Answer:
Number 12 Godfrey Close,
Delhi Public School
New Delhi
September 19, 2020.
To the Director of Tourism,
Manali.
INFORMATION ABOUT POSSIBLE EXCURSION TO MANALI BY DELHI PUBLIC SCHOOL STUDENTS.
Good day sir. My name is Suresh Bachan, Secretary of Students Council of Delhi Public School, New Delhi and I want to make enquiries about the feasibility of embarking on an excursion with the students of the aforementioned school.
We want to come and enjoy the ambience and rich culture of Manali and in doing so, expand our knowledge and horizon about culture, arts and crafts and other indigenous things.
Please treat this request with the kindest consideration.
Yours faithfully,
Suresh Bachan.
The correct answer is the first one: Melville is building a mood of suspense.
Long before Ahab appears in the story, there is an atmosphere of mystery about the captain of the ship. The owners call in the crew in while Ahab is absent. Ishmael is told that Ahab is a man of few words but deep meaning; from the first moment, it is clear that the captain has a complicated personality. He is an "ungodly, god-like" man who has attended colleges as well as he has been among cannibals. Ahab is ungodly because he refuses to submit to a higher power. He does not worship or even acknowledge that there are forces beyond himself. Ahab is god-like in the sense that he represents a higher power; perhaps he even wants to be considered as a God.
The mystery is deepened as Ahab remains in his cabin through the first days of the trip. Ishmael grows anxious, checking the area outside the captain's cabin whenever the narrator goes on watch. When Ahab finally appears, in this chapter 28, he is an imposing figure whose haunted look sends shivers Ishmael's spine.
By watching the other dogs and understand what the laws of the wild mean.
He learns there is a hierarchy among dogs. he learns that he has so hold his position to survive.