Superstition
seems to have a huge role in this novel. Starting on page 68 we see Pym
create a plan using superstition in order to defeat some of the
mutineers, “By good fortune I at length hit upon the idea of working
upon the superstitious terrors and guilty conscience of the mate.” In
other words, Pym created a plan to dress up as Rogers (one of the
mutineers who died, and body was still on board) and pretend to be a
spirit who has awakened. Dirk, Augustus and Pym were desperate and were
in need of a plan to try to kill off some of the men, so Pym decided to
undress Roger, paint some blood over his face and stuff his body
resembling Roger’s corpse. At first I laughed at this plan they had
devised because I wondered to myself, who in their right mind would ever
believe such a thing but then as I continued to read it was clear that
these mutineers were all so crazy. Pym’s plan worked in his favor,
killing off the mate, “The mate sprang up from the mattress on which he
was lying, and without uttering a syllable, fell back, stone dead, upon
the cabin floor, and was hurled to the leeward like a log by a heavy
roll of the brig” (75).
Doing a little research of my own, I found that the mutineers seem to
believe in superstition and that it comes naturally to sailors because
they live in a world where they are isolated and are “at the mercy of
nature and tormented psychologically by guilt” (Kathy, 2) which is
clearly shown through the mate. His sudden death, and quick belief that
Pym was actually Roger, proves that they don’t put meaning into
seemingly meaningless things in life. They just go with the flow,
believe every and anything, which benefits and helps Dirk, Augustus and
Pym cut off an extra body to throw over-board.
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