. Strip that rigging!
Copy !req
854. More fresh water!
More hardtack! Come on!
Copy !req
855. I can see
more casks in the steerage!
Copy !req
856. Benjamin! Quick! Come on!
Copy !req
857. - Give me your hand!
- Get him up.
Copy !req
858. I got you.
Copy !req
859. Hardtack!
Copy !req
860. Come on! Move it!
Copy !req
861. Step lively, Mr. Nickerson!
Copy !req
862. Gotta get away from the oil!
Copy !req
863. She's going down! She's listing!
Copy !req
864. Where's Owen?
Copy !req
865. Nickerson, where is Mr. Chase?
Copy !req
866. He was just here, sir.
Copy !req
867. - Come on, hurry up!
- Owen!
Copy !req
868. - Mr. Chase!
- We gotta shove off!
Copy !req
869. Come on, now, boys!
Copy !req
870. Oil on deck!
Copy !req
871. - Captain!
- Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
872. Mr. Chase, sir!
Copy !req
873. Owen!
Copy !req
874. Where is the first mate?
Copy !req
875. - Owen!
- Mr. Chase, sir!
Copy !req
876. - Owen!
- She's gonna blow!
Copy !req
877. - Owen!
- We gotta move!
Copy !req
878. No, wait! Wait!
Copy !req
879. Mr. Chase, sir!
Copy !req
880. Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
881. There he is!
There he is! There he is!
Copy !req
882. - Over here!
- Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
883. Move that!
Copy !req
884. Mr. Chase, sir.
Copy !req
885. - Here!
- Get ahold, now.
Copy !req
886. We got you.
Copy !req
887. - Sir.
- You're all right now, Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
888. Going fishing, are we?
Copy !req
889. Clean and load it, Mr. Joy.
Copy !req
890. Back away,
or she'll take us down with her.
Copy !req
891. Captain.
Copy !req
892. What about our provisions?
Copy !req
893. Two ounces of hardtack a day per man.
Copy !req
894. And half a cup of water.
Copy !req
895. Hey, man, we can't live on that.
Copy !req
896. Not for more than a few days.
Copy !req
897. It's he.
Copy !req
898. Yeah, it's him, all right.
Copy !req
899. You don't fool me, Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
900. Mr. Coffin?
Copy !req
901. - That right?
- You put us here.
Copy !req
902. You know you put us here.
Copy !req
903. - Hey! Put it down!
- Mr. Coffin, put the pistol down.
Copy !req
904. - Say you're scared!
- What are you doing?
Copy !req
905. Mr. Coffin, put the pistol down.
Copy !req
906. You know what happens
when the food and water runs out?
Copy !req
907. Do as the captain says, Coffin!
Copy !req
908. I just wanna see the landsman scared.
Copy !req
909. Mr. Coffin, put the pistol down.
That's an order!
Copy !req
910. - Do as the captain says! Now!
- Say it!
Copy !req
911. - Henry.
- Say it!
Copy !req
912. Say it!
Copy !req
913. Henry!
Copy !req
914. Put the pistol down.
Copy !req
915. Henry!
Copy !req
916. Put it down.
Copy !req
917. So east it was.
Copy !req
918. Back in the direction we'd come.
Copy !req
919. Though only the sun
and compass told us so.
Copy !req
920. All directions looked the same.
Copy !req
921. Our hope was to catch
the Westerlies to Easter Island.
Copy !req
922. A journey of 3,000 miles.
Copy !req
923. In 12 days, we have drifted south.
Copy !req
924. Six degrees latitude.
Copy !req
925. We're not one mile closer
to Easter Island.
Copy !req
926. We stayed in the same place.
Copy !req
927. We are cursed.
Copy !req
928. We'll make up for it
when we catch the variables.
Copy !req
929. We'll catch them.
Copy !req
930. Chappel!
Copy !req
931. Chappel!
Copy !req
932. Chappel!
Copy !req
933. You've got him, Captain!
Copy !req
934. Mr. Joy, the halyard's jammed!
Copy !req
935. Mr. Joy!
You all right, Mr. Joy?
Copy !req
936. Grab the tiller!
Copy !req
937. - Grab it!
- Matthew!
Copy !req
938. Get that sail down!
Copy !req
939. Matthew. Hey, what happened?
Copy !req
940. What happened?
Copy !req
941. Owen. What are you doing here?
Copy !req
942. - Let me take a look.
- No, no, no.
Copy !req
943. - Lay still. Let me look.
- Owen, I'm fine.
Copy !req
944. All right. Just relax. Relax.
Let me take a look.
Copy !req
945. - I'm fine!
- I know. I know.
Copy !req
946. I just wanna take a look.
Copy !req
947. I banged my head.
Just a scratch, all right?
Copy !req
948. - Just a scratch.
- Give him some water.
Copy !req
949. - I don't need any water!
- Give him some goddamn water!
Copy !req
950. No, no, no. I don't need water. I'm fine.
Copy !req
951. - Yeah.
- Take that. Take it.
Copy !req
952. Hey. I got you, I got you.
Copy !req
953. You're all right. You're all right.
Copy !req
954. Hey! What're you all looking at?
I'm fine.
Copy !req
955. Captain Pollard. Fit as a fiddle.
Copy !req
956. Fit as a goddamned fiddle. You hear me?
Copy !req
957. - Owen.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
958. I'm fine.
Copy !req
959. All right? I'm fine!
Copy !req
960. - You're a tough son of a bitch.
- Thank you. I'm fine. Get out of here.
Copy !req
961. He's good.
Copy !req
962. Let's go.
Copy !req
963. Why waste water on a dead man?
Copy !req
964. Them two men have known each other,
sailed together since childhood.
Copy !req
965. Now, tell me,
Copy !req
966. could you sit there and watch
your own brother die?
Copy !req
967. Simply a matter of numbers, Mr. Chappel.
Copy !req
968. There's not enough for all of us.
Copy !req
969. Why waste water on a dead man?
Copy !req
970. Why waste water on...
Copy !req
971. Why waste water? Why waste?
Copy !req
972. Why waste water on a dead man?
Copy !req
973. Mr. Nickerson?
Copy !req
974. - Why waste water...
- You all right, sir?
Copy !req
975. - I cannot.
- Cannot what?
Copy !req
976. No, you...
Copy !req
977. You have enough. More than enough.
Copy !req
978. But, sir, we've come so far.
Copy !req
979. We have come to an end.
Copy !req
980. We have an agreement, sir.
Copy !req
981. Take the money and leave!
Copy !req
982. The devil's bargain.
Copy !req
983. No, sir.
Copy !req
984. The devil loves unspoken secrets.
Copy !req
985. Especially those that
fester in a man's soul.
Copy !req
986. What's yours?
Copy !req
987. I am not a great writer.
Copy !req
988. I am not Hawthorne.
Copy !req
989. But from my first hearing of it,
Copy !req
990. this tale has haunted me.
Copy !req
991. It consumes me.
Copy !req
992. I fear if I do not write it,
Copy !req
993. then I should never write again.
Copy !req
994. What else?
Copy !req
995. I fear if I do write it,
Copy !req
996. that it will not be
as good as it should be.
Copy !req
997. Continue the story, sir.
Copy !req
998. For the both of us.
Copy !req
999. Pass that down.
Copy !req
1000. Thank you, sir.
Copy !req
1001. We thank you, Lord, for this is our food.
Copy !req
1002. I'm sorry.
Copy !req
1003. For life and health,
Copy !req
1004. and every good.
Copy !req
1005. - Let all manner to...
- Land.
Copy !req
1006. Land!
Copy !req
1007. - Land! Land!
- Land!
Copy !req
1008. - Land!
- Land!
Copy !req
1009. Oars! Give way! Give way!
Copy !req
1010. Oars! Now! Give way! Row!
Copy !req
1011. - I saw it, Mr. Chase.
- That you did, boy.
Copy !req
1012. Hold fast.
Hold fast! Hold fast!
Copy !req
1013. - Mr. Chase, sir. What is it?
- Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
1014. What the devil is it?
Why have you stopped?
Copy !req
1015. He's been following us!
Copy !req
1016. What is he talking about?
Copy !req
1017. There's nothing out there,
Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
1018. - There ain't nothing out there, sir!
- Sir, what are you doing?
Copy !req
1019. Brace! Brace! Brace!
Copy !req
1020. No!
Copy !req
1021. Where is he?
Copy !req
1022. This could be Ducie Island.
Copy !req
1023. Without a map, compass or quadrant,
there's no way to be certain.
Copy !req
1024. We will keep fires going night and day.
Copy !req
1025. Hope a passing ship
catches sight of our smoke.
Copy !req
1026. This is what I wanted you to see.
Copy !req
1027. They've been here a long time, no doubt.
Copy !req
1028. Waiting for a ship.
Copy !req
1029. But no ship came.
Copy !req
1030. No ship is going to come.
Copy !req
1031. If we stay, we die.
Copy !req
1032. How long do you think
it'll take the tropic birds
Copy !req
1033. to stop coming here once
they see their eggs eaten?
Copy !req
1034. It's a privilege to know
the moment of one's death in advance,
Copy !req
1035. be able to prepare for it.
Copy !req
1036. Curse to be so far from home
Copy !req
1037. without a chance to say goodbyes,
Copy !req
1038. without a chance to make peace,
Copy !req
1039. without a chance to settle the scores.
Copy !req
1040. Then let us at least settle
those between us, Captain.
Copy !req
1041. Captain of what?
Copy !req
1042. The Essex was lost
through no fault of yours.
Copy !req
1043. I was as much to blame for...
Copy !req
1044. You are not the captain.
Copy !req
1045. But you were born to do this job.
Copy !req
1046. I was just born into it.
Copy !req
1047. What do we do, do you think, George?
Copy !req
1048. And what offense did we give God
to upset him so?
Copy !req
1049. The only creature to have
offended God here
Copy !req
1050. is the whale.
Copy !req
1051. Not us?
Copy !req
1052. In our arrogance, our greed,
look where we find ourselves.
Copy !req
1053. We are supreme creatures
made in God's own likeness.
Copy !req
1054. Earthly kings whose business it is
Copy !req
1055. to circumnavigate
the planet bestowed to us.
Copy !req
1056. To bend nature to our will.
Copy !req
1057. You really feel like an earthly king
after everything that we've been through?
Copy !req
1058. We're nothing. We're...
Copy !req
1059. We're specks. And dust.
Copy !req
1060. We sail into the sun at dawn.
Copy !req
1061. If we are to die,
then with God's grace, let us die as men.
Copy !req
1062. Are we ready, Mr. Weeks?
Copy !req
1063. Aye, sir.
Copy !req
1064. Mr. Chappel?
Copy !req
1065. Mr. Wright?
Copy !req
1066. I can't do it, sir.
Copy !req
1067. Me, Wrights and Weeks,
Copy !req
1068. we're staying.
Copy !req
1069. You ready to go, Matthew?
Copy !req
1070. I'll give you a hand.
Here, you gotta get up.
Copy !req
1071. No, there's no point. You hear me?
Copy !req
1072. No, we're going home.
We're going home.
Copy !req
1073. There's no point.
Copy !req
1074. Just go.
Copy !req
1075. God damn it, Matthew.
Copy !req
1076. It's all right.
Copy !req
1077. Well, I'll send a boat for you
the minute we get back.
Copy !req
1078. Then we'll play cards
back in Nantucket, all right?
Copy !req
1079. Yeah.
Copy !req
1080. - It's a deal.
- Good.
Copy !req
1081. You want me to open that for you?
Copy !req
1082. Ah...
Copy !req
1083. I think I'll manage.
Copy !req
1084. If it comes to that.
Copy !req
1085. God be with you, brother.
Copy !req
1086. Yeah, and you.
Copy !req
1087. Brother Peterson?
Copy !req
1088. Y'all coming with us?
Copy !req
1089. Mr. Peterson.
Copy !req
1090. Why don't you come in our boat
with Mr. Bond here?
Copy !req
1091. Where... Where is he?
Copy !req
1092. Pollard?
Copy !req
1093. Mr. Lawrence. Mr. Lawrence, wake up.
Copy !req
1094. Where's the other boat gone?
Copy !req
1095. - Pollard!
- Captain Pollard!
Copy !req
1096. - Captain Pollard!
- Captain Pollard, sir!
Copy !req
1097. - Pollard.
- Captain!
Copy !req
1098. Captain Pollard!
Copy !req
1099. Pollard!
Copy !req
1100. What's the matter?
Copy !req
1101. Benjamin. What are you doing?
Copy !req
1102. He's dead.
Copy !req
1103. Putting him overboard, sir.
Copy !req
1104. Look at me.
Copy !req
1105. Look at me, Benjamin.
Copy !req
1106. No right-minded sailor discards
what might yet save him.
Copy !req
1107. Listen to me, boy. Listen to me.
Copy !req
1108. He can help us.
Copy !req
1109. My God. My heavenly king.
Copy !req
1110. Sweetness is the power of his grace.
Copy !req
1111. With longing eyes,
Copy !req
1112. thy creatures await on thee
for daily food.
Copy !req
1113. My soul is dead.
Copy !req
1114. So it was decided.
Copy !req
1115. We prepared the body.
Copy !req
1116. We removed the organs.
Copy !req
1117. Separated his limbs from his body
Copy !req
1118. and cut all the flesh from the bones.
Copy !req
1119. After which,
Copy !req
1120. we closed the body
Copy !req
1121. and we sewed it up
Copy !req
1122. as decently as we could
Copy !req
1123. and committed it to the sea.
Copy !req
1124. We ate the heart first.
Copy !req
1125. You judge me.
Copy !req
1126. No.
Copy !req
1127. There.
Copy !req
1128. There.
Copy !req
1129. It is done.
Copy !req
1130. It is out.
Copy !req
1131. And you've never told anyone?
Copy !req
1132. No.
Copy !req
1133. Not even your wife?
Copy !req
1134. Do you think she could ever love me
Copy !req
1135. if she knew the abominations
I had committed?
Copy !req
1136. Yes. She would.
Copy !req
1137. And if you had told me
the story when we met,
Copy !req
1138. I would still wear your ring today.
Copy !req
1139. The strength of that boy
Copy !req
1140. still lives in you.
Copy !req
1141. I see that.
Copy !req
1142. Even if you don't.
Copy !req
1143. You can finish your story now, my love.
Copy !req
1144. Hey, sit up.
Copy !req
1145. Listen,
Copy !req
1146. put your head back.
Copy !req
1147. Look, we still got
a few drops of water left.
Copy !req
1148. Don't you quit on me.
We're going home.
Copy !req
1149. Do you have a family back home, Mr. Chase?
Copy !req
1150. Yeah, I have a wife.
Copy !req
1151. Yes, and a son or a daughter.
Copy !req
1152. Very well.
Copy !req
1153. - Captain.
- We will draw again.
Copy !req
1154. We will do no such thing.
Copy !req
1155. We'll draw again.
Copy !req
1156. Mr. Ramsdell,
Copy !req
1157. you will assume command of this vessel.
Copy !req
1158. Cousin, will you?
Copy !req
1159. You're our...
Copy !req
1160. You're our captain.
The men need you.
Copy !req
1161. The men will be fine.
Copy !req
1162. Please.
Copy !req
1163. Please. Please.
Copy !req
1164. - Henry.
- Let us draw again.
Copy !req
1165. It is an order.
Copy !req
1166. If you cannot do it,
Copy !req
1167. pass the pistol to another man.
Copy !req
1168. Henry, no, no, no!
Copy !req
1169. You gotta help me, kid.
You gotta help me.
Copy !req
1170. We were weeks in the doldrums.
Copy !req
1171. That part of the Pacific
is more desert than ocean.
Copy !req
1172. The sun beating down.
Copy !req
1173. My fear.
Copy !req
1174. All I could think about
Copy !req
1175. was that everyone would die,
Copy !req
1176. and I'd be the last left alive.
Copy !req
1177. And as best Mr. Chase could tell,
we were still 800 miles from land.
Copy !req
1178. Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
1179. Ah.
Copy !req
1180. Captain Pollard.
Copy !req
1181. I am happy to see you.
Copy !req
1182. Been very little happiness
in our survival.
Copy !req
1183. Or in ours, sir.
Copy !req
1184. Barzillai?
Copy !req
1185. The third boat?
Copy !req
1186. They've, uh...
Copy !req
1187. They've been gone for days.
Copy !req
1188. I'm afraid they're lost, sir.
Copy !req
1189. Mr. Chase,
you have the best position.
Copy !req
1190. It's just a whale.
Copy !req
1191. He's there! Throw the lance!
Copy !req
1192. Throw it!
Copy !req
1193. - Throw it! Throw the lance!
- Come on.
Copy !req
1194. Throw it!
Copy !req
1195. Come on.
Copy !req
1196. Kill it! He's there!
Copy !req
1197. Throw the lance!
Copy !req
1198. Why didn't you kill it?
Copy !req
1199. You're a damn fool.
Copy !req
1200. Currents drew us apart
Copy !req
1201. and that was the last we would see
of Captain Pollard's whale boat.
Copy !req
1202. A boat!
Copy !req
1203. Broad on the port bow!
Copy !req
1204. May God have mercy.
Copy !req
1205. Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
1206. Father!
Copy !req
1207. Don't leave me, Father!
Copy !req
1208. Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
1209. Mr. Chase.
Copy !req
1210. Sir, look. Look, sir.
Copy !req
1211. Mr. Chase, look.
Copy !req
1212. Wake up, Mr. Chase!
Copy !req
1213. Here, wake up!
Copy !req
1214. Please wake up, sir, there's land.
Copy !req
1215. Mr. Chase, look.
Copy !req
1216. We were rescued there,
Copy !req
1217. off the island of Más Afuera, Chile,
Copy !req
1218. 90 days after the sinking of the Essex.
Copy !req
1219. They gave us some old clothes.
Copy !req
1220. Fed us, too.
Copy !req
1221. It was hard to eat at first.
Copy !req
1222. Strange.
Copy !req
1223. They looked after us as best they could
Copy !req
1224. till we found a ship
that would carry us home.
Copy !req
1225. That voyage took another three months.
Copy !req
1226. It looked like the whole island
turned out to see us return.
Copy !req
1227. But there were no cheers.
Copy !req
1228. Only silence.
Copy !req
1229. They looked at us like
we were apparitions,
Copy !req
1230. phantoms.
Copy !req
1231. We'd said nothing of the details
of our survival to anyone,
Copy !req
1232. but I wondered if they somehow
knew of our privations.
Copy !req
1233. Maybe they were just curious.
Copy !req
1234. Oh, my God!
Copy !req
1235. I promised, didn't I?
Copy !req
1236. Oh, God.
Copy !req
1237. Hi.
Copy !req
1238. Hey, sweetie. Who's this?
Copy !req
1239. Phoebe Ann.
Copy !req
1240. Phoebe Ann Chase, huh?
Copy !req
1241. This is Daddy.
Copy !req
1242. Hey, sweetie.
Copy !req
1243. It's your daddy.
Copy !req
1244. Oh, my God.
Copy !req
1245. Of course,
they couldn't leave him alone.
Copy !req
1246. Mr. Chase and his wife had
scarcely walked a block towards home
Copy !req
1247. when he was stopped and
made to return to the Maritime office.
Copy !req
1248. There were business matters
still in question.
Copy !req
1249. So, to the matter.
Copy !req
1250. Due to the significant loss of life
and property on our voyage,
Copy !req
1251. it seems there will be an inquiry.
Copy !req
1252. And as captain and first mate,
Copy !req
1253. we will be expected to give an account
Copy !req
1254. of what happened.
Copy !req
1255. Yes, of course.
Copy !req
1256. And having discussed this
with the ship owners and my father,
Copy !req
1257. it is clear that full disclosure
will have ramifications.
Copy !req
1258. Terrible ramifications
for the whole industry.
Copy !req
1259. That a whale brought down the Essex.
Copy !req
1260. But it's the truth.
Copy !req
1261. If the insurance houses and investors
Copy !req
1262. were to start worrying
about sea monsters sinking ships,
Copy !req
1263. sailors drawing lots to survive...
Copy !req
1264. We are in the oil business.
Copy !req
1265. All of us.
Copy !req
1266. And as in any business,
Copy !req
1267. the probability of success must
always be greater than the risk incurred.
Copy !req
1268. So, what are you suggesting, George?
Copy !req
1269. That you say the ship ran aground.
Copy !req
1270. That's a lie.
Copy !req
1271. - And that the men that died, drowned.
- And that's another lie.
Copy !req
1272. Think on it. They will make you captain.
Copy !req
1273. Well, that pledge I already have
in writing.
Copy !req
1274. Only on the condition
you bring home a ship full of oil.
Copy !req
1275. This way, it's guaranteed.
Copy !req
1276. You would be a wealthy man.
Copy !req
1277. The name Chase need
no longer be a landsman's name,
Copy !req
1278. but an established name
Copy !req
1279. that belongs among the great families
of Nantucket.
Copy !req
1280. You want me to whitewash
what happened for profit?
Copy !req
1281. We are asking you to be pragmatic.
Copy !req
1282. The Essex was stove by a white whale.
Copy !req
1283. And those of us that survived
in ill-equipped whaleboats
Copy !req
1284. had to commit abominations
in order to survive.
Copy !req
1285. And, on our return,
we're expected to spread barefaced lies
Copy !req
1286. so that you,
the ship owners of Nantucket,
Copy !req
1287. might line your pockets
and sleep well at night?
Copy !req
1288. Well, I will not embroider the truth.
Copy !req
1289. Nor should you, George.
Copy !req
1290. That last time I saw him...
Copy !req
1291. Mr. Chase, sir!
Copy !req
1292. I couldn't find the right words
to say what I wanted to.
Copy !req
1293. Thomas.
Copy !req
1294. Perhaps there are no words.
Copy !req
1295. Um...
Copy !req
1296. I'm gonna be on my way to Falmouth and...
Copy !req
1297. It's...
Copy !req
1298. It's been an honor, sir,
to sail with you.
Copy !req
1299. The honor's been mine, Mr. Nickerson.
Copy !req
1300. Here.
Copy !req
1301. Good luck out there, Thomas.
Copy !req
1302. And you, sir.
Copy !req
1303. Next day, George Pollard was called
before the inquiry.
Copy !req
1304. Gentlemen, Captain George Pollard.
Copy !req
1305. And all the important men
in Nantucket were there.
Copy !req
1306. It was a formality.
Copy !req
1307. Good day to you, Captain.
Please sit down.
Copy !req
1308. For the record, then...
Copy !req
1309. The Essex was stove by a white whale
Copy !req
1310. 1,200 leagues west of Ecuador.
Copy !req
1311. It was as if Owen Chase himself
had spoken.
Copy !req
1312. Told them the truth.
Copy !req
1313. Captain Pollard's conscience was clear.
Copy !req
1314. But the inquiry was a sham.
Copy !req
1315. Pollard went out again,
Copy !req
1316. looking for the white whale.
Copy !req
1317. He never found it.
Copy !req
1318. He ran a second ship aground off Hawaii.
Copy !req
1319. Twice cursed.
Copy !req
1320. Never sailed again.
Copy !req
1321. And Owen Chase?
Copy !req
1322. He was a man of his word.
Copy !req
1323. First, he sent a boat back
to Ducie Island.
Copy !req
1324. Mr. Joy had passed.
Copy !req
1325. But the other three were,
incredibly, still alive.
Copy !req
1326. And then?
Copy !req
1327. And then he packed up his family
and moved to New Bedford.
Copy !req
1328. Started over.
Copy !req
1329. Became a merchant captain,
Copy !req
1330. sailing on his own terms.
Copy !req
1331. Well, you certainly got your
money's worth, Mr. Melville.
Copy !req
1332. These February nights
are the longest of the year.
Copy !req
1333. Well, you can both rest now.
Copy !req
1334. Believe me,
Copy !req
1335. I shall not be resting for some time.
Copy !req
1336. Why?
Copy !req
1337. You got your story.
Copy !req
1338. You know, your plot. It's all there.
Copy !req
1339. Maybe it wasn't a plot I was after.
Copy !req
1340. No. What, then?
Copy !req
1341. - Something else you've given me tonight.
- And what's that?
Copy !req
1342. The courage to go where
one does not want to go.
Copy !req
1343. Mr. Melville,
Copy !req
1344. what you've heard, what I've told you,
Copy !req
1345. will it all be of service to your book?
Copy !req
1346. It will be a work of fiction,
Mr. Nickerson,
Copy !req
1347. inspired by truth.
Copy !req
1348. But I don't believe
I'll feel the need to use all of it.
Copy !req
1349. - Thank you.
- Here.
Copy !req
1350. - Take that with you.
- No. The money is for you. I insist.
Copy !req
1351. I insist you keep it.
Copy !req
1352. And I insist one person
in this conversation is sober.
Copy !req
1353. - So it's back to, uh...
- Pittsfield, Massachusetts.
Copy !req
1354. Well, good luck.
Copy !req
1355. Thank you.
Copy !req
1356. You know,
Copy !req
1357. I heard a man from Pennsylvania
drilled a hole in the ground recently
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1358. and found oil.
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1359. That can't be true.
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1360. I heard it, too.
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1361. Oil from the ground.
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1362. Fancy that.
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