logo

The Chambered Nautilus

Oliver Wendell Holmes

The Chambered Nautilus

Oliver Wendell Holmes

  • 20-page comprehensive Study Guide
  • Chapter-by-chapter summaries and multiple sections of expert analysis
  • The ultimate resource for assignments, engaging lessons, and lively book discussions

The Chambered Nautilus Symbols & Motifs

The Siren Song

As the nautilus, a “ship of pearl […] / [s]ails” (Lines 1-2), it travels “gulfs enchanted” (Line 5). These waters are beautiful—but also potentially dangerous. Populated by mythic sea-people, traditionally ruled by the god Triton, the sea is also where a “Siren sings” (Line 5). In Greco-Roman mythology, the siren is a figure who is part human and part fish. Eventually, sirens became synonymous with sinister mermaids, or as Holmes’s speaker notes, “cold sea-maids” (Line 7). Sirens were said to lure sailors to their deaths with an irresistible song. They are featured prominently in the story of Jason and the Argonauts and in Homer’s The Odyssey. Here, Holmes’s speaker shows the symbolic ship of the nautilus is “wrecked” (Line 9) against the “coral reefs” (Line 6). Holmes uses the myth of the Siren to show one should not be guided by a seductive earthly song, but the “clearer note” (Line 25) of spiritual progress.

Church Architecture

Holmes deliberately uses references to churchly architecture to emphasize that one’s interior life should be crafted like a holy site, much as the nautilus crafts each chamber of its shell. Each phase of life is as sacred as the next. The chambers are described as having “irised ceiling[s]” (Line 14) and the largest chamber comprises a “vast” space (Line 33) in the shape of a “dome” (Line 33).

blurred text

Unlock this
Study Guide!

Join SuperSummary to gain instant access to all 20 pages of this Study Guide and thousands of other learning resources.
Get Started
blurred text