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+<html>
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+<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
+<title>Within the Deep</title>
+<meta name="author" content="R. Cadwallader Smith">
+
+</head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Within the Deep, by R. Cadwallader Smith
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Within the Deep
+ Cassell's "Eyes And No Eyes" Series, Book VIII.
+
+Author: R. Cadwallader Smith
+
+Release Date: January 6, 2004 [EBook #10617]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITHIN THE DEEP ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Loki and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<center><h2>CASSELL'S "EYES AND NO EYES" SERIES BOOK VIII</h2></center>
+
+<center><h1>WITHIN THE DEEP</h1></center>
+
+<center>By</center>
+
+<center><h2>R. CADWALLADER SMITH</h2></center>
+
+<center><h4>WITH EIGHT COLOURED PLATES AND MANY BLACK-AND-WHITE ILLUSTRATIONS</h4></center>
+
+<br>
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<table>
+<tr><td>LESSON</td></tr>
+<tr><td align=right>I.</td>
+<td><a href="#l1">FISH FOR BREAKFAST</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align=right>II.</td>
+<td><a href="#l2">THE STORY OF THE FLAT FISH</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align=right>III.</td>
+<td><a href="#l3">SEALS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align=right>IV.</td>
+<td><a href="#l4">SOME STRANGE NURSERIES</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align=right>V.</td>
+<td><a href="#l5">THE OGRE OF THE DEEP</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align=right>VI.</td>
+<td><a href="#l6">THE WHALE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align=right>VII.</td>
+<td><a href="#l7">TIGERS OF THE SEA</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align=right>VIII.</td>
+<td><a href="#l8">THE DANGERS OF THE DEEP</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align=right>IX.</td>
+<td><a href="#l9">THE FISH OF OUR ROCK-POOLS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align=right>X.</td>
+<td><a href="#l10">SOME CURIOUS FISHES</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align=right>XI.</td>
+<td><a href="#l11">THE GARDEN OF THE SEA</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<br>
+
+<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+<h4>COLOURED PLATES</h4>
+
+THE HERRING FLEET AT WORK IN THE NORTH SEA (missing)<br>
+<a href="#plate2">THE SEA-ELEPHANT</a><br>
+<a href="#plate3">CORALS OF MANY KINDS</a><br>
+<a href="#plate4">WHALING!</a><br>
+<a href="#plate5">A CORAL REEF</a><br>
+<a href="#plate6">FISHES (No. 1)</a><br>
+<a href="#plate7">FISHES (No. 2)</a><br>
+A GARDEN IN THE SEA (missing)<br>
+
+<center><h2>CASSELL'S</h2></center>
+
+<center><h1>"EYES AND NO EYES"</h1></center>
+
+<hr size=1 width=50>
+
+<center>Eighth Book</center>
+
+<center><h3>WITHIN THE DEEP</h3></center>
+
+<a name="l1"></a>
+<h4>LESSON I</h4>
+
+<h3>FISH FOR BREAKFAST</h3>
+<p>
+Of all the fish in the wide ocean world, the Herring
+deserves to be called the king. He gives work to
+thousands of people, and food to millions. Many
+towns exist because of him; if he failed to visit our
+seas, these big towns would shrink to tiny villages.
+</p><p>
+There are several interesting kinds of Herring,
+but we will first look at the one we know so well,
+which is such good food, either fresh or as dried
+"kipper" or "bloater."
+</p><p>
+The Herring loves to swim in a <i>shoal</i>. From the
+time he leaves the egg, during his babyhood, and all
+through his life, he explores the sea with thousands
+of other Herrings crowded round him. His name
+is from a foreign word--<i>heer</i> or <i>herr</i>, an <i>army</i>. His
+enemies--ourselves among them--find this habit
+of his a good one. It makes him such easy prey.
+</p><p>
+Here is a dense shoal of fish, moving slowly along
+near the surface. To catch some is quite easy.
+The Dolphin, or Shark, or other large fish-hunter,
+merely has to rush into their ranks with wide-open
+mouth. Hordes of Dog-fish feast on the edges of
+the shoal. And Gannets, Cormorants, Gulls and other
+sea-birds can take their fill with ease.
+</p><p>
+The Herring shoal is a banquet at which the fish-eating
+sea creatures feed heartily, and man comes
+along, to spread his nets in the path of the shoal.
+But what matter a few million Herrings when the
+sea is packed with billions more! In the North Sea,
+one shoal was seen which was over four miles long
+and two miles wide. In such a mass there would
+be, at the very least, twenty thousand million Herring;
+and this shoal was but one out of many
+thousand shoals. One might as well try to count
+the grains of sand on the shore as the Herrings
+in the wide ocean.
+</p><p>
+These huge shoals do not stay long in one part
+of the sea. They make journeys of many miles,
+each shoal seeming to keep to itself. Like every
+other creature, the Herring goes where his food is.
+What food does he find? He swallows the small
+life of the sea, tiny transparent things like baby
+shrimps, prawns, crabs, and so on, which swarm even
+in the cold water which the Herring loves.
+</p><p>
+They are good juicy food, these little mites, and
+very plentiful; so no wonder the Herring becomes
+plump. He eats greedily of this good food. For
+instance, a young Herring, picked up on the beach
+at Yarmouth, was found to contain no less than one
+hundred and forty-three small shrimps. Not a bad
+dinner for a fish the length of this page! The ocean
+teems with small creatures; even the huge Greenland
+Whale feeds on them, and the Herring seems to
+live on little else.
+</p><p>
+Well, the shoals of Herring begin to move from
+their feeding place in the deeps, and come nearer
+the coast. As they get to shallower water they are
+crowded together near the surface. Where are they
+going, and why?
+</p><p>
+Perhaps you can guess--they seek warmer, shallower
+water, in which to lay their eggs. Now is the
+time for the fisherman! If the Herring kept to the
+deep they would be quite safe--and we should have
+no nice plump Herrings on our breakfast tables!
+Yes, now is the time to spread out miles of nets in
+the path of this living mass of silvery fish. They are
+in fine condition, well fed, and ready to lay their
+eggs.
+</p><p>
+They are moving slowly but surely towards
+the right place where those eggs should be laid. What
+guides them? Why do they go <i>this</i> way and not
+<i>that</i> in the vast ocean? We do not really know
+what guides them; so we say that they obey a wonderful,
+unfailing guide--"instinct."
+</p><p>
+Of course you have seen and tasted the "hard"
+roe of a Herring; but I do not suppose you have ever
+troubled to count all those little round eggs. Each
+roe contains some thirty thousand of them! What
+a huge number of young ones for one Herring! Still,
+this is not a large family, as fish families go. The
+Cod lays about nine million eggs!
+</p><p>
+At last the Herrings reach the breeding grounds
+that they sought, and the eggs are laid. The eggs
+of most sea-fish just drift on the surface of the ocean,
+at the mercy of their enemies, and washing here and
+there as the current sends them. The Herring's
+eggs sink to the bottom and, being rather sticky,
+adhere wherever they fall.
+</p><p>
+There they lie in masses, on the bed of the sea,
+and then guests of all kinds hasten to enjoy such a
+rare feast of eggs, laid ready for them. One of the
+first guests is the Haddock. He comes in his thousands,
+greedy for his part of the good food; but,
+knowing this, the fishermen also hasten to the spot,
+and the Haddock pays dearly for his love of Herring
+eggs.
+</p><p>
+Only a few out of each thousand eggs will escape
+their enemies, and the baby Herrings, which hatch
+in about a fortnight, run many dangers; thus, in the
+end, the huge family of Mrs. Herring is reduced to
+a small one. Even so, there are countless numbers
+of the tiny fish. They soon grow shining scales, like
+those of their parents, and move towards the coast.
+</p><p>
+It is a pretty sight, these little silvery Herrings
+playing in the shallow water. Millions of them dart
+about and flash in the sunshine, during the summer
+months, round our coasts. Sea-birds and other
+enemies hover round, to feast on the tiny fish.
+Great numbers of these baby Herrings are caught and
+sold as "Whitebait."
+</p><p>
+The older Herrings, having laid their eggs, leave
+the shallows, and make their way into deep water.
+They are no longer nice to eat, and the Herring harvest
+is over until the following season.
+</p><p>
+In our talk on flat-fish we shall notice how they
+are caught, near the bed of the sea, in the <i>trawl-net</i>.
+Now this net is of no use for the capture of Herrings.
+They swim in the open water, near the surface, and
+so another kind of trap, the <i>drift-net</i>, is used.
+</p><p>
+Hundreds of vessels sail from our fishing ports
+when King Herring is about. Each vessel carries
+a number of drift-nets. These nets are to be let down
+like a hanging wall, in the path of the shoal, at night.
+Corks or bladders are fastened to the upper edge of
+the nets. Of course they are all mended and made
+ready before the vessels reach the fishing grounds.
+It is not easy to know where to shoot the nets; all
+the skill and knowledge of the fisherman are needed
+to locate the shoals, and, without this knowledge,
+he would come home with an empty vessel. Even
+as it is, he sometimes catches no more fish than would
+fill his hat.
+</p><p>
+A sharp look-out is kept. An oily gleam in the
+sea tells the knowing fisherman that the shoal is
+there; or he may see a Gull swoop down and carry
+off a Herring. Then the nets are put out in the path
+of the shoal. A big fleet of fishing vessels may let
+down a thousand miles of nets!
+</p><p>
+The Herrings, not seeing the fine wall of net,
+swim into it. Now the openings in the net--the
+meshes--are one inch across, just wide enough for
+the Herring to poke his head through. Once through,
+he is caught. His gill-covers prevent him from drawing
+back again. Thousands of other Herrings are
+held tight, all around him, and the rest of the shoal
+scatters for the time being.
+</p><p>
+When the nets are hauled in, the fisherman
+beholds a mighty catch, a sight to repay him for all
+his trouble. On being taken from its watery home
+each Herring is dead almost at once--"as dead as a
+Herring."
+</p><p>
+Then comes the race to the market. Once in port,
+the vessels are rapidly emptied. Hundreds of thousands
+of shining, silvery bodies are piled on the quays--a
+sight worth seeing! An army of packers gets
+to work; and the fresh fish are soon on the rail,
+speeding to the great fish markets, on the way to
+your breakfast table.
+</p><p>
+The story of the Herring fishery is one of deep
+interest, and of great importance. Millions of Herrings
+are caught every year, forming a cheap and
+good food. Yet there are uncountable numbers left;
+and there is not the least danger that our nets can
+ever empty the sea of this wonderful little fish.
+</p><p>
+The Herring has several smaller relatives, all of
+them being excellent food for us. The Pilchard is
+one of them; the Sardine is merely a young Pilchard.
+Countless myriads of Pilchards visit the Cornish coast;
+strangely enough, they frequent only this corner
+of our seas.
+</p><p>
+Another cousin of the Herring, the Sprat, is also
+a fine food, and so cheap that poor people can enjoy
+it. Baby Herrings and baby Sprats are caught in
+great quantity, and sold under the name of "Whitebait."
+It was thought, at one time, that the Whitebait
+was another kind of fish; but Whitebait are
+really the Herring and Sprat in their baby state.
+</p>
+
+<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
+<p>
+1. Name several enemies of the Herring. 2. Describe
+the eggs of the Herring, and where they are laid. 3. What
+is a "drift-net," and how is it used? 4. What is a Sardine?
+What is a "Whitebait?"
+</p>
+
+
+<a name="l2"></a>
+<h4>LESSON II</h4>
+
+<h3>THE STORY OF THE FLAT FISH</h3>
+
+<p>
+You see fish of many shapes and sizes in the fishmonger's
+shop; they can be divided into two kinds--round
+fish and flat fish. Cod, Herring, Mackerel
+and Salmon are round fish. The flat fish are Plaice,
+Turbot, Brill, Halibut, Sole, Dab and Flounder.
+</p><p>
+Most people know the taste, as well as the look,
+of a Plaice; but few know much about its life in the
+ocean. Indeed, there are secrets in the life of this
+fish, and many other fish too, which still puzzle us.
+</p><p>
+Put a Salmon and a Plaice side by side, and it is
+plain that they live in very different ways. One is
+made to dart like an arrow, the other to lie flat. One
+is the shape of a torpedo, the other is flat like a raft.
+The shape and colour of the Plaice tell their own
+story of a life on the sandy, pebbly bed of the sea.
+And look at the eyes! Both are on the upper side
+of the head! What could be better for a fish that
+lies flat on the ocean floor?
+</p><p>
+The Plaice is the best known of these flat fish, so
+we will try to find how its life is spent in the deep
+sea.
+</p><p>
+Have you ever watched those little sailing-vessels
+which go a-shrimping? They carry a large net--a
+shrimp-trawl, it is called--which is drawn over the
+sandy home of the Shrimp. When the trawl is
+hauled up it may contain not only Shrimps, but the
+other dwellers in sandy places. Among these, sad
+to say, is often a mass of baby Plaice and other flat
+fish. Tiny little fellows they are, some hardly as
+large as a postage stamp. They are thrown aside,
+being of no use to the fisherman.
+</p><p>
+Now these babies are quite flat, darkish on the
+upper side, white on the other side, like the Plaice
+you see in the shop. They are not such new babies
+after all. Though such wee mites, it is more than
+six weeks since they left the egg; and, in that time,
+they have passed through wonderful changes, as you
+will see.
+</p><p>
+Plaice lay a great many eggs, which float about
+in the sea. Most are gobbled up by those sea-creatures--and
+they are many--who love fish-eggs for
+dinner. From each remaining egg a baby Plaice
+escapes. At first it floats upside down at the surface
+of the sea, and eats nothing at all. Then it rights
+itself, and begins to swallow the tiny creatures which
+swarm in sea-water.
+</p><p>
+Strange to tell, this baby Plaice is not a bit like
+its mother. It is not a flat fish now, but a "round"
+fish. It has one eye on each side of its head, and you
+would expect it to grow up like any other round fish.
+</p><p>
+For about a month this small, transparent youngster
+hardly alters. Then it grows deeper in the body,
+and begins to swim near the bottom of the sea. At
+last it lies on one side, and its life as a "round" fish
+is over.
+</p><p>
+A fish lying thus on its side would have one eye
+buried in the sand, and quite useless, would it not?
+But our young Plaice is changing its appearance
+very quickly. Its head is growing rather "lopsided."
+The eye next the sand is, little by little,
+brought round to the upper side, until it looks up
+instead of down. Its mouth gets a queer one-sided
+look, owing to the twisting of the bones in the head.
+</p><p>
+Many people think that the dark upper part of
+a flat fish is the back, and the white under part is the
+stomach. We have seen, however, that this is not
+so, for <i>flat fish lie on one side</i>.
+</p><p>
+For the rest of its life the Plaice will remain flat,
+with two eyes looking up, and a twisted head. But
+its colour alters. The side on which it lies is white;
+the upper side becomes brown and speckled, dotted
+over with red marks. This is a good disguise.
+Its enemies cannot distinguish the Plaice
+from the pebbles and sand around it. They might
+swim over it, and yet not see the thin, flat, brownish
+body pressed down on the bed of the sea.
+</p><p>
+Also, these flat fish have a wonderful way of
+changing colour. Put them on light sand, and they
+become lightish. Put them on dark sand and pebbles,
+and they soon match it by becoming brown and
+mottled. This is a most useful dodge where so many
+enemies abound, all swifter in the water than the
+slow-swimming flat fish.
+</p><p>
+If you look for flat fish in an aquarium, you will
+not easily see them. Now and again one will swim
+up, with a wavy motion of its body. On settling
+again, it shuffles and flaps about, works itself into
+the sand, hiding its edges well under, and then, hey
+presto! it is gone! If the flat fish are so hard to
+find in a tank, you may be sure it would be impossible
+to find them on the sea bed. They are poor swimmers,
+but perfect hiders.
+</p><p>
+As far as we can tell, they feed on other living
+creatures. The ocean floor is a huge dining table
+for them, where they find very mixed dinners.
+They eat small fish, sand-worms, shell-fish, Shrimps
+and young Crabs. The Plaice has strong, blunt teeth
+in its throat, and is well able to grind up the shells
+of Cockles and other molluscs, swallowing the juicy
+contents.
+</p><p>
+Now we have seen that the Plaice is first a floating
+egg, and then a tiny transparent "round" fish.
+It sinks to the sea bed, lies on one side, and becomes
+a flat fish like its parents.
+</p><p>
+These little baby flat fish, not much larger than
+your thumb-nail, crowd in the shallow, sandy parts
+of the sea near the coast. There they often end their
+lives in the shrimp-trawl, as we have already noticed.
+</p><p>
+After leaving this "infants' school" the Plaice,
+and other small flat fish, go to deeper water. There
+they feed and grow fat. Our fishermen know where
+to find them. Indeed, these special fishing grounds
+are so well known that flat fish are scarcer than they
+used to be. Some kinds are much too dear ever to
+be seen on the poor man's table.
+</p><p>
+There is a special net for catching flat fish, called
+a <i>trawl</i>. This is a large net, dragged over the bed
+of the sea by ropes, or steel wire, attached to the
+sailing vessel or steam trawler. The net is kept open
+under water by means of beams or boards.
+</p><p>
+When the flat fish are disturbed, they rise a foot
+or two from the sea floor, and are then swept into
+the gaping mouth of the deadly trawl. Once in,
+there is no escape. There they remain, pressed together,
+until the net is hauled up and emptied.
+</p>
+
+<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
+<p>
+1. Give the names of five kinds of flat fish. 2. How
+does the Plaice escape its enemies in the sea? 3. What
+is the food of the Plaice? 4. How are flat fish usually
+caught for the market?
+</p>
+
+
+<a name="l3"></a>
+<h4>LESSON III</h4>
+
+<h3>SEALS</h3>
+
+<p>
+There are many different kinds of Seal; the family
+is a large one, but all have one thing in common--the
+fish-like body, with toes joined together by a web.
+Anyone who has seen the diving power of a Seal, and
+its wonderful way in the water, will agree that the
+"flippers" of the Seal are as useful as the fins of the
+fish.
+</p><p>
+In fact, the flipper beats the fin, for the Seal earns
+his dinner by chasing and catching fish. He slips
+through the water with perfect ease, and seizes the
+darting fish in their own home. The Seal is nearly
+always hungry, but so wonderfully quick that his
+hunting is made easy for him.
+</p><p>
+It is quite another matter on land, where his best
+pace is a waddle and a shuffle; but his life is in the
+wide sea, where he can feed and sleep as easily as
+other mammals can on land.
+</p><p>
+Seals are easily tamed, and soon become fond of
+their owners. Some fishermen once caught a baby
+Seal, which they gave to a boy, knowing his love of
+animals. The strange baby soon made itself at home,
+and loved to lie in the warmth of the kitchen fire.
+It knew the voice of its young master, and would
+follow him like a dog.
+</p><p>
+The older it grew, the more milk and fish it
+needed each day. At last, this food was not to be
+easily obtained, and so the boy had to get rid of his
+pet. He rowed out to sea, taking the Seal, and let
+it free in the ocean to fend for itself; but the Seal
+would not leave him; it swam swiftly round the boat,
+calling pitifully. Needless to say, it was taken back
+again, and well cared for.
+</p>
+<br clear=all><a name="plate2"></a>
+<center><a href="images/img01L.jpg">
+<img alt="[Illustration: THE SEA-ELEPHANT]"
+src="images/img01.jpg"></a></center>
+<p>
+Seals have even been trained to catch fish for
+their owners. Being docile by nature, and having
+larger brains than most animals, they can be taught.
+Perhaps you have seen Sea-lions performing surprising
+tricks, showing clearly how intelligent these fish-like
+creatures really are. The Sea-lions at the London
+"Zoo" are not specially trained. But they are
+clever enough to teach themselves, especially when
+rewarded by a few extra fish. They know well the
+voice of their keeper, and clap with their flippers
+to let him know that feeding--time is near; and in many other
+amusing ways they prove their intelligence.
+</p><p>
+<a href="images/img02L.jpg">
+<img align="right" alt="[Illustration: SEA-LION]"
+src="images/img02.jpg"></a>
+You have noticed, perhaps, that these Sea-lions can shuffle along
+on their hind flippers, which are turned forward under the body.
+The real Seals, however, cannot do this. Their hind limbs, so
+wonderful in the water, are merely dragged behind
+the body on land. "Sealskin" should be
+called "Sea-lion-skin," to be exact; for it is the Sea-lions,
+not the true Seals, which men kill and rob of
+their lovely warm coats.
+</p><p>
+The giant of the Seal family is the Sea-elephant;
+a big lumbering fellow, with a most peculiar nose.
+Of course this gives him his name, though it is not
+much like the trunk of the real elephant. It is just
+the baggy skin of his nose, a foot long, which hangs
+down past his mouth.
+</p><p>
+When the Sea-elephant is angry or excited, this
+loose nose of his becomes filled with air, and bulges
+out. Our coloured picture shows you Mr. Sea-elephant,
+full grown; his wife and children have ordinary seal noses. Perhaps
+we should say wives, not wife, for he has many.
+</p><p>
+<a href="images/img03L.jpg">
+<img align="left" alt="[Illustration: A COMMON SEAL]"
+src="images/img03.jpg"></a>
+The Sea-elephants go to wild, lonely islands, and there make
+their nurseries. Year after year
+tens of thousands of the big Seals gather, to fight and
+to rear their young. The clumsy great father Sea-elephants
+fight terrible battles; and at this time
+always seem to be in a very bad temper, tearing
+each other with their tusk-like teeth. Their roaring
+can be heard far out at sea; but the lady Seals
+take no part in these combats.
+</p><p>
+We have no room in this lesson to look at all
+the other kinds of Seals, Sea-lions, Sea-bears and Walrus.
+As we have already noticed, the sealskin sold
+in shops is really the skin of a Sea-lion. Sometimes
+these are called <i>Eared Seals</i>, for they possess little
+ears, while the real Seals have only small holes in the
+side of the head for ears. Again, there are some
+Eared Seals whose fur is of no use to us, for it lacks
+the deep under-fur of the fur Seals.
+</p><p>
+Nature gave this coat to the Seal to protect him
+from the cold, but it has caused his destruction!
+For these animals were killed by the hundred thousand.
+Worse than this, they were killed in the most
+cruel manner. Laws have now been made to help
+protect the poor fur Seal from its merciless hunters.
+It lives in cold seas where its deep rich coat is a
+splendid protection. No finer fur is there for keeping
+out cold and wet; and the skilful furrier can make
+it into soft garments of great value.
+</p><p>
+The habits of these Seals are strange indeed.
+For nine or ten months of the year they wander
+freely over the open seas. They dive for their food,
+and sleep calmly amidst the restless heaving of the
+ocean. This is the happy life of the Seal, though
+enemies--Sharks, Killer Whales or Grampuses--sometimes
+snap him up as he sleeps.
+</p><p>
+Then, in the springtime, there comes a change.
+The Seals leave the open sea and take to the land.
+They go to their special breeding-places, or "rookeries,"
+as they are called. The big "old man"
+Seals arrive first, and haul themselves on shore.
+Each chooses a spot for himself among the rocks.
+He then settles down to defend it; for more and more
+"old man" Seals come, all eager to own the best
+places. The roaring and fighting go on day and night.
+The gentle Seal is now a savage beast, covered with
+wounds.
+</p><p>
+Then the soft-eyed female Seals come ashore.
+Now the thing is, for each big male Seal to claim as
+many lady Seals as he can. More fighting, roaring and
+tearing occur now, in which the lady Seals are banged
+about like footballs. The strongest "old man" drags
+the female Seal away in his teeth, and plumps her down
+in his special part of the beach. Along comes another
+big Seal to take her away, and the fight begins again.
+</p><p>
+Meanwhile, the younger Seals keep out of the
+way. Strange to say, the fighting Seals take no food
+at all, though they are on the beach for several weeks.
+A few stones is all they eat, though at other times
+they devour numbers of fish at every meal.
+</p>
+
+<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
+<p>
+1. How could you tell the Sea-lion from the real Seal?
+2. Where are the Seal "rookeries"? What happens there
+in the springtime? 3. Why is the Sea-elephant so named?
+</p>
+
+
+<a name="l4"></a>
+<h4>LESSON IV</h4>
+
+<h3>SOME STRANGE NURSERIES</h3>
+
+<p>
+As a rule, nests or nurseries are unknown in the
+world of fishes. They lay their eggs and leave them;
+and the young ones have to fight their own battles,
+in a sea full of fierce and hungry enemies. Indeed,
+it often happens that a parent fish is eager to make a
+meal of its own children!
+</p><p>
+The Codfish lays about nine million eggs! You
+would hardly expect the female Codfish to make a
+nursery for such a family! She would be much
+worse off than the "old woman who lived in a shoe."
+As a matter of fact, the eggs are laid in the open sea;
+and the Cod shows no interest in them, but leaves
+them to become food for many a roving enemy.
+</p><p>
+Those cousins of the Shark,--the Skate and the
+Dog-fish,--are more careful of their eggs. Have you
+ever found their empty eggs on the sea shore?
+Children call them "mermaids' purses." But they
+are more like little horny pillow-cases than purses.
+</p><p>
+When first laid, the Dog-fish's egg has a very long
+string or <i>tendril</i> at each corner. As the fish lays the
+egg, she winds these tendrils round and round a sea-plant;
+thus the egg is fixed firmly until the young
+one is ready to escape from within <a href="#p49">(<i>see</i> p. 49)</a>.
+</p><p>
+The Skate's egg is much the same, only there is
+no tendril, but a curved hook at each corner. These
+hooks, of course, serve as anchors to hold the egg:
+no doubt they catch in weeds and stones. One fish,
+you see, ties her eggs with strings, the other uses
+anchors. These large "purse eggs" are like cradles,
+and the baby Skates do not slip out of them until
+they are quite ready to look after themselves in the
+ocean.
+</p><p>
+There are fish in the sea which take great pains
+to save their eggs and babies from harm; they
+will even defend them at the risk of their own lives.
+Of course these careful parents do not have huge
+families, like the Cod. No; the fish that care for
+their young have small families, but the babies
+have a much better chance of living than the baby
+Cod. It is one of Nature's wise laws.
+</p><p>
+Our common Stickleback--"Tiddler," or "Red-throat,"
+as boys call him--builds a nest in ponds.
+He has a seaside cousin, the fifteen-spined
+Stickleback, who is also a nest-builder. This little
+fish is fairly common round our coasts, living in
+weedy pools by the shore, where it devours any small
+creature unlucky enough to come near. It is about
+six inches long, this sea Stickleback, with a long snout,
+and its body is very thin near the tail.
+</p><p>
+To build his nest, this little fish chooses a quiet
+corner, then gathers pieces of green and purple seaweed.
+He takes the pieces in his mouth, pushing
+them about until the shape is to his liking. Having
+got his nursery to the right size and shape, the little
+builder next fastens it together. How can he do this?
+What mortar can he find in the sea? It is quite
+simple. He uses threads, which come from his own
+body. He swims round the nest, again and again;
+and, each time, a thread is spun, binding the clump
+of weed into a safe, tight nest for the eggs. When
+the task is done there is a weed-nursery about the
+size of your fist. Now all is ready for the eggs to
+be laid by the female Stickleback. You would expect
+them to be kept in a hole amid the nest, would
+you not? Instead of that, they are tucked a few
+here, a few there, in the weed.
+</p><p>
+<a href="images/img04L.jpg">
+<img align="right"
+alt="[Illustration: <i>Photo: A.F. Dauncey</i>. SKATE'S EGG CASE]"
+src="images/img04.jpg"></a>
+Then the father Stickleback mounts guard. Woe
+betide any small fish looking for a dinner of Stickleback
+eggs! The gallant little sentry will rush at
+him, with spines as stiff as fixed bayonets, ready to
+do battle to the death. When the young are
+hatched out he still keeps guard. They are not
+allowed out of the nursery for some time. The watchful
+parent forces them back if they try to wander
+out into the perils of the shore-pool.
+</p><p>
+Let us look at another nest-builder--the Sand
+Goby, or Spotted Goby, He is common enough in
+the pools at low tide, but not easy to find. You can
+look at him, yet not see him! For he takes the
+same colour as the rocks and sands of his home.
+Amid the glinting lights and shadows of his rock-pool,
+with a background of sand, rock, and weed,
+this little fish is nearly invisible. Of course it is a
+dodge, and a useful one, to escape the eye of the
+enemy!
+</p><p>
+Perhaps you will not think the Spotted Goby so
+clever at nest-building as the Stickleback. He likes
+to use a "ready-made" house, whereas the Stickleback
+finds his own "bricks and mortar." In the
+pools of the shore there is no lack of houses to let,
+the empty homes of shell-fish are there in plenty.
+So the little Goby, when nesting time comes, hunts
+round for the empty shell of a Cockle lying with its
+hollow side to the sand.
+</p><p>
+This shell is to be used as the roof for the nursery.
+The Goby's next task is to make a hole beneath the
+shell. He sets to work and, by scooping out the sand,
+makes a hole about as large as a marble. To keep the
+sand from tumbling in, he smears the hole with
+slime, which soon binds hard like mortar. Now the
+nursery is nearly ready; but a passage-way is made,
+passing under the edge of the shell, and then, to
+make things quite safe, the whole roof is covered with
+sand: it then looks more like a bump in the sand
+than a fish-nursery.
+</p><p>
+The female Goby enters the nest, and leaves her
+eggs in it; and then the little father fish is left in
+charge. He rests on the sand, near the entrance.
+When the little ones appear, he seems to think he
+has done his duty. So away, he swims, not staying,
+like the father Stickleback, to guard the youngsters.
+Again we see that the father, and not the mother,
+is the builder and nurse.
+</p>
+<br clear=all><a name="plate3"></a>
+<center><a href="images/img05L.jpg">
+<img alt="[Illustration: CORALS OF MANY KINDS.]"
+src="images/img05.jpg"></a></center>
+<p>
+That very strange creature, the Pipe-fish, has the
+most peculiar nursery of all. He uses no building
+material! No made-up nest of weed or sand for him!
+No, he prefers to carry his eggs in his pocket. To be
+more exact, there is a small pouch under his body,
+and there the eggs are kept until they hatch. Meanwhile,
+the Pipe-fish goes about his affairs in the pool
+as if nothing particular had happened. You will
+see more about this funny little fish when we come
+to our lesson on "The Fish of our Rock-pools."
+</p>
+
+<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
+<p>
+1. What are the eggs of the Skate and the Dog-fish
+like? 2. How does the Sea-stickleback build his nest?
+3. Where would you find the Sand Goby, the Pipe-fish,
+and the Sea-stickleback? 4. How does the Sand Goby
+build its nest?
+</p>
+
+
+<a name="l5"></a>
+<h4>LESSON V</h4>
+
+<h3>THE OGRE OF THE DEEP</h3>
+
+<p>
+The ogre of the fairy-tale is bad enough, but, for evil
+looks, the Octopus is worse still. With his tough,
+brownish skin, knobbed like the toad's back, his
+large staring eyes, his parrot's beak, and ugly bag
+of a body, the Octopus is a horrid-looking creature.
+Add to this eight long arms twisting and writhing
+like snakes, and you have an idea of the most hideous
+inhabitant of the deep.
+</p><p>
+Then, like the ogre, the Octopus lives in a cave,
+and goes forth at night to claim his victims. He
+tears them to pieces, and returns to his dark cavern
+when daylight comes.
+</p><p>
+Before seeing how this ugly monster lives, eats,
+breathes and fights, we must know something of the
+way he is made. In the first place, it may surprise
+you to know that the Octopus's body is made on the
+same plan as that of the snail. The ogre of the ocean
+and the Garden Snail are second cousins! Their
+family name--<i>mollusc</i>--means <i>soft-bodied.</i>
+</p><p>
+But there are such numbers of molluscs that we
+split them up into different orders, just as a big
+school is split into classes. The Octopus belongs to
+an order of molluscs with a long name, which only
+means <i>head-footed.</i> Why is he called head-footed?
+The snail, as you know, has one broad foot under its
+body. The foot of the Octopus is divided into eight
+strips. These long strips are set round his head,
+hence the name head-footed. Because there are
+eight of these long feet he is named <i>octo-pus</i> or eight-feet.
+</p><p>
+The feet--or arms, or tentacles, as they are
+called--are joined at their base by a skin. It makes
+a sort of webbing. In the centre of this is a horny
+beak, usually of a brownish colour. It is just like
+a parrot's beak, only of thinner and lighter stuff.
+There are two parts to it, the top one curving down
+over the lower one. Behind this beaked mouth is a
+hard, rasping tongue. On each side of the head is a
+big, staring eye; and behind the ugly head is the
+ugly body, like a bag.
+</p><p>
+The Octopus breathes by means of gills. Water
+enters through a big hole under the head, passes over
+the gills, and out again through a <i>funnel</i>, or <i>siphon</i>.
+Now the Octopus can make good use of this siphon.
+Sometimes he is attacked, and wishes to "make
+himself scarce." So he sends the water rapidly
+through the siphon; the force is enough to jerk him
+quickly backwards, his "arms" trailing behind.
+</p><p>
+The Octopus and his relations have another dodge
+as well. They possess a bag of inky fluid. By mixing
+this ink with the spurt of water from the funnel,
+the Octopus leaves a thick cloud behind him. The
+enemy is lost in this dark cloud, while the Octopus
+darts safely away.
+</p><p>
+Having no armour to protect him, and no shelly
+home like that of the snail, the Octopus is an easy
+prey to large fish, Seals and Whales. So this trick
+of shooting backwards, hidden in a cloud of ink,
+must be of great use. Soldiers and sailors use clouds
+of smoke to baffle their enemy in battle. The Octopus
+uses clouds of ink.
+</p>
+<center><a href="images/img06L.jpg">
+<img alt="[Illustration: THE OCTOPUS--A MONSTER OF THE DEEP]"
+src="images/img06.jpg"></a></center>
+<p>
+Sharks, Conger Eels, and Whales are able to fight
+the Octopus and eat his soft body; but small fish
+and Crabs keep away from the ogre if they can. This
+is not easy, for he hides away under rocks, watching
+with his great eyes for passing prey. If anything
+comes near enough, out flicks a long, tapering, snaky
+arm, and holds the victim tight.
+</p><p>
+Down the inside of each arm are nearly three
+hundred round suckers. Each one acts like those
+leather suckers with which boys sometimes play.
+Once fixed, it is nearly impossible to unloose them,
+without chopping or tearing the arm to pieces.
+First one and then another sucker takes hold, and the
+wretched victim is drawn up to the ogre's beak,
+with no chance of escape.
+</p><p>
+When one sees the grasping power of even a small
+Octopus, it is easy to believe that a large one would
+be a dangerous enemy. The strongest swimmer
+would stand no chance: those clinging arms could
+hold two or three men under water.
+</p><p>
+Luckily, the Octopus has no wish to attack people.
+It is not fierce. But to the Crabs it must seem an
+awful ogre. I once watched an Octopus on the lookout
+for food. It had its lair between two rocks, its
+twining arms showing outside, its eyes and body
+in the shadow. Along came a Crab, scuttling near
+the rocks. He spied the ogre, at once stopping and
+raising his claws as Crabs do, like a boxer ready to
+fight. The Crab having strong pincers, and a good
+suit of armour, I expected to see him fight for life.
+But no! Like poor Bunny chased by the dreaded
+Stoat, the Crab gave in as soon as the ogre flicked
+him with an arm. The suckers gripped him fast and,
+still holding up his claws, he was drawn into the den
+of his dreadful enemy.
+</p>
+<br clear=all><a name="plate4"></a>
+<center><a href="images/img07L.jpg">
+<img alt="[Illustration: WHALING.]"
+src="images/img07.jpg"></a></center>
+<p>
+Although armed with a beak, the Octopus seems
+not to use it against the Crab. He prefers to pull
+the poor Crab to pieces with his strong arms, and then
+to pick up the crab-meat with the hooked beak.
+When full-fed, he retires to his den; he sometimes
+pulls shells and stones over the entrance, and rests
+within until hungry.
+</p><p>
+In this strange order of molluscs there are dwarfs
+and giants. One kind is never more than two inches
+long, others are vast monsters. The Octopus is big
+enough and ugly enough to make one shudder to
+see him, but the real ogre of the deep is the Giant
+Cuttle-fish, beside which the Octopus is a tiny mite.
+</p><p>
+These Giant Cuttles have ten arms, two of them
+being very long. The Octopus's body is round, like that
+of a fat spider, while the Cuttle has a long body.
+The Cuttle has many sharp claws on its arms, besides
+numbers of big, strong suckers. It holds and tears
+its prey at the same time. Its staring eyes are like
+big black lanterns on each side of the head. The
+head twists this way and that, so that nothing
+escapes the glare of those horrible eyes.
+</p><p>
+Lurking in the dark depths of the sea, these Giant
+Cuttles wait for large fish, Crabs, or even their own
+relations, to come near. Like hideous, gigantic
+Spiders, they are the terror of the ocean caverns.
+They are so large that they have few enemies to fear.
+Indeed, it is surprising that any animal dares to
+attack such a monster, but that other giant, the
+Sperm Whale, dives deep to the home of the Cuttles,
+purposely to attack and eat them.
+</p><p>
+The Sperm Whale <i>must</i> attack these big creatures
+in order to get enough food. He has such a huge,
+barn-like body to fill, that only these big Cuttles will
+satisfy him. Whale-hunters sometimes catch a
+glimpse of terrific combats between these giants of
+the deep. The Sperm wins the battle, for he is nearly
+always found to contain great pieces of the ogre's
+arms.
+</p><p>
+Although the Octopus and the Cuttle are related
+to the Snail and Whelk, they have no shell. Their
+bodies are naked. Neither do they grow a backbone,
+or skeleton; but, inside the body, the Cuttle has a
+plate of chalk, which you may find on the shore.
+Some kinds have a long strip of transparent
+substance, like a large feather. Fishermen use the
+smaller kinds of Cuttle as bait. You will find it
+quite easy to cut out the "beaks" and "bone"
+for yourself, or the fishermen will not mind saving
+them for you.
+</p>
+
+<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
+<p>
+1. What is the meaning of the words "mollusc" and
+"octopus"? 2. How does the Octopus capture its prey?
+3. How does the Octopus escape its enemies? 4. What
+creatures prey on the Cuttle and Octopus?
+</p>
+
+
+<a name="l6"></a>
+<h4>LESSON VI</h4>
+
+<h3>THE WHALE</h3>
+
+<p>
+Now and again Whales are washed up on our coasts,
+and then we can see how huge is this strange monster
+of the deep. It is by far the largest of all living animals.
+Once on the land it is quite helpless; it cannot
+regain its home in the waters, and slowly dies.
+It is shaped like a fish, and its home is in the sea, so
+no wonder it has often been called a fish.
+</p><p>
+If by chance the Whale is held under water, it
+drowns. It has no gills, like those of the fish, to take
+air from the water; it is a mammal, a creature that
+must breathe the free air just as other mammals.
+Nature is full of surprises. And here she surprises
+us with a mammal most marvellously fitted to live
+a fish-like life.
+</p><p>
+The Whale dives to great depths in search of food,
+and stays under water for a long time. But it is
+forced to rise again, and breathe at the surface. To
+do this, it need not put its head and mouth out of
+water, for its nostril is at the top of the head.
+</p><p>
+As the Whale forces used-up air from its nostril--or
+"blow-hole," as it is called--it mixes with water;
+this causes a jet or spout of water to rise some distance
+into the air. The blow-hole is closed by a stopper or
+valve, opening to let the air in or out, but closing to
+shut out the water.
+</p><p>
+Some of the Whale family are enormous, and some
+are small. A large Sperm Whale may grow to be
+ninety feet long, and its weight would be nearly two
+hundred tons! This huge creature would look like
+a deep barge in the water.
+</p><p>
+These Sperm Whales love to swim in herds, or
+schools. As many as three hundred have been seen
+in one school, old "bulls" and "cows," and their
+young ones swimming together far out at sea. It
+has been noticed that they all spout, or breathe, at
+the same time, and then dive to great depths. The
+old ones seem to know that their babies cannot stay
+under water as long as a full-grown Whale can, and
+they all rise at the same time. These youngsters
+may be nearly thirty feet long; but they gambol
+like so many kittens, twisting and turning over and
+over, and throwing themselves into the air. Most
+Whales are happy creatures, enjoying their roving
+life in the free ocean.
+</p><p>
+You can well imagine that a Whale as big as a barge
+needs huge dinners. We should not be far wrong if
+we guessed that he would need about a ton of food
+every day. Where is he to get all that food? It is
+said that he feeds mostly on the Cuttle-fish, that giant
+cousin of the Octopus, who haunts the dim caverns
+of the deep. The Sperm is of enormous strength,
+and is as fierce as he is strong. Otherwise he would
+not dare to face the awful, clinging arms of the Cuttle,
+that ogre of the deep sea.
+</p><p>
+The Sperm Whale has a great, blunt head, a huge
+mouth, and a throat large enough to swallow a man.
+His clumsy-looking head contains oil, so does the deep
+layer of blubber with which his body is covered.
+</p><p>
+For the sake of this oil, the Sperm has always been
+hunted. But he is not easily overcome. He fights
+hard for life; and many a whaling boat has been
+dashed to pieces with one blow from the powerful tail
+of a hunted Sperm.
+</p><p>
+This great tail is set cross-wise, not upright like
+the tail of a fish. It is of immense power, and divided
+into two big "flukes," as they are called. With
+strong up-and-down strokes the tail propels the monster
+along at a great pace. It also shoots him down
+to his feeding place in the depths of the sea, and up
+again to fill his lungs with sweet fresh air. The fins,
+or paddles, are used only as balancers, and to protect
+the young.
+</p><p>
+These Sperm Whales inhabit warm seas, but
+others of the Whale family haunt colder regions.
+The greatest of these is the Right Whale, or Greenland
+Whale, a monster whose bulk rivals that of the
+Sperm.
+</p><p>
+Now it is very strange that this, the largest
+member of the whole kingdom of animals, should
+live on some of the smallest creatures of the sea,
+and that the mouth and throat of this monster should
+be so made that he can eat only this minute food,
+food like that which the tiny Herring eats.
+</p><p>
+In some parts of those cold northern seas the
+water is coloured in bands of red and blue. If you
+took up a bucketful, you would find that the colour
+was due to myriads of tiny creatures. Amongst
+these are other myriads of small animals, each of less
+size than a house-fly. The larger ones are there to
+feed on the smaller ones. And that mass of small
+life is the food of this mountain of fat and flesh, the
+Greenland Whale.
+</p><p>
+He swims through the sea with his mouth gaping
+open, like a great cavern, and soon thousands of
+the little creatures are inside. Then his tongue
+comes forward. It is of immense size, and it pushes
+out all the sea water from his mouth. But the small
+animals remain inside! For the water is forced
+through a wonderful sieve, made of fringed plates,
+which hangs from his upper jaw. Instead of having
+teeth in his mouth, as many Whales have, the Greenland
+Whale has this sieve of "whalebone." Of course
+it is a large sieve, to fill so large a mouth. Yet it is
+never in the way, being neatly packed away at the
+top of the mouth, one plate over the other, when not
+in use.
+</p><p>
+The mass of small animals, held back by this
+peculiar sieve, then slides down his throat, which is
+a tube about as wide as a boy's wrist! We said just
+now that Nature was full of surprises. Is it not
+surprising to find a gigantic Whale feeding in this
+way! Inside the great mouth the <i>Remora</i>? or Sucking
+Fish, is often found. This fish has an oval sucker on
+its head, by which it fixes itself to Whales, or even to
+the hull of a ship. It has fins, and can swim perfectly
+well, but prefers to live in this lazy way.
+</p><p>
+The Whalebone Whales lead a peaceful, happy life,
+though not without dangers. The bitter cold of
+their northern home is nothing to them, for are they
+not snug in a deep blanket of blubber? To obtain
+food, they merely swim along with open mouth.
+These peaceful giants do not know how to fight for
+their lives, like the Sperm Whales. So, when man
+came, hunting the Greenland Whale for oil and
+"whalebone," he found an easy victim.
+</p><p>
+They have other enemies, besides man. The
+Killer Whale is one of the fiercest, swiftest terrors of
+the sea. It is tiny, compared with the Greenland
+Whale, but much quicker and more cunning. Several
+Killers band together and spring to the attack at the
+same time, Like wild cats, they dash at the poor
+helpless Whale, and tear its sides with terrible curved
+teeth.
+</p><p>
+The Sword-fish and Thresher Shark also help to
+destroy this harmless giant of the deep. The Sword-fish
+pierces it with his pointed "beak"; the other
+slashes the sides of the wretched Whale with its long
+tail. It is said, by those who have seen such a fight,
+that the Thresher's tail cuts deep into the Whale's
+sides.
+</p><p><a name="p43"></a>
+<a href="images/img08L.jpg">
+<img align="right" alt="[Illustration: THE SUCKING FISH]"
+src="images/img08.jpg"></a>
+In all parts of the wide sea there are Whales of
+one kind or another. We have looked briefly at the
+Sperm and Greenland Whales, and the Killer
+Whale. Besides these there is the Narwhal, or
+Sea-unicorn, with a
+wonderful tusk, which is really a big tooth, some six
+feet long. Another one, the Bottle-nose Whale, has
+a long, narrow "beak," and is sometimes washed
+up on our shores. The Pilot Whale is also seen in
+herds in our seas.
+</p><p>
+Another visitor, the Rorqual, is not welcomed by
+the fishermen. This big fellow follows the shoals of
+Mackerel and Herring. He lives on them, swallowing
+as many at each gulp as would fill several big baskets.
+The fishermen can spare him the fish. But it is
+another matter when he swims through valuable nets,
+tearing through them as if they were so much cobweb.
+</p><p>
+The commonest Whale of our seas is that small one,
+the Common Dolphin, who is a midget some five or
+six feet long. You may have seen Dolphins, for they
+swim near the surface, and may often be noticed not
+far from the shore. Like the Rorquals, they follow
+the Herring and Mackerel shoals. Now and again
+they dash into the nets, and are shown in the fish-market.
+</p>
+
+<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
+<p>
+1. Describe how the Whale breathes. 2. What food do
+the Sperm and Greenland Whales eat? 3. How does the
+Greenland Whale eat its food? 4, Give the names of five
+kinds of Whale.
+</p>
+
+
+<a name="l7"></a>
+<h4>LESSON VII</h4>
+
+<h3>TIGERS OF THE SEA</h3>
+
+
+<br clear=all><a name="plate5"></a>
+<center><a href="images/img09L.jpg">
+<img alt="[Illustration: A CORAL REEF.]"
+src="images/img09.jpg"></a></center>
+<p>
+The monsters of the Shark family, fortunately for
+us, live in warm seas, and so are not often found near
+the shores of Great Britain. But our seas contain
+smaller Sharks of various kinds, and in greater number
+than most people imagine.
+</p><p>
+Sharks are fierce hunters. Many a poor sailor or
+diver has been torn to pieces and devoured by these
+ravenous tigers of the deep. Some Sharks are of
+great size and immense power; they are by far the
+largest of all living fish; and no animal in the whole
+kingdom of animals owns such a terrible death-trap
+of a mouth as the Shark. It is, in some kinds of Shark,
+armed with seven rows of teeth with keen edges and
+points!
+</p><p>
+<a href="images/img10L.jpg">
+<img align="left" alt="[Illustration: THE WHITE RAY]"
+src="images/img10.jpg"></a>
+Sometimes a Shark follows a steamer in the open
+sea, day after day, waiting for whatever may chance
+his way; and it is astonishing what strange objects
+he will swallow. These monsters are often caught
+on a hook baited with a lump of meat, and are hauled
+to the steamer's deck. One Shark was found to contain
+all the rubbish that had been pitched overboard;
+tin cans, a bundle of old coats, a piece of rope, old
+bones, and so on. What a fierce hunger must have
+driven the Shark to swallow such a meal as that!
+</p><p><a name="p48"></a>
+<a href="images/img11L.jpg">
+<img align="right" alt="[Illustration: THE ELECTRIC RAY]"
+src="images/img11.jpg"></a>
+Before we look at some of these fierce creatures,
+whom everyone dislikes, we will say a word for them.
+Nature meant them to be <i>scavengers</i>, to clean up the
+sea. And this they do. Dead and decaying flesh
+is a danger, and the Shark, ever hungry, clears it
+away quickly.
+</p><p>
+Now and again fishermen bring a big Shark to
+port, and hang him in the market--not for sale, but
+as a "show." The Blue Shark is the
+one most often displayed like this. See how his mouth
+is set, well under the head, as in all Sharks;
+and notice the shape of the body. It tells of
+speed and strength in the water; its pointed,
+tapering form reminds one of the racing yacht.
+</p><p>
+What is this fierce fellow doing so near our
+coast? He is often found off Cornwall--too often,
+thinks the fisherman. This Shark comes to seek the
+same prey as the fisherman--the shoals of Mackerel
+and Pilchard (a cousin of the Herring). Where the
+shoals go, the Blue Shark follows. The silly Mackerel,
+all crowded together, have no chance to escape their
+awful foe. They are nearly as helpless as a flock of
+sheep with a tiger in their midst.
+</p><p>
+If the Shark comes across a mass of Mackerel or
+Pilchards in a net, he looks on them as a fine
+feast. Dashing at them, he tears the net to pieces,
+swallowing lumps of netting with great mouthfuls
+of fish. Small wonder the fisherman detests this
+savage visitor which causes him such serious
+loss of time and money. He naturally looks on
+Sharks as useless "vermin," to be destroyed whenever possible.
+</p><p>
+<a name="p49"></a>
+<a href="images/img12L.jpg">
+<img align="right"
+alt="[Illustration: <i>Photo: A. F. Dauncey</i>. DOG-FISH EGG CASE]"
+src="images/img12.jpg"></a>
+The Fox Shark, or Thresher, is another fierce visitor to these shores.
+This savage hunter comes after the Herrings, Pilchards
+and Sprats. It is said to hunt these useful
+little fish in a strange way. As you know, they travel
+in shoals. The Thresher swims rapidly round and
+round them. Nearer and nearer it comes to the
+unlucky little fish, and they crowd together, huddling
+up in a helpless mass. The Thresher adds
+to their panic by <i>threshing</i> the water with its terrible
+tail. And then, as you can well imagine, it dashes
+at them and devours an
+enormous meal. Half the length of the Thresher is
+tail. Not long ago there was landed at one of our
+fishing ports a Thresher Shark of half a ton, its tail
+being over ten feet in length. Even the great Whale
+has reason to fear the fierce lashings of that long,
+whip-like weapon!
+</p><p>
+<a href="images/img13L.jpg">
+<img align="left" alt="[Illustration: THE SHARK]"
+src="images/img13.jpg"></a>
+Our commonest Sharks are those small ones known
+as Dog-fish, which you can often see at any fish market.
+They are good to eat, though not used much as food.
+Though small in size, they are large in appetite and
+fierce in nature. Like savage dogs, they hunt in
+packs, waging war against the Whiting, Herring and
+other fish.
+</p><p>
+There are several kinds of these small Sharks,
+known as Spur-dog, Smooth Hound, Greater-spotted
+and Lesser-spotted Dog-fish, and Tope. And you will
+hear fishermen call them by such names as
+"Rig," "Robin Huss," and "Shovel-nose." Fisher-folk dislike
+Sharks, the Dog-fish among
+them. All those creatures, like the Cormorant, Seal,
+and Shark, which catch fish for breakfast, dinner
+and supper, are rivals of the fisherman. He often
+pulls up his line to find but a part of a fish on the hook--the
+rest was snatched by a "dog." At times his nets
+are torn by these nuisances, when they attack the
+"catch" of fish. Or his lines come up from the deep
+all tangled round and round a writhing Dog-fish,
+which had swallowed the baited hook.
+</p><p>
+We come now to those flat Sharks, whose flesh
+you may have tasted. No Sharks are nice-looking,
+but these flat ones--the Skates or Rays--are really
+hideous, Many of them are of great size and strength,
+and armed with spines on their bodies
+<a href="#p52">(<i>see</i> p. 52, No. 3)</a>
+as well as teeth in their ugly jaws. They have broad,
+flat bodies, with wide "wings," and a long thin tail.
+The whole shape reminds you of a kite, and you would
+hardly know the Ray or Skate as the Shark's first
+cousin.
+</p><p>
+Yet it is only a Shark with flattened body, and
+whose side fins are so large that they spread out like
+fleshy wings. The mouth is on the under part, as
+it is in all Sharks.
+</p>
+<br clear=all><a name="plate6"></a><a name="p52"></a>
+<center><a href="images/img14L.jpg">
+<img alt="[Illustration: FISHES (No.1).]"
+src="images/img14.jpg"></a></center>
+<p>
+<!-- 1. Blue Shark. -->
+<!-- 2. Saw Fish. -->
+<!-- 3. Starry Ray. -->
+<!-- 4. Ox Ray. -->
+<!-- 5. Plaice. -->
+<!-- 6. Trunk Fish. -->
+<!-- 7. Blue Striped Wrasse. -->
+<!-- 8. Malted Gurnard. -->
+<!-- 9. Muroena. -->
+These flattened Sharks must be a terror to their
+neighbours. We shall see, in our next lesson, what
+strange weapons are used in the battles of the fish.
+The Rays or Skates have their share of spines, stings,
+and poisons. One glance at their shape tells you
+that speed is not their strong point. If they wish to
+eat fast-swimming fish--and they often do--they
+must use cunning.
+</p><p>
+The Skate, being sandy-coloured and flat, is nearly
+invisible as it lies on the bed of the sea. There it
+lurks, waiting for the first unwary fish. A sudden
+spring, and its wide body smothers its unlucky
+victim.
+</p><p>
+Skates also flap their way slowly over the ocean
+floor, looking for a dinner. They can eat shell-fish,
+and are fitted with teeth suited to the work of crushing
+such hard fare. But, as we have seen, they have
+also the Shark's love of eating other fish.
+</p><p>
+These Skates are the only members of the Shark
+family that we value as food. You can see Skates
+of several kinds in the fish market. They go by such
+names as Thorn-back Ray, Blue Skate, Spotted Ray,
+Starry Ray, Cuckoo Ray, Long-nosed Skate and
+Sting Ray.
+</p>
+
+<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
+<p>
+1. Of what use are Sharks? 2. How does the Thresher
+Shark hunt its prey? 3. Give the names of several Dogfish
+and Rays. 4. What is the food of the Skate, and how
+is it obtained?
+</p>
+
+
+<a name="l8"></a>
+<h4>LESSON VIII</h4>
+
+<h3>THE DANGERS OF THE DEEP</h3>
+
+<p>
+The "game" of hide-and-seek is played by most of
+the dwellers in the sea. Many of them are "hiders"
+and "seekers" by turn. That is to say, they are
+always seeking other creatures to devour, but must
+also be ready to hide from their own enemies.
+</p><p>
+<i>Eating and being eaten</i>--that is the life of the sea.
+The small and weak ones must hide, and their lives
+depend on their skill in hiding. Perhaps we should
+not call it a "game," as it is not done for fun. But,
+though the sea is full of danger for some creatures,
+you must not think that they live in fear. There is
+no doubt that they enjoy their lives, each in its own
+way.
+</p><p>
+Many are the quaint dodges and tricks of the
+hiders and seekers in the sea. We can mention but
+a few in this lesson. Look at the Spider Crabs, and
+their trick of dressing up. They have hooks on their
+backs, which catch in the seaweed. Some of them
+even tear off weed with their pincers, and fix it on to
+these hooks, and succeed in looking like bundles of
+weed, and not a bit like living Crabs.
+</p><p>
+Then there are the fish which wear a coloured
+scaly coat. Many of them are not easily seen in
+the glinting water, as you know. Others are lazy;
+they lie on the bed of the sea, and wear a disguise
+which hides them from prowling foes. The Plaice
+and other flat-fish, as we noticed in Lesson 2, are
+coloured and marked like the sand and pebbles of
+their home; and they can even change colour to
+suit their background. They are wonderfully hidden,
+owing to this useful dodge. It is as if Mother Nature
+had given them the marvellous "cloak of invisibility,"
+of which we read in fairy-tales.
+</p><p>
+Shrimps and young Crabs wear a coat of sand-colour
+or weed-colour. Our soldiers, for much the
+same reason, wear suits of <i>khaki</i>.
+</p><p>
+Another common hide-and-seek trick is to look
+like nothing at all. That sounds difficult, but it is
+a favourite dodge in the sea. If a number of very
+young Herrings or Eels were placed in a glass tank
+of sea-water, you would have a hard task to find them.
+You can look <i>at</i> them, and yet not see them. They
+are transparent--you look through them as if they
+were water or glass. You can imagine how well
+hidden they are in the open sea.
+</p><p>
+It is well to be able to hide, when all around you
+are enemies who look on you as good food. But there
+is another way, and that is to wear armour. Then
+you can frighten your enemy, or at least prevent him
+from eating you. Some fish, like the Trunk Fish,
+<a href="#p52">(p. 52, No. 6)</a>, are covered with bony plates, jointed
+together like armour. Spines and prickles are a
+commoner defence.
+</p><p>
+The little Stickleback of our ponds wears sharp
+spines, and knows well how to use them. Even the
+terrible Pike will not swallow such a dangerous
+mouthful unless driven by hunger.
+</p><p>
+Sea-fish are the most hunted of all living things.
+From the day they leave the egg, enemies lurk on
+all sides to gobble them up. The weak ones are
+eaten, and none of them has the chance to die of old
+age! So we find a defence of spines and prickles worn
+by many sea-fish. Spines on the fins are the commonest,
+and no doubt help to keep away enemies; but
+some fish go one better than that, and wear a complete
+suit of spines.
+</p><p>
+The Porcupine-fish, as his name tells us, is one of
+these. He is a small fish, living in warm seas. No
+doubt he has many enemies, eager to meet him and
+eat him. But, when they see this little fish puff out
+his sides like a balloon, and when pointed spines
+rise up all over the balloon, they think better of it!
+They leave him alone; and the Porcupine-fish goes
+back to his usual shape, the spines lying flat until
+wanted again. He is sometimes called the Sea-hedgehog
+or Urchin-fish, and well deserves his name.
+</p><p>
+Many of the Skates or Rays wear terrible spikes.
+The Starry Ray <a href="#p52">(p. 52, No. 7)</a> is not easy to handle,
+dead or alive, for he has spines all over his body.
+The Thornback is another ugly fellow of this family,
+having spines on his back and a double row of them
+down his tail. Fishermen are careful to avoid the
+lash of this armed tail. The Sting Ray shows us still
+another weapon. At the end of its long tail it has
+a horrible, jagged three-inch spike. As this fish likes
+to bury itself in wet sand, bathers sometimes tread
+on it. In a flash the tail whips round! A poisonous
+slime covers the spike, causing great pain to
+the unlucky bather.
+</p><p>
+Several poisonous fish are common near our coast.
+You may have seen the one called the Great Weaver,
+also its small cousin, the Sting Fish. The Weaver is
+dreaded by fishermen; for the spines on its back fin,
+as well as the one on its gill-cover, cause poisoned
+wounds. They are grooved, to hold a very poisonous
+slime.
+</p><p>
+Some fish have the power to kill their prey, and
+stun their enemies, at a distance! Instead of a
+spiny defence, they are <i>armed with electricity!</i> The
+best-known sea-fish of this sort is the Electric Ray,
+also called the Cramp Fish or Torpedo
+<a href="#p48">(<i>see</i> p. 48)</a>. It
+is a clumsy fish about a yard long, and very ugly.
+Being too slow to catch its swift prey in fair chase, it
+stuns them with an electric shock, and then eats them.
+The electric power comes from the body of the Ray;
+if it wishes it can send a deadly shock through any
+fish which ventures near. Without chance of
+escape, it is at once stunned, and falls helpless.
+</p><p>
+We come now to some formidable dangers of the
+deep--big strong fish, so well armed that they roam the
+seas without fear. On page 52 you see a picture
+<a href="#p52">(No. 2)</a> of the Saw-fish, one of the Shark family.
+It is a large fish, and carries a big saw on its head, with
+which it stabs sideways at its prey.
+</p><p>
+Imagine, if you can, a Shark about fifteen feet
+long and weighing a ton or so. Now suppose the top
+jaw of this monster to be drawn out into a hard, flat
+blade six feet in length. Then suppose there are
+sharp ivory teeth, one inch apart, fixed on each side
+the blade, and you have an idea of the Saw-fish. This
+strange Shark is said to be as strong as it is fierce. It
+kills its prey by tearing them open with side blows
+from its sharp, two-edged saw. Its big mouth is
+fitted with a great many rows of needle-like teeth.
+</p><p>
+The Sword-fish wears a different weapon--a lance
+instead of a saw. He is not a Shark, but a cousin of
+the beautiful Mackerel. This warrior of the deep
+is more dreaded than the Saw-fish, and braver than
+any Shark. His speed in the water is marvellous;
+it makes him safe from attack. He carries in front
+of him a terrible weapon, and all sea-creatures hasten
+from his path as fast as they can.
+</p><p>
+You may have seen the Sword-fish in a museum.
+There is a fine one in the London Natural History
+Museum, where there is also a "sword" from one
+of these fish, driven eighteen inches into the solid
+oak of a ship. The Sword-fish never thinks twice about
+attacking, no matter if his enemy is ten or twenty
+times as large as himself. He sees a Whale, and, like
+a flash, hurls himself at it, stabbing his sword as deep
+as it will go into the Whale's side. With a twist of
+his body the sword is wrenched free, only to be driven
+savagely in again.
+</p>
+
+<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
+<p>
+1. Mention three ways in which sea-creatures try to
+escape their enemies. 2. How do the Sting-fish and Sting
+Ray defend themselves? 3. What is the Saw-fish like?
+4. How does the Sword-fish attack its prey?
+</p>
+
+
+<a name="l9"></a>
+<h4>LESSON IX</h4>
+
+<h3>THE FISH OF OUR ROCK-POOLS</h3>
+
+<p>
+The pools left by the falling tide have many an interesting
+thing to show us. There are living creatures
+in plenty, besides the pretty weeds, shells, and other
+objects. Shrimps, Prawns and Crabs abound in the
+rock-pools and shallows, with anemones and shellfish
+of all kinds. In the rock-pools we shall also find
+the interesting little fish whose story we glance at
+in this lesson. Of course there are baby flat-fish,
+and large fish too, along the shore. But these are
+only visitors. The real rock-pool fish are those which
+live their lives there.
+</p><p>
+Some of them are tiny things, two or three inches
+long. With quick movements like Shrimps they dart
+away as you approach. They have a way of hiding
+under weeds and rocks, being very clever at "hide-and-seek,"
+and knowing all the dodges. But, by
+using a net, you will soon capture a few of them.
+Then you can put them in a small pool and examine
+them; or even keep them in an aquarium, giving
+them clean sea-water, seaweed, and the small
+shrimps on which they feed.
+</p>
+<br clear=all><a name="plate7"></a>
+<center><a href="images/img16L.jpg">
+<img alt="[Illustration: FISHES (No. 2).]"
+src="images/img16.jpg"></a></center>
+<p>
+<!-- 1. John Dory. -->
+<!-- 2. Rock Cod. -->
+<!-- 3. Sand Eel. -->
+<!-- 4. Small Pipe Fish. -->
+<!-- 5. Cuckoo-Wrasse. -->
+<!-- 6. Angler. -->
+<!-- 7. Whiting. -->
+<!-- 8. Gattorngine. -->
+<!-- 9. Sapphirnal Gurnard. -->
+<!-- 10. Three-bearded Rockling. -->
+<!-- 11. Red Gurnard. -->
+<!-- 12. Pipe Fish. -->
+<!-- 13. Bass. -->
+<!-- 14. Red Mullet. -->
+<!-- 15. Turbot. -->
+In our lesson on fish-nurseries we saw how the
+Sea-stickleback, Sand Goby and Pipe-fish cared for
+their eggs or young ones. These three fish are often to be found
+by the shore. As you look into the clear and still waters of a pool
+you may see a Pipe-fish getting its dinner. This funny creature
+looks more like a pencil swimming than a fish. It may be a
+foot in length, but its body is no thicker than a pipe-stem!
+</p><p>
+<a href="images/img15L.jpg">
+<img align="left" alt="[Illustration: PIPE-FISH AND FLUTE MOUTH]"
+src="images/img15.jpg"></a>
+It has very long jaws. They are quite useless, however, being
+fastened together! At their tip is an opening, though a very small
+one, and that is the mouth of the Pipe-fish. Of course, with such
+a mouth, the fish cannot bite its prey, and so has to suck in
+small creatures and swallow them. Its method of
+hunting them is strange. It stands on its head, as
+it were, takes in a mouthful of water, and spurts it
+out at the sandy bed of the sea. This stirs up the
+small living things, which are at once swallowed by
+the Pipe-fish.
+</p><p>
+We have already seen how the male Pipe-fish
+carries his eggs in his "pocket." Another curious
+thing is his suit of armour. Instead of scales, he has
+hard plates all over his body. Very often you may
+see young Pipe-fish among Sprats and "Whitebait"
+in the fishmonger's shop.
+</p><p>
+Most of the little shore-fish are either Gobies or
+Blennies. No doubt they have to avoid the sharp eyes
+of Gulls and Cormorants, for they are very anxious
+not to be seen. Some of these rock-pool fish do not
+mind being out of water for hours at a time.
+In every way Nature has fitted them for their life
+between sea and shore. They have cousins in
+warmer seas which love to come ashore at times.
+This is how a traveller describes one of these foreign
+Gobies:--
+</p><p>
+"Though they are fish, and breathe by gills, they
+have a passion for the land, and during the daytime
+may always be seen ashore, especially where the coast
+is muddy. They bask in the sun, and hunt for food,
+raising themselves on their fleshy fins.... When
+pursued, they take great springs, using their tails
+and fins for the purpose; and if they cannot escape
+into the sea, they will dive down the burrow of a
+land-crab, or dash into a bunch of mangrove-roots."
+They are very wary, having eyes like swivels, to turn
+in all directions.
+</p><p>
+The Spotted Goby, as we have already noticed,
+makes a nest under a shell, and guards it until the
+eggs hatch. Two other Gobies are quite common in
+the pools of our south coast--the One-spot Goby
+and the Two-spot Goby. The back fin has the one
+spot, or two spots, from which they
+get their name. Though they are such mites, they
+have sharp teeth, as you may already know if you
+have caught them with your fingers!
+</p><p>
+These lively little fellows are not very easy to
+catch! They have a cunning way of hiding amid
+sand and rock, and are coloured to suit such places.
+One strange thing about the Gobies is their trick of
+anchoring themselves to a stone.
+</p><p>
+You may wonder what kind of anchor they can
+use. It is a simple matter, however. The fins on
+the stomach are pressed together to form a little disc.
+This acts as a strong sucker, much like that of the
+Sucking Fish <a href="#p43">(p. 43)</a>. If the Goby wishes to stay
+still in one place, it presses its sucker to a stone; then
+it cannot be washed away by the ever-moving water.
+</p><p>
+<a href="images/img17L.jpg">
+<img align="left" alt="[Illustration: A BUTTERFLY BLENNY]"
+src="images/img17.jpg"></a>
+In the Blenny family we find big, ugly fish as well
+as pretty little ones of strange shapes and lovely
+colours. There are several kinds of small Blennies in
+our rock-pools. The Eyed Blenny, or Butterfly
+Blenny is not very common along our shores, but
+may be seen now and again. It is only a few inches
+in length, with eyes like jewels, a kind of tuft over
+each eye, and a pretty spot on its tall back fin.
+</p><p>
+It will live quite well in a glass tank of sea-water;
+someone who kept many interesting fish says of this
+Blenny:--
+</p><p>
+"Our little Butterfly Blenny was not often to be
+seen. It was using an old whelk shell for a nursery.
+In this broken old shell the dainty fish was able to
+hide, and was so nervous that we seldom saw it.
+But we placed some food near the hole in the shell,
+and were rewarded by the sight of the Butterfly's
+head, and its lovely eyes, each with a little movable
+tassel above it."
+</p><p>
+Hidden under weed and stones is another small
+brownish fish of the shore, the Gunnell or Butter-fish.
+You may turn it out of its snug hiding-place, but you
+will have a hard task to catch it, even in a small
+rock-pool, and, once caught, it slips through
+your fingers like an eel. Its body is eel-shaped,
+with a narrow fin on the back, and covered
+with a layer of slime. It well deserves the name
+of Butter-fish.
+</p><p>
+<a href="images/img18L.jpg">
+<img align="right" alt="[Illustration: A SMOOTH BLENNY]"
+src="images/img18.jpg"></a>
+The eggs of this strange little fish are rolled
+into a mass by the two parents. By curling their
+long, slimy bodies around the eggs, a closely-packed
+ball is the result. This precious ball of eggs is then
+taken care of, and guarded by the two fish. In this
+nursery both the father and mother fish take their
+share as guardians.
+</p>
+
+<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
+<p>
+1. Name three rock-pool fish. 2. Describe the Pipe-fish.
+3. How does the Sand Goby anchor itself? 4. In
+what ways are these rock-pool fish so well fitted to live
+in such places?
+</p>
+
+
+<a name="l10"></a>
+<h4>LESSON X</h4>
+
+<h3>SOME CURIOUS FISHES</h3>
+
+<p>
+Now and again that queer fish called the Sea-horse
+is found by our coast; a little brown fish, with bluish-white
+spots and lines on the sides and tail. But
+Sea-horses are common in warmer seas, in the banks
+of seaweed where they love to dwell. You would
+never guess that these curious creatures were fish.
+</p><p>
+The shape of the head, and the curved neck,
+remind you of a horse. It is also rather like the
+knight of the chess-board; or it may make you think
+of the dragon of the fable; but, really, the Sea-horse
+is like nothing on the earth, or in the waters. Nature
+has given it a special pattern of its own.
+</p><p>
+Sea-horses use their twisty tails as monkeys do,
+clinging to the seaweed with them. They swim along
+slowly, in an upright position. Every now and then
+they seem to be falling forward on their noses, and
+pull themselves up again, only to begin falling a
+moment after. It is fun to see them play hide-and-seek
+among the weed in an aquarium. Some Sea-horses
+are like floating scraps of torn weed; this, of course,
+hides them from the eyes of enemies.
+</p><p>
+<a href="images/img19L.jpg">
+<img align="right" alt="[Illustration: SEA-HORSES]"
+src="images/img19.jpg"></a>
+They have no teeth, but a long mouth like a
+pipe; so you can be sure they eat only the smallest
+sea-creatures. To add to his odd look, the Seahorse
+moves his eyes in a comic fashion. One
+eye may roll round and look at you, while the other
+gazes forward.
+</p><p>
+As if this were not strange enough, he surprises
+us again. Mr. Sea-horse turns himself into a living
+nursery. He carries the eggs about with him, in a
+special pouch of skin! You will remember that the
+Pipe-fish also carries the eggs in his pocket, as it were.
+So you will not be surprised to hear that these two
+quaint fish belong to the same family.
+</p><p>
+We will leave the funny little Sea-horse, and look at
+a very different fish--the Sunfish. This remarkable
+fish often reaches a good size; even near our coast
+big ones are caught now and again, and in warmer
+seas, where they are often killed for the sake of the
+oil they contain, big fellows of half a ton are quite
+common.
+</p><p>
+This Sunfish has a peculiar shape. It looks as if
+it had once been an immense fish of the usual fish
+shape, but someone cut off the head and shoulders,
+and placed a short fin where the rest of the body had
+been. Above and below there is a long pointed fin.
+The mouth is very small, and has no real teeth;
+so the Sunfish lives on small prey, such as the young
+of other fish, or small shell-fish.
+</p><p>
+Far away from land these strange Sunfish are
+met with, asleep near the surface, with the back fin
+showing above water. They roll along lazily,
+not unlike big cart-wheels. The top and bottom
+fins are for balancing and guiding the body, which
+is moved forward by the fin which frills the
+back part of this odd fish.
+</p><p>
+<a href="images/img20L.jpg">
+<img align="left" alt="[Illustration: GLOBE FISH]"
+src="images/img20.jpg"></a>
+In the fishmonger's shop you may sometimes
+see that ugly monster of the deep, the
+Angler-fish, or Fishing-frog. Now and again
+he finds his way into the fishermen's nets;
+and is also caught on the lines, for he is so
+greedy that he will snap at a hooked fish. Rather
+than let go of his prey, he will be drawn to the surface.
+Then he is knocked on the head, and thrown into the
+boat with the other fish.
+</p><p>
+Being slow and clumsy, the Angler-fish cannot
+chase his prey, so gets his dinner by fraud. Nature
+has given him a fishing line and a bait! He has long
+spines on his head, so beautifully joined to the bones
+of the head that they can wave to and fro very easily.
+At the tip of the front spine there is a loose, shining
+strip of skin--that is the bait. Now, all anglers
+know how a fish is lured by a shining bait. The
+Angler-fish seems to know this too. He buries himself
+in the wet mud and sand at the bottom of the sea.
+Then he waves the long spine, so that the shining
+tip glistens as it shakes in the water, until a fish swims
+up to see what it is all about. A sudden snap, and
+that inquisitive fish is inside a huge, toad-like mouth,
+well furnished with rows of sharp teeth. The Angler-fish
+puts his catch in his pocket, and begins fishing
+again, for he is never satisfied. His pocket is a loose
+bag of skin in the throat. This bag is always examined
+by fishermen who capture the Angler, for it
+may contain a nice big Plaice or Sole, worth money
+in the market.
+</p><p>
+There are Angler-fishes in every ocean, and some
+live in the very deepest parts. In those black depths
+the little waving "bait" would not be seen. So it
+is made to shine, like a bluish spark moving to and
+fro over the cold black slime of the sea-bed.
+</p><p>
+Down in those awful deeps it is for ever dark, and
+freezing cold, There is no day or night, summer or
+winter. No plants can live there. Yet in that
+strange, still world there are numbers of living things,
+though we know very little about them. There are
+weird Crabs, blind Lobsters, and fish terrors such as
+are never seen elsewhere.
+</p><p>
+In that darkness you would think that eyes would
+be of no use, but some of the deep-sea fish have
+great black owl-like eyes. Others are quite blind,
+or have eyes like pin-points. Some of them make their
+own light, glowing with rows of little lamps on their
+bodies, each like the lamp of the glow-worm of our
+country lanes. Blue, red, and green these lights are,
+but no one can tell you their real use, or why they are
+so coloured. The blind fish feel their way with long
+feelers, stretched out like the threads of a web.
+</p>
+<center><a href="images/img21L.jpg">
+<img alt="[Illustration: THE FISHING FROG.]"
+src="images/img21.jpg"></a></center>
+<p>
+As there are no plants down there, these strange
+fish must live mostly on one another! And here is
+a puzzle, for some of them have great big bodies,
+but small heads and tiny mouths; others have bodies
+like ribbons, but large heads and huge mouths,
+and some are such gluttons that they swallow fish
+twice their own size! This sounds absurd, but it is
+true. Their mouths gape open like trap-doors, and
+their stomachs are made to stretch, to hold their huge
+meals! There are other terrors of the deep with such
+big teeth that they cannot shut their mouths. No
+doubt the sea holds yet other weird fish which no man
+has seen.
+</p>
+
+<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
+<p>
+1. In what ways is the Sea-horse so different from most
+other fish? 2. In what ways are the Sea-horse and Pipe-fish
+alike? 3. How does the Angler-fish catch its prey?
+4. Mention a few strange facts about the deep-sea fish.
+</p>
+
+
+<a name="l11"></a>
+<h4>LESSON XI</h4>
+
+<h3>THE GARDEN OF THE SEA</h3>
+<p>
+For many centuries men were puzzled over those
+strange growths in the sea--Corals and Sponges.
+Were they to be classed as animals or as vegetables?
+It was by no means an easy question to answer.
+</p><p>
+Corals, with their pretty colour, and their stems
+and branches growing up from the sea-bed, were said
+to be shrubs, but they were as hard as rock, said
+some people, so how could they be vegetables? The
+reply to this was, that the Coral became hard as soon
+as it reached the air. Then, of course, it was found
+that Coral was as hard under water as above it,
+and the question was still unanswered.
+</p><p>
+Sponges, too, were thought to be sea-plants for
+many, many years; though some people even said
+that they must really be made of hardened sea-foam!
+The Sponge took its place in the vegetable kingdom,
+then it was moved to the animal kingdom, and back
+again.
+</p><p>
+This went on for long years. Then, by careful
+watching, it was found that the Sponge is an animal.
+True, it is a very lowly member of the great kingdom
+of animals, yet it is one, and not a plant.
+</p>
+<center><a href="images/img22L.jpg">
+<img alt="[Illustration: CUPS AND SOLID SPONGES]"
+src="images/img22.jpg"></a></center>
+<p>
+Like all other animals, the Sponge animal must
+eat, and its way of doing so is rather strange. If you
+look at any ordinary washing-sponge, you notice a
+great many very small openings and some larger
+ones amongst them. It is through the smaller holes,
+or pores, that the Sponge gets its supply of food.
+When it is alive, and in its own home, there is a current
+of water always passing through its and the
+Sponge depends on the food which the water brings.
+Now, if you could watch this water-current, you would see that it
+rushes into some of the holes, and out of others; it has a certain path
+to follow. It enters the small pores, or openings, of the
+Sponge, and goes along narrow canals, and is then led into larger
+ones. Finally, it rushes out again through those
+large openings we noticed. We may compare
+it with traffic coming into a city by many narrow
+streets, then passing into broader roads, and at last
+out again by big main roads.
+</p><p>
+<a href="images/img23L.jpg">
+<img align="right"
+alt="[Illustration: <i>Photo: A. F. Dauncey</i>. SEA FURZE]"
+src="images/img23.jpg"></a>
+How does the Sponge animal cause this current;
+and how is it made to follow a certain path?
+</p><p>
+The narrow canals in the Sponge are lined with
+lashes, or tiny hairs, so very small that you can just
+see them through a microscope. Now the secret of
+the wonderful water-current is a secret no longer.
+As long as the Sponge lives, these little lashes are
+always moving, always lashing the water along in
+one direction. They cause it to follow its proper
+course, through and through the Sponge, and out
+again into the sea. On its way it loses the tiny scraps
+of food which it contains, and carries away any waste
+stuff out of the Sponge.
+</p><p>
+You will have noticed that there are various kinds
+of Sponges in the market; some are large and flat,
+others small and cup-shaped; some are soft, and
+others rather hard. They are all somewhat horny
+and elastic. This "spongy" material is the skeleton
+of the Sponge animal, cleaned and dried for your use.
+Some kinds of Sponge would tear your skin if you
+tried to use them, for they have a hard skeleton. It
+is made of lime, and sometimes of flint, which the
+Sponge obtains from its food. Of course we use only
+those sponge-skeletons which are soft; but the
+cheaper kinds do often contain little flinty needles.
+</p><p>
+The best washing-sponges live in warm seas,
+attached to the rocks on the sea-bed. Divers go
+down and obtain them; or else they are dredged up,
+cleaned, dried, and sorted, and then sent to the market.
+Some Sponges, called Slime Sponges, have no skeleton,
+being merely a living mass of slime.
+</p><p>
+Coral is also the hard skeleton of a little animal,
+known as the Coral Polyp. The rest of the polyp's
+body is soft jelly, which many fish regard as good food.
+The Sea Anemone--another jelly-animal--is first
+cousin to the Coral Polyp. And we may call the Jellyfish
+second cousin to these two, for it is in the same
+big division of the animal kingdom.
+</p><p>
+The pretty red Coral, then, is really the hard part
+of a little jelly-animal. This animal is much like a
+Sea-anemone, with a hard skeleton of lime. Coral,
+as you know, looks like a solid rock; it is really made
+of needles of lime, fastened together into a solid mass
+by the little Coral Polyp.
+</p><p>
+Now, many of the Coral animals have the strange
+habit of budding. The buds become perfect polyps,
+and then they, too, begin to bud. In this way,
+those marvellous <i>coral-reefs</i> and <i>coral-islands</i> have
+been made. Branch by branch, layer by layer, the
+hard Coral is built up by myriads of the small, soft-bodied
+creatures. This kind of polyp can live only
+in warm, clear water. So it is not found in the cold
+depths of the sea, nor in the seas near our islands,
+but in the warm shallow waters near tropical lands
+it flourishes so well that it builds up most wonderful
+Coral walls. So strong are they that they can defy
+the terrific force of the waves.
+</p>
+<center><a href="images/img24L.jpg">
+<img alt="[Illustration: THE PICTURE STORY OF A CORAL ISLAND.]"
+src="images/img24.jpg"></a></center>
+<p>
+Some coral-reefs are of immense size and strength.
+One, near the coast of Australia, is nearly a thousand
+miles in length. These marvellous works of the
+polyp are of great use, for they break the force
+of the waves, and so make a calm shelter for
+vessels.
+</p><p>
+The brilliant masses of Coral make a world of
+colour in the clear seas of the tropics, a gay garden
+inhabited by fishes of gaudy hues. In dull seas we
+have, as a rule, dull creatures to match. And in
+bright, warm, sunny seas the fishes are also brightly
+coloured. A dull fish would show up amid such rich
+colours, so it is easy to know why Coral fish wear such
+fine clothes.
+</p><p>
+Many of them spend all their time among the
+Coral, their food being the living tips of the Coral
+"branches," which they nip off with fine, sharp teeth.
+Others have teeth like millstones, fit for crushing
+the hard Coral, and eating the fleshy body of the
+polyp within.
+</p><p>
+Blue, red and yellow, striped and spotted, and of
+wonderful shapes, are the fish which swim in these
+coloured gardens of the sea. Some of them have
+golden bands round their bodies, and fine spines
+which wave in the water like shreds of weed--all
+to help them hide in the bright, sunlit groves of
+Coral.
+</p><p>
+Gorgeous Sea-anemones of all shapes and sizes add
+to the brightness; and even the Shrimps, Prawns,
+and Crabs are coloured to fit their background.
+Crabs are always surprising us with their queer ways
+and quaint "dresses"; and here, among the Coral,
+it is the same story. For there are Crabs whose
+shelly coats are covered with coloured knobs and
+spikes, so that the sharpest eye cannot pick them out
+from the Corals on which they rest.
+</p>
+<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
+<p>
+1. How does the Sponge obtain its food? 2. What is
+Coral? 3. How are Coral-reefs formed? 4. Why are
+there no Coral-reefs in our seas?
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Within the Deep, by R. Cadwallader Smith
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@@ -0,0 +1,2007 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Within the Deep, by R. Cadwallader Smith
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Within the Deep
+ Cassell's "Eyes And No Eyes" Series, Book VIII.
+
+Author: R. Cadwallader Smith
+
+Release Date: January 6, 2004 [EBook #10617]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITHIN THE DEEP ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Loki and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+WITHIN THE DEEP
+
+By R. CADWALLADER SMITH
+
+WITH EIGHT COLOURED PLATES AND MANY BLACK-AND-WHITE ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+_CASSELL'S "EYES AND NO EYES" SERIES_ _BOOK VIII_
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ LESSON
+ I. FISH FOR BREAKFAST
+ II. THE STORY OF THE FLAT FISH
+ III. SEALS
+ IV. SOME STRANGE NURSERIES
+ V. THE OGRE OF THE DEEP
+ VI. THE WHALE
+ VII. TIGERS OF THE SEA
+ VIII. THE DANGERS OF THE DEEP
+ IX. THE FISH OF OUR ROCK-POOLS
+ X. SOME CURIOUS FISHES
+ XI. THE GARDEN OF THE SEA
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ COLOURED PLATES
+
+ THE HERRING FLEET AT WORK IN THE NORTH SEA
+ THE SEA-ELEPHANT
+ CORALS OF MANY KINDS
+ WHALING!
+ A CORAL REEF
+ FISHES (No. 1)
+ FISHES (No. 2)
+ A GARDEN IN THE SEA
+
+
+
+CASSELL'S
+
+"EYES AND NO EYES"
+
+Eighth Book
+
+WITHIN THE DEEP
+
+
+LESSON I
+
+FISH FOR BREAKFAST
+
+Of all the fish in the wide ocean world, the Herring deserves to be
+called the king. He gives work to thousands of people, and food to
+millions. Many towns exist because of him; if he failed to visit our
+seas, these big towns would shrink to tiny villages.
+
+There are several interesting kinds of Herring, but we will first look
+at the one we know so well, which is such good food, either fresh or as
+dried "kipper" or "bloater."
+
+The Herring loves to swim in a _shoal_. From the time he leaves the egg,
+during his babyhood, and all through his life, he explores the sea with
+thousands of other Herrings crowded round him. His name is from a
+foreign word--_heer_ or _herr_, an _army_. His enemies--ourselves among
+them--find this habit of his a good one. It makes him such easy prey.
+
+Here is a dense shoal of fish, moving slowly along near the surface. To
+catch some is quite easy. The Dolphin, or Shark, or other large
+fish-hunter, merely has to rush into their ranks with wide-open mouth.
+Hordes of Dog-fish feast on the edges of the shoal. And Gannets,
+Cormorants, Gulls and other sea-birds can take their fill with ease.
+
+The Herring shoal is a banquet at which the fish-eating sea creatures
+feed heartily, and man comes along, to spread his nets in the path of
+the shoal. But what matter a few million Herrings when the sea is packed
+with billions more! In the North Sea, one shoal was seen which was over
+four miles long and two miles wide. In such a mass there would be, at
+the very least, twenty thousand million Herring; and this shoal was but
+one out of many thousand shoals. One might as well try to count the
+grains of sand on the shore as the Herrings in the wide ocean.
+
+These huge shoals do not stay long in one part of the sea. They make
+journeys of many miles, each shoal seeming to keep to itself. Like every
+other creature, the Herring goes where his food is. What food does he
+find? He swallows the small life of the sea, tiny transparent things
+like baby shrimps, prawns, crabs, and so on, which swarm even in the
+cold water which the Herring loves.
+
+They are good juicy food, these little mites, and very plentiful; so no
+wonder the Herring becomes plump. He eats greedily of this good food.
+For instance, a young Herring, picked up on the beach at Yarmouth, was
+found to contain no less than one hundred and forty-three small shrimps.
+Not a bad dinner for a fish the length of this page! The ocean teems
+with small creatures; even the huge Greenland Whale feeds on them, and
+the Herring seems to live on little else.
+
+Well, the shoals of Herring begin to move from their feeding place in
+the deeps, and come nearer the coast. As they get to shallower water
+they are crowded together near the surface. Where are they going, and
+why?
+
+Perhaps you can guess--they seek warmer, shallower water, in which to
+lay their eggs. Now is the time for the fisherman! If the Herring kept
+to the deep they would be quite safe--and we should have no nice plump
+Herrings on our breakfast tables! Yes, now is the time to spread out
+miles of nets in the path of this living mass of silvery fish. They are
+in fine condition, well fed, and ready to lay their eggs.
+
+They are moving slowly but surely towards the right place where those
+eggs should be laid. What guides them? Why do they go _this_ way and not
+_that_ in the vast ocean? We do not really know what guides them; so we
+say that they obey a wonderful, unfailing guide--"instinct."
+
+Of course you have seen and tasted the "hard" roe of a Herring; but I do
+not suppose you have ever troubled to count all those little round eggs.
+Each roe contains some thirty thousand of them! What a huge number of
+young ones for one Herring! Still, this is not a large family, as fish
+families go. The Cod lays about nine million eggs!
+
+At last the Herrings reach the breeding grounds that they sought, and
+the eggs are laid. The eggs of most sea-fish just drift on the surface
+of the ocean, at the mercy of their enemies, and washing here and there
+as the current sends them. The Herring's eggs sink to the bottom and,
+being rather sticky, adhere wherever they fall.
+
+There they lie in masses, on the bed of the sea, and then guests of all
+kinds hasten to enjoy such a rare feast of eggs, laid ready for them.
+One of the first guests is the Haddock. He comes in his thousands,
+greedy for his part of the good food; but, knowing this, the fishermen
+also hasten to the spot, and the Haddock pays dearly for his love of
+Herring eggs.
+
+Only a few out of each thousand eggs will escape their enemies, and the
+baby Herrings, which hatch in about a fortnight, run many dangers; thus,
+in the end, the huge family of Mrs. Herring is reduced to a small one.
+Even so, there are countless numbers of the tiny fish. They soon grow
+shining scales, like those of their parents, and move towards the coast.
+
+It is a pretty sight, these little silvery Herrings playing in the
+shallow water. Millions of them dart about and flash in the sunshine,
+during the summer months, round our coasts. Sea-birds and other enemies
+hover round, to feast on the tiny fish. Great numbers of these baby
+Herrings are caught and sold as "Whitebait."
+
+The older Herrings, having laid their eggs, leave the shallows, and make
+their way into deep water. They are no longer nice to eat, and the
+Herring harvest is over until the following season.
+
+In our talk on flat-fish we shall notice how they are caught, near the
+bed of the sea, in the _trawl-net_. Now this net is of no use for the
+capture of Herrings. They swim in the open water, near the surface, and
+so another kind of trap, the _drift-net_, is used.
+
+Hundreds of vessels sail from our fishing ports when King Herring is
+about. Each vessel carries a number of drift-nets. These nets are to be
+let down like a hanging wall, in the path of the shoal, at night. Corks
+or bladders are fastened to the upper edge of the nets. Of course they
+are all mended and made ready before the vessels reach the fishing
+grounds. It is not easy to know where to shoot the nets; all the skill
+and knowledge of the fisherman are needed to locate the shoals, and,
+without this knowledge, he would come home with an empty vessel. Even as
+it is, he sometimes catches no more fish than would fill his hat.
+
+A sharp look-out is kept. An oily gleam in the sea tells the knowing
+fisherman that the shoal is there; or he may see a Gull swoop down and
+carry off a Herring. Then the nets are put out in the path of the shoal.
+A big fleet of fishing vessels may let down a thousand miles of nets!
+
+The Herrings, not seeing the fine wall of net, swim into it. Now the
+openings in the net--the meshes--are one inch across, just wide enough
+for the Herring to poke his head through. Once through, he is caught.
+His gill-covers prevent him from drawing back again. Thousands of other
+Herrings are held tight, all around him, and the rest of the shoal
+scatters for the time being.
+
+When the nets are hauled in, the fisherman beholds a mighty catch, a
+sight to repay him for all his trouble. On being taken from its watery
+home each Herring is dead almost at once--"as dead as a Herring."
+
+Then comes the race to the market. Once in port, the vessels are rapidly
+emptied. Hundreds of thousands of shining, silvery bodies are piled on
+the quays--a sight worth seeing! An army of packers gets to work; and
+the fresh fish are soon on the rail, speeding to the great fish markets,
+on the way to your breakfast table.
+
+The story of the Herring fishery is one of deep interest, and of great
+importance. Millions of Herrings are caught every year, forming a cheap
+and good food. Yet there are uncountable numbers left; and there is not
+the least danger that our nets can ever empty the sea of this wonderful
+little fish.
+
+The Herring has several smaller relatives, all of them being excellent
+food for us. The Pilchard is one of them; the Sardine is merely a young
+Pilchard. Countless myriads of Pilchards visit the Cornish coast;
+strangely enough, they frequent only this corner of our seas.
+
+Another cousin of the Herring, the Sprat, is also a fine food, and so
+cheap that poor people can enjoy it. Baby Herrings and baby Sprats are
+caught in great quantity, and sold under the name of "Whitebait." It was
+thought, at one time, that the Whitebait was another kind of fish; but
+Whitebait are really the Herring and Sprat in their baby state.
+
+
+EXERCISES
+
+1. Name several enemies of the Herring. 2. Describe the eggs of the
+Herring, and where they are laid. 3. What is a "drift-net," and how is
+it used? 4. What is a Sardine? What is a "Whitebait?"
+
+
+
+LESSON II
+
+THE STORY OF THE FLAT FISH
+
+You see fish of many shapes and sizes in the fishmonger's shop; they can
+be divided into two kinds--round fish and flat fish. Cod, Herring,
+Mackerel and Salmon are round fish. The flat fish are Plaice, Turbot,
+Brill, Halibut, Sole, Dab and Flounder.
+
+Most people know the taste, as well as the look, of a Plaice; but few
+know much about its life in the ocean. Indeed, there are secrets in the
+life of this fish, and many other fish too, which still puzzle us.
+
+Put a Salmon and a Plaice side by side, and it is plain that they live
+in very different ways. One is made to dart like an arrow, the other to
+lie flat. One is the shape of a torpedo, the other is flat like a raft.
+The shape and colour of the Plaice tell their own story of a life on the
+sandy, pebbly bed of the sea. And look at the eyes! Both are on the
+upper side of the head! What could be better for a fish that lies flat
+on the ocean floor?
+
+The Plaice is the best known of these flat fish, so we will try to find
+how its life is spent in the deep sea.
+
+Have you ever watched those little sailing-vessels which go a-shrimping?
+They carry a large net--a shrimp-trawl, it is called--which is drawn
+over the sandy home of the Shrimp. When the trawl is hauled up it may
+contain not only Shrimps, but the other dwellers in sandy places. Among
+these, sad to say, is often a mass of baby Plaice and other flat fish.
+Tiny little fellows they are, some hardly as large as a postage stamp.
+They are thrown aside, being of no use to the fisherman.
+
+Now these babies are quite flat, darkish on the upper side, white on the
+other side, like the Plaice you see in the shop. They are not such new
+babies after all. Though such wee mites, it is more than six weeks since
+they left the egg; and, in that time, they have passed through wonderful
+changes, as you will see.
+
+Plaice lay a great many eggs, which float about in the sea. Most are
+gobbled up by those sea-creatures--and they are many--who love fish-eggs
+for dinner. From each remaining egg a baby Plaice escapes. At first it
+floats upside down at the surface of the sea, and eats nothing at all.
+Then it rights itself, and begins to swallow the tiny creatures which
+swarm in sea-water.
+
+Strange to tell, this baby Plaice is not a bit like its mother. It is
+not a flat fish now, but a "round" fish. It has one eye on each side of
+its head, and you would expect it to grow up like any other round fish.
+
+For about a month this small, transparent youngster hardly alters. Then
+it grows deeper in the body, and begins to swim near the bottom of the
+sea. At last it lies on one side, and its life as a "round" fish is
+over.
+
+A fish lying thus on its side would have one eye buried in the sand, and
+quite useless, would it not? But our young Plaice is changing its
+appearance very quickly. Its head is growing rather "lopsided." The eye
+next the sand is, little by little, brought round to the upper side,
+until it looks up instead of down. Its mouth gets a queer one-sided
+look, owing to the twisting of the bones in the head.
+
+Many people think that the dark upper part of a flat fish is the back,
+and the white under part is the stomach. We have seen, however, that
+this is not so, for _flat fish lie on one side_.
+
+For the rest of its life the Plaice will remain flat, with two eyes
+looking up, and a twisted head. But its colour alters. The side on which
+it lies is white; the upper side becomes brown and speckled, dotted over
+with red marks. This is a good disguise. Its enemies cannot distinguish
+the Plaice from the pebbles and sand around it. They might swim over it,
+and yet not see the thin, flat, brownish body pressed down on the bed of
+the sea.
+
+Also, these flat fish have a wonderful way of changing colour. Put them
+on light sand, and they become lightish. Put them on dark sand and
+pebbles, and they soon match it by becoming brown and mottled. This is a
+most useful dodge where so many enemies abound, all swifter in the water
+than the slow-swimming flat fish.
+
+If you look for flat fish in an aquarium, you will not easily see them.
+Now and again one will swim up, with a wavy motion of its body. On
+settling again, it shuffles and flaps about, works itself into the sand,
+hiding its edges well under, and then, hey presto! it is gone! If the
+flat fish are so hard to find in a tank, you may be sure it would be
+impossible to find them on the sea bed. They are poor swimmers, but
+perfect hiders.
+
+As far as we can tell, they feed on other living creatures. The ocean
+floor is a huge dining table for them, where they find very mixed
+dinners. They eat small fish, sand-worms, shell-fish, Shrimps and young
+Crabs. The Plaice has strong, blunt teeth in its throat, and is well
+able to grind up the shells of Cockles and other molluscs, swallowing
+the juicy contents.
+
+Now we have seen that the Plaice is first a floating egg, and then a
+tiny transparent "round" fish. It sinks to the sea bed, lies on one
+side, and becomes a flat fish like its parents.
+
+These little baby flat fish, not much larger than your thumb-nail, crowd
+in the shallow, sandy parts of the sea near the coast. There they often
+end their lives in the shrimp-trawl, as we have already noticed.
+
+After leaving this "infants' school" the Plaice, and other small flat
+fish, go to deeper water. There they feed and grow fat. Our fishermen
+know where to find them. Indeed, these special fishing grounds are so
+well known that flat fish are scarcer than they used to be. Some kinds
+are much too dear ever to be seen on the poor man's table.
+
+There is a special net for catching flat fish, called a _trawl_. This is
+a large net, dragged over the bed of the sea by ropes, or steel wire,
+attached to the sailing vessel or steam trawler. The net is kept open
+under water by means of beams or boards.
+
+When the flat fish are disturbed, they rise a foot or two from the sea
+floor, and are then swept into the gaping mouth of the deadly trawl.
+Once in, there is no escape. There they remain, pressed together, until
+the net is hauled up and emptied.
+
+
+EXERCISES
+
+1. Give the names of five kinds of flat fish. 2. How does the Plaice
+escape its enemies in the sea? 3. What is the food of the Plaice? 4. How
+are flat fish usually caught for the market?
+
+
+
+LESSON III
+
+SEALS
+
+There are many different kinds of Seal; the family is a large one, but
+all have one thing in common--the fish-like body, with toes joined
+together by a web. Anyone who has seen the diving power of a Seal, and
+its wonderful way in the water, will agree that the "flippers" of the
+Seal are as useful as the fins of the fish.
+
+In fact, the flipper beats the fin, for the Seal earns his dinner by
+chasing and catching fish. He slips through the water with perfect ease,
+and seizes the darting fish in their own home. The Seal is nearly always
+hungry, but so wonderfully quick that his hunting is made easy for him.
+
+It is quite another matter on land, where his best pace is a waddle and
+a shuffle; but his life is in the wide sea, where he can feed and sleep
+as easily as other mammals can on land.
+
+Seals are easily tamed, and soon become fond of their owners. Some
+fishermen once caught a baby Seal, which they gave to a boy, knowing his
+love of animals. The strange baby soon made itself at home, and loved to
+lie in the warmth of the kitchen fire. It knew the voice of its young
+master, and would follow him like a dog.
+
+The older it grew, the more milk and fish it needed each day. At last,
+this food was not to be easily obtained, and so the boy had to get rid
+of his pet. He rowed out to sea, taking the Seal, and let it free in the
+ocean to fend for itself; but the Seal would not leave him; it swam
+swiftly round the boat, calling pitifully. Needless to say, it was taken
+back again, and well cared for.
+
+[Illustration: THE SEA-ELEPHANT]
+
+Seals have even been trained to catch fish for their owners. Being
+docile by nature, and having larger brains than most animals, they can
+be taught. Perhaps you have seen Sea-lions performing surprising tricks,
+showing clearly how intelligent these fish-like creatures really are.
+The Sea-lions at the London "Zoo" are not specially trained. But they
+are clever enough to teach themselves, especially when rewarded by a few
+extra fish. They know well the voice of their keeper, and clap with
+their flippers to let him know that feeding--time is near; and in many
+other amusing ways they prove their intelligence.
+
+[Illustration: SEA-LION]
+
+You have noticed, perhaps, that these Sea-lions can shuffle along on
+their hind flippers, which are turned forward under the body. The real
+Seals, however, cannot do this. Their hind limbs, so wonderful in the
+water, are merely dragged behind the body on land. "Sealskin" should be
+called "Sea-lion-skin," to be exact; for it is the Sea-lions, not the
+true Seals, which men kill and rob of their lovely warm coats.
+
+The giant of the Seal family is the Sea-elephant; a big lumbering
+fellow, with a most peculiar nose. Of course this gives him his name,
+though it is not much like the trunk of the real elephant. It is just
+the baggy skin of his nose, a foot long, which hangs down past his
+mouth.
+
+When the Sea-elephant is angry or excited, this loose nose of his
+becomes filled with air, and bulges out. Our coloured picture shows you
+Mr. Sea-elephant, full grown; his wife and children have ordinary seal
+noses. Perhaps we should say wives, not wife, for he has many.
+
+[Illustration: A COMMON SEAL]
+
+The Sea-elephants go to wild, lonely islands, and there make their
+nurseries. Year after year tens of thousands of the big Seals gather,
+to fight and to rear their young. The clumsy great father Sea-elephants
+fight terrible battles; and at this time always seem to be in a very bad
+temper, tearing each other with their tusk-like teeth. Their roaring can
+be heard far out at sea; but the lady Seals take no part in these
+combats.
+
+We have no room in this lesson to look at all the other kinds of Seals,
+Sea-lions, Sea-bears and Walrus. As we have already noticed, the
+sealskin sold in shops is really the skin of a Sea-lion. Sometimes these
+are called _Eared Seals_, for they possess little ears, while the real
+Seals have only small holes in the side of the head for ears. Again,
+there are some Eared Seals whose fur is of no use to us, for it lacks
+the deep under-fur of the fur Seals.
+
+Nature gave this coat to the Seal to protect him from the cold, but it
+has caused his destruction! For these animals were killed by the hundred
+thousand. Worse than this, they were killed in the most cruel manner.
+Laws have now been made to help protect the poor fur Seal from its
+merciless hunters. It lives in cold seas where its deep rich coat is a
+splendid protection. No finer fur is there for keeping out cold and wet;
+and the skilful furrier can make it into soft garments of great value.
+
+The habits of these Seals are strange indeed. For nine or ten months of
+the year they wander freely over the open seas. They dive for their
+food, and sleep calmly amidst the restless heaving of the ocean. This is
+the happy life of the Seal, though enemies--Sharks, Killer Whales or
+Grampuses--sometimes snap him up as he sleeps.
+
+Then, in the springtime, there comes a change. The Seals leave the open
+sea and take to the land. They go to their special breeding-places, or
+"rookeries," as they are called. The big "old man" Seals arrive first,
+and haul themselves on shore. Each chooses a spot for himself among the
+rocks. He then settles down to defend it; for more and more "old man"
+Seals come, all eager to own the best places. The roaring and fighting
+go on day and night. The gentle Seal is now a savage beast, covered with
+wounds.
+
+Then the soft-eyed female Seals come ashore. Now the thing is, for each
+big male Seal to claim as many lady Seals as he can. More fighting,
+roaring and tearing occur now, in which the lady Seals are banged about
+like footballs. The strongest "old man" drags the female Seal away in
+his teeth, and plumps her down in his special part of the beach. Along
+comes another big Seal to take her away, and the fight begins again.
+
+Meanwhile, the younger Seals keep out of the way. Strange to say, the
+fighting Seals take no food at all, though they are on the beach for
+several weeks. A few stones is all they eat, though at other times they
+devour numbers of fish at every meal.
+
+
+EXERCISES
+
+1. How could you tell the Sea-lion from the real Seal? 2. Where are the
+Seal "rookeries"? What happens there in the springtime? 3. Why is the
+Sea-elephant so named?
+
+
+
+LESSON IV
+
+SOME STRANGE NURSERIES
+
+As a rule, nests or nurseries are unknown in the world of fishes. They
+lay their eggs and leave them; and the young ones have to fight their
+own battles, in a sea full of fierce and hungry enemies. Indeed, it
+often happens that a parent fish is eager to make a meal of its own
+children!
+
+The Codfish lays about nine million eggs! You would hardly expect the
+female Codfish to make a nursery for such a family! She would be much
+worse off than the "old woman who lived in a shoe." As a matter of fact,
+the eggs are laid in the open sea; and the Cod shows no interest in
+them, but leaves them to become food for many a roving enemy.
+
+Those cousins of the Shark,--the Skate and the Dog-fish,--are more
+careful of their eggs. Have you ever found their empty eggs on the sea
+shore? Children call them "mermaids' purses." But they are more like
+little horny pillow-cases than purses.
+
+When first laid, the Dog-fish's egg has a very long string or _tendril_
+at each corner. As the fish lays the egg, she winds these tendrils round
+and round a sea-plant; thus the egg is fixed firmly until the young one
+is ready to escape from within (_see_ p. 49).
+
+The Skate's egg is much the same, only there is no tendril, but a curved
+hook at each corner. These hooks, of course, serve as anchors to hold
+the egg: no doubt they catch in weeds and stones. One fish, you see,
+ties her eggs with strings, the other uses anchors. These large "purse
+eggs" are like cradles, and the baby Skates do not slip out of them
+until they are quite ready to look after themselves in the ocean.
+
+There are fish in the sea which take great pains to save their eggs and
+babies from harm; they will even defend them at the risk of their own
+lives. Of course these careful parents do not have huge families, like
+the Cod. No; the fish that care for their young have small families, but
+the babies have a much better chance of living than the baby Cod. It is
+one of Nature's wise laws.
+
+Our common Stickleback--"Tiddler," or "Red-throat," as boys call
+him--builds a nest in ponds. He has a seaside cousin, the fifteen-spined
+Stickleback, who is also a nest-builder. This little fish is fairly
+common round our coasts, living in weedy pools by the shore, where it
+devours any small creature unlucky enough to come near. It is about six
+inches long, this sea Stickleback, with a long snout, and its body is
+very thin near the tail.
+
+To build his nest, this little fish chooses a quiet corner, then gathers
+pieces of green and purple seaweed. He takes the pieces in his mouth,
+pushing them about until the shape is to his liking. Having got his
+nursery to the right size and shape, the little builder next fastens it
+together. How can he do this? What mortar can he find in the sea? It is
+quite simple. He uses threads, which come from his own body. He swims
+round the nest, again and again; and, each time, a thread is spun,
+binding the clump of weed into a safe, tight nest for the eggs. When the
+task is done there is a weed-nursery about the size of your fist. Now
+all is ready for the eggs to be laid by the female Stickleback. You
+would expect them to be kept in a hole amid the nest, would you not?
+Instead of that, they are tucked a few here, a few there, in the weed.
+
+Then the father Stickleback mounts guard. Woe betide any small fish
+looking for a dinner of Stickleback eggs! The gallant little sentry will
+rush at him, with spines as stiff as fixed bayonets, ready to do battle
+to the death. When the young are hatched out he still keeps guard. They
+are not allowed out of the nursery for some time. The watchful parent
+forces them back if they try to wander out into the perils of the
+shore-pool.
+
+[Illustration: _Photo: A.F. Dauncey_. SKATE'S EGG CASE]
+
+Let us look at another nest-builder--the Sand Goby, or Spotted Goby, He
+is common enough in the pools at low tide, but not easy to find. You can
+look at him, yet not see him! For he takes the same colour as the rocks
+and sands of his home. Amid the glinting lights and shadows of his
+rock-pool, with a background of sand, rock, and weed, this little fish
+is nearly invisible. Of course it is a dodge, and a useful one, to
+escape the eye of the enemy!
+
+Perhaps you will not think the Spotted Goby so clever at nest-building
+as the Stickleback. He likes to use a "ready-made" house, whereas the
+Stickleback finds his own "bricks and mortar." In the pools of the shore
+there is no lack of houses to let, the empty homes of shell-fish are
+there in plenty. So the little Goby, when nesting time comes, hunts
+round for the empty shell of a Cockle lying with its hollow side to the
+sand.
+
+This shell is to be used as the roof for the nursery. The Goby's next
+task is to make a hole beneath the shell. He sets to work and, by
+scooping out the sand, makes a hole about as large as a marble. To keep
+the sand from tumbling in, he smears the hole with slime, which soon
+binds hard like mortar. Now the nursery is nearly ready; but a
+passage-way is made, passing under the edge of the shell, and then, to
+make things quite safe, the whole roof is covered with sand: it then
+looks more like a bump in the sand than a fish-nursery.
+
+The female Goby enters the nest, and leaves her eggs in it; and then the
+little father fish is left in charge. He rests on the sand, near the
+entrance. When the little ones appear, he seems to think he has done his
+duty. So away, he swims, not staying, like the father Stickleback, to
+guard the youngsters. Again we see that the father, and not the mother,
+is the builder and nurse.
+
+[Illustration: CORALS OF MANY KINDS.]
+
+That very strange creature, the Pipe-fish, has the most peculiar nursery
+of all. He uses no building material! No made-up nest of weed or sand
+for him! No, he prefers to carry his eggs in his pocket. To be more
+exact, there is a small pouch under his body, and there the eggs are
+kept until they hatch. Meanwhile, the Pipe-fish goes about his affairs
+in the pool as if nothing particular had happened. You will see more
+about this funny little fish when we come to our lesson on "The Fish of
+our Rock-pools."
+
+
+EXERCISES
+
+1. What are the eggs of the Skate and the Dog-fish like? 2. How does the
+Sea-stickleback build his nest? 3. Where would you find the Sand Goby,
+the Pipe-fish, and the Sea-stickleback? 4. How does the Sand Goby build
+its nest?
+
+
+
+LESSON V
+
+THE OGRE OF THE DEEP
+
+The ogre of the fairy-tale is bad enough, but, for evil looks, the
+Octopus is worse still. With his tough, brownish skin, knobbed like the
+toad's back, his large staring eyes, his parrot's beak, and ugly bag of
+a body, the Octopus is a horrid-looking creature. Add to this eight long
+arms twisting and writhing like snakes, and you have an idea of the most
+hideous inhabitant of the deep.
+
+Then, like the ogre, the Octopus lives in a cave, and goes forth at
+night to claim his victims. He tears them to pieces, and returns to his
+dark cavern when daylight comes.
+
+Before seeing how this ugly monster lives, eats, breathes and fights, we
+must know something of the way he is made. In the first place, it may
+surprise you to know that the Octopus's body is made on the same plan as
+that of the snail. The ogre of the ocean and the Garden Snail are second
+cousins! Their family name--_mollusc_--means _soft-bodied._
+
+But there are such numbers of molluscs that we split them up into
+different orders, just as a big school is split into classes. The
+Octopus belongs to an order of molluscs with a long name, which only
+means _head-footed._ Why is he called head-footed? The snail, as you
+know, has one broad foot under its body. The foot of the Octopus is
+divided into eight strips. These long strips are set round his head,
+hence the name head-footed. Because there are eight of these long feet
+he is named _octo-pus_ or eight-feet.
+
+The feet--or arms, or tentacles, as they are called--are joined at their
+base by a skin. It makes a sort of webbing. In the centre of this is a
+horny beak, usually of a brownish colour. It is just like a parrot's
+beak, only of thinner and lighter stuff. There are two parts to it, the
+top one curving down over the lower one. Behind this beaked mouth is a
+hard, rasping tongue. On each side of the head is a big, staring eye;
+and behind the ugly head is the ugly body, like a bag.
+
+The Octopus breathes by means of gills. Water enters through a big hole
+under the head, passes over the gills, and out again through a _funnel_,
+or _siphon_. Now the Octopus can make good use of this siphon. Sometimes
+he is attacked, and wishes to "make himself scarce." So he sends the
+water rapidly through the siphon; the force is enough to jerk him
+quickly backwards, his "arms" trailing behind.
+
+The Octopus and his relations have another dodge as well. They possess a
+bag of inky fluid. By mixing this ink with the spurt of water from the
+funnel, the Octopus leaves a thick cloud behind him. The enemy is lost
+in this dark cloud, while the Octopus darts safely away.
+
+[Illustration: THE OCTOPUS--A MONSTER OF THE DEEP]
+
+Having no armour to protect him, and no shelly home like that of the
+snail, the Octopus is an easy prey to large fish, Seals and Whales. So
+this trick of shooting backwards, hidden in a cloud of ink, must be of
+great use. Soldiers and sailors use clouds of smoke to baffle their
+enemy in battle. The Octopus uses clouds of ink.
+
+Sharks, Conger Eels, and Whales are able to fight the Octopus and eat
+his soft body; but small fish and Crabs keep away from the ogre if they
+can. This is not easy, for he hides away under rocks, watching with his
+great eyes for passing prey. If anything comes near enough, out flicks a
+long, tapering, snaky arm, and holds the victim tight.
+
+Down the inside of each arm are nearly three hundred round suckers. Each
+one acts like those leather suckers with which boys sometimes play. Once
+fixed, it is nearly impossible to unloose them, without chopping or
+tearing the arm to pieces. First one and then another sucker takes hold,
+and the wretched victim is drawn up to the ogre's beak, with no chance
+of escape.
+
+When one sees the grasping power of even a small Octopus, it is easy to
+believe that a large one would be a dangerous enemy. The strongest
+swimmer would stand no chance: those clinging arms could hold two or
+three men under water.
+
+[Illustration: WHALING.]
+
+Luckily, the Octopus has no wish to attack people. It is not fierce. But
+to the Crabs it must seem an awful ogre. I once watched an Octopus on
+the lookout for food. It had its lair between two rocks, its twining
+arms showing outside, its eyes and body in the shadow. Along came a
+Crab, scuttling near the rocks. He spied the ogre, at once stopping and
+raising his claws as Crabs do, like a boxer ready to fight. The Crab
+having strong pincers, and a good suit of armour, I expected to see him
+fight for life. But no! Like poor Bunny chased by the dreaded Stoat, the
+Crab gave in as soon as the ogre flicked him with an arm. The suckers
+gripped him fast and, still holding up his claws, he was drawn into the
+den of his dreadful enemy.
+
+Although armed with a beak, the Octopus seems not to use it against the
+Crab. He prefers to pull the poor Crab to pieces with his strong arms,
+and then to pick up the crab-meat with the hooked beak. When full-fed,
+he retires to his den; he sometimes pulls shells and stones over the
+entrance, and rests within until hungry.
+
+In this strange order of molluscs there are dwarfs and giants. One kind
+is never more than two inches long, others are vast monsters. The
+Octopus is big enough and ugly enough to make one shudder to see him,
+but the real ogre of the deep is the Giant Cuttle-fish, beside which the
+Octopus is a tiny mite.
+
+These Giant Cuttles have ten arms, two of them being very long. The
+Octopus's body is round, like that of a fat spider, while the Cuttle has
+a long body. The Cuttle has many sharp claws on its arms, besides
+numbers of big, strong suckers. It holds and tears its prey at the same
+time. Its staring eyes are like big black lanterns on each side of the
+head. The head twists this way and that, so that nothing escapes the
+glare of those horrible eyes.
+
+Lurking in the dark depths of the sea, these Giant Cuttles wait for
+large fish, Crabs, or even their own relations, to come near. Like
+hideous, gigantic Spiders, they are the terror of the ocean caverns.
+They are so large that they have few enemies to fear. Indeed, it is
+surprising that any animal dares to attack such a monster, but that
+other giant, the Sperm Whale, dives deep to the home of the Cuttles,
+purposely to attack and eat them.
+
+The Sperm Whale _must_ attack these big creatures in order to get enough
+food. He has such a huge, barn-like body to fill, that only these big
+Cuttles will satisfy him. Whale-hunters sometimes catch a glimpse of
+terrific combats between these giants of the deep. The Sperm wins the
+battle, for he is nearly always found to contain great pieces of the
+ogre's arms.
+
+Although the Octopus and the Cuttle are related to the Snail and Whelk,
+they have no shell. Their bodies are naked. Neither do they grow a
+backbone, or skeleton; but, inside the body, the Cuttle has a plate of
+chalk, which you may find on the shore. Some kinds have a long strip of
+transparent substance, like a large feather. Fishermen use the smaller
+kinds of Cuttle as bait. You will find it quite easy to cut out the
+"beaks" and "bone" for yourself, or the fishermen will not mind saving
+them for you.
+
+
+EXERCISES
+
+1. What is the meaning of the words "mollusc" and "octopus"? 2. How does
+the Octopus capture its prey? 3. How does the Octopus escape its
+enemies? 4. What creatures prey on the Cuttle and Octopus?
+
+
+
+LESSON VI
+
+THE WHALE
+
+Now and again Whales are washed up on our coasts, and then we can see
+how huge is this strange monster of the deep. It is by far the largest
+of all living animals. Once on the land it is quite helpless; it cannot
+regain its home in the waters, and slowly dies. It is shaped like a
+fish, and its home is in the sea, so no wonder it has often been called
+a fish.
+
+If by chance the Whale is held under water, it drowns. It has no gills,
+like those of the fish, to take air from the water; it is a mammal, a
+creature that must breathe the free air just as other mammals. Nature is
+full of surprises. And here she surprises us with a mammal most
+marvellously fitted to live a fish-like life.
+
+The Whale dives to great depths in search of food, and stays under water
+for a long time. But it is forced to rise again, and breathe at the
+surface. To do this, it need not put its head and mouth out of water,
+for its nostril is at the top of the head.
+
+As the Whale forces used-up air from its nostril--or "blow-hole," as it
+is called--it mixes with water; this causes a jet or spout of water to
+rise some distance into the air. The blow-hole is closed by a stopper or
+valve, opening to let the air in or out, but closing to shut out the
+water.
+
+Some of the Whale family are enormous, and some are small. A large Sperm
+Whale may grow to be ninety feet long, and its weight would be nearly
+two hundred tons! This huge creature would look like a deep barge in the
+water.
+
+These Sperm Whales love to swim in herds, or schools. As many as three
+hundred have been seen in one school, old "bulls" and "cows," and their
+young ones swimming together far out at sea. It has been noticed that
+they all spout, or breathe, at the same time, and then dive to great
+depths. The old ones seem to know that their babies cannot stay under
+water as long as a full-grown Whale can, and they all rise at the same
+time. These youngsters may be nearly thirty feet long; but they gambol
+like so many kittens, twisting and turning over and over, and throwing
+themselves into the air. Most Whales are happy creatures, enjoying their
+roving life in the free ocean.
+
+You can well imagine that a Whale as big as a barge needs huge dinners.
+We should not be far wrong if we guessed that he would need about a ton
+of food every day. Where is he to get all that food? It is said that he
+feeds mostly on the Cuttle-fish, that giant cousin of the Octopus, who
+haunts the dim caverns of the deep. The Sperm is of enormous strength,
+and is as fierce as he is strong. Otherwise he would not dare to face
+the awful, clinging arms of the Cuttle, that ogre of the deep sea.
+
+The Sperm Whale has a great, blunt head, a huge mouth, and a throat
+large enough to swallow a man. His clumsy-looking head contains oil, so
+does the deep layer of blubber with which his body is covered.
+
+For the sake of this oil, the Sperm has always been hunted. But he is
+not easily overcome. He fights hard for life; and many a whaling boat
+has been dashed to pieces with one blow from the powerful tail of a
+hunted Sperm.
+
+This great tail is set cross-wise, not upright like the tail of a fish.
+It is of immense power, and divided into two big "flukes," as they are
+called. With strong up-and-down strokes the tail propels the monster
+along at a great pace. It also shoots him down to his feeding place in
+the depths of the sea, and up again to fill his lungs with sweet fresh
+air. The fins, or paddles, are used only as balancers, and to protect
+the young.
+
+These Sperm Whales inhabit warm seas, but others of the Whale family
+haunt colder regions. The greatest of these is the Right Whale, or
+Greenland Whale, a monster whose bulk rivals that of the Sperm.
+
+Now it is very strange that this, the largest member of the whole
+kingdom of animals, should live on some of the smallest creatures of the
+sea, and that the mouth and throat of this monster should be so made
+that he can eat only this minute food, food like that which the tiny
+Herring eats.
+
+In some parts of those cold northern seas the water is coloured in bands
+of red and blue. If you took up a bucketful, you would find that the
+colour was due to myriads of tiny creatures. Amongst these are other
+myriads of small animals, each of less size than a house-fly. The larger
+ones are there to feed on the smaller ones. And that mass of small life
+is the food of this mountain of fat and flesh, the Greenland Whale.
+
+He swims through the sea with his mouth gaping open, like a great
+cavern, and soon thousands of the little creatures are inside. Then his
+tongue comes forward. It is of immense size, and it pushes out all the
+sea water from his mouth. But the small animals remain inside! For the
+water is forced through a wonderful sieve, made of fringed plates, which
+hangs from his upper jaw. Instead of having teeth in his mouth, as many
+Whales have, the Greenland Whale has this sieve of "whalebone." Of
+course it is a large sieve, to fill so large a mouth. Yet it is never in
+the way, being neatly packed away at the top of the mouth, one plate
+over the other, when not in use.
+
+The mass of small animals, held back by this peculiar sieve, then slides
+down his throat, which is a tube about as wide as a boy's wrist! We said
+just now that Nature was full of surprises. Is it not surprising to find
+a gigantic Whale feeding in this way! Inside the great mouth the
+_Remora_? or Sucking Fish, is often found. This fish has an oval sucker
+on its head, by which it fixes itself to Whales, or even to the hull of
+a ship. It has fins, and can swim perfectly well, but prefers to live in
+this lazy way.
+
+The Whalebone Whales lead a peaceful, happy life, though not without
+dangers. The bitter cold of their northern home is nothing to them, for
+are they not snug in a deep blanket of blubber? To obtain food, they
+merely swim along with open mouth. These peaceful giants do not know how
+to fight for their lives, like the Sperm Whales. So, when man came,
+hunting the Greenland Whale for oil and "whalebone," he found an easy
+victim.
+
+They have other enemies, besides man. The Killer Whale is one of the
+fiercest, swiftest terrors of the sea. It is tiny, compared with the
+Greenland Whale, but much quicker and more cunning. Several Killers band
+together and spring to the attack at the same time, Like wild cats, they
+dash at the poor helpless Whale, and tear its sides with terrible curved
+teeth.
+
+The Sword-fish and Thresher Shark also help to destroy this harmless
+giant of the deep. The Sword-fish pierces it with his pointed "beak";
+the other slashes the sides of the wretched Whale with its long tail. It
+is said, by those who have seen such a fight, that the Thresher's tail
+cuts deep into the Whale's sides.
+
+[Illustration: THE SUCKING FISH]
+
+In all parts of the wide sea there are Whales of one kind or another. We
+have looked briefly at the Sperm and Greenland Whales, and the Killer
+Whale. Besides these there is the Narwhal, or Sea-unicorn, with a
+wonderful tusk, which is really a big tooth, some six feet long. Another
+one, the Bottle-nose Whale, has a long, narrow "beak," and is sometimes
+washed up on our shores. The Pilot Whale is also seen in herds in our
+seas.
+
+Another visitor, the Rorqual, is not welcomed by the fishermen. This big
+fellow follows the shoals of Mackerel and Herring. He lives on them,
+swallowing as many at each gulp as would fill several big baskets. The
+fishermen can spare him the fish. But it is another matter when he swims
+through valuable nets, tearing through them as if they were so much
+cobweb.
+
+The commonest Whale of our seas is that small one, the Common Dolphin,
+who is a midget some five or six feet long. You may have seen Dolphins,
+for they swim near the surface, and may often be noticed not far from
+the shore. Like the Rorquals, they follow the Herring and Mackerel
+shoals. Now and again they dash into the nets, and are shown in the
+fish-market.
+
+
+EXERCISES
+
+1. Describe how the Whale breathes. 2. What food do the Sperm and
+Greenland Whales eat? 3. How does the Greenland Whale eat its food? 4,
+Give the names of five kinds of Whale.
+
+
+
+LESSON VII
+
+TIGERS OF THE SEA
+
+[Illustration: A CORAL REEF.]
+
+The monsters of the Shark family, fortunately for us, live in warm seas,
+and so are not often found near the shores of Great Britain. But our
+seas contain smaller Sharks of various kinds, and in greater number than
+most people imagine.
+
+Sharks are fierce hunters. Many a poor sailor or diver has been torn to
+pieces and devoured by these ravenous tigers of the deep. Some Sharks
+are of great size and immense power; they are by far the largest of all
+living fish; and no animal in the whole kingdom of animals owns such a
+terrible death-trap of a mouth as the Shark. It is, in some kinds of
+Shark, armed with seven rows of teeth with keen edges and points!
+
+Sometimes a Shark follows a steamer in the open sea, day after day,
+waiting for whatever may chance his way; and it is astonishing what
+strange objects he will swallow. These monsters are often caught on a
+hook baited with a lump of meat, and are hauled to the steamer's deck.
+One Shark was found to contain all the rubbish that had been pitched
+overboard; tin cans, a bundle of old coats, a piece of rope, old bones,
+and so on. What a fierce hunger must have driven the Shark to swallow
+such a meal as that!
+
+Before we look at some of these fierce creatures, whom everyone
+dislikes, we will say a word for them. Nature meant them to be
+_scavengers_, to clean up the sea. And this they do. Dead and decaying
+flesh is a danger, and the Shark, ever hungry, clears it away quickly.
+
+Now and again fishermen bring a big Shark to port, and hang him in the
+market--not for sale, but as a "show." The Blue Shark is the one most
+often displayed like this. See how his mouth is set, well under the
+head, as in all Sharks; and notice the shape of the body. It tells of
+speed and strength in the water; its pointed, tapering form reminds one
+of the racing yacht.
+
+[Illustration: THE WHITE RAY]
+
+What is this fierce fellow doing so near our coast? He is often found
+off Cornwall--too often, thinks the fisherman. This Shark comes to seek
+the same prey as the fisherman--the shoals of Mackerel and Pilchard (a
+cousin of the Herring). Where the shoals go, the Blue Shark follows. The
+silly Mackerel, all crowded together, have no chance to escape their
+awful foe. They are nearly as helpless as a flock of sheep with a tiger
+in their midst.
+
+[Illustration: THE ELECTRIC RAY]
+
+If the Shark comes across a mass of Mackerel or Pilchards in a net, he
+looks on them as a fine feast. Dashing at them, he tears the net to
+pieces, swallowing lumps of netting with great mouthfuls of fish. Small
+wonder the fisherman detests this savage visitor which causes him such
+serious loss of time and money. He naturally looks on Sharks as useless
+"vermin," to be destroyed whenever possible.
+
+[Illustration: _Photo: A. F. Dauncey_. DOG-FISH EGG CASE]
+
+The Fox Shark, or Thresher, is another fierce visitor to these shores.
+This savage hunter comes after the Herrings, Pilchards and Sprats. It is
+said to hunt these useful little fish in a strange way. As you know,
+they travel in shoals. The Thresher swims rapidly round and round them.
+Nearer and nearer it comes to the unlucky little fish, and they crowd
+together, huddling up in a helpless mass. The Thresher adds to their
+panic by _threshing_ the water with its terrible tail. And then, as you
+can well imagine, it dashes at them and devours an enormous meal. Half
+the length of the Thresher is tail. Not long ago there was landed at one
+of our fishing ports a Thresher Shark of half a ton, its tail being over
+ten feet in length. Even the great Whale has reason to fear the fierce
+lashings of that long, whip-like weapon!
+
+Our commonest Sharks are those small ones known as Dog-fish, which you
+can often see at any fish market. They are good to eat, though not used
+much as food. Though small in size, they are large in appetite and
+fierce in nature. Like savage dogs, they hunt in packs, waging war
+against the Whiting, Herring and other fish.
+
+[Illustration: THE SHARK]
+
+There are several kinds of these small Sharks, known as Spur-dog, Smooth
+Hound, Greater-spotted and Lesser-spotted Dog-fish, and Tope. And you
+will hear fishermen call them by such names as "Rig," "Robin Huss," and
+"Shovel-nose." Fisher-folk dislike Sharks, the Dog-fish among them. All
+those creatures, like the Cormorant, Seal, and Shark, which catch fish
+for breakfast, dinner and supper, are rivals of the fisherman. He often
+pulls up his line to find but a part of a fish on the hook--the rest was
+snatched by a "dog." At times his nets are torn by these nuisances, when
+they attack the "catch" of fish. Or his lines come up from the deep all
+tangled round and round a writhing Dog-fish, which had swallowed the
+baited hook.
+
+We come now to those flat Sharks, whose flesh you may have tasted. No
+Sharks are nice-looking, but these flat ones--the Skates or Rays--are
+really hideous, Many of them are of great size and strength, and armed
+with spines on their bodies (_see_ p. 52, No. 3) as well as teeth in
+their ugly jaws. They have broad, flat bodies, with wide "wings," and a
+long thin tail. The whole shape reminds you of a kite, and you would
+hardly know the Ray or Skate as the Shark's first cousin.
+
+Yet it is only a Shark with flattened body, and whose side fins are so
+large that they spread out like fleshy wings. The mouth is on the under
+part, as it is in all Sharks.
+
+[Illustration: FISHES (No.1).
+1. Blue Shark.
+2. Saw Fish.
+3. Starry Ray.
+4. Ox Ray.
+5. Plaice.
+6. Trunk Fish.
+7. Blue Striped Wrasse.
+8. Malted Gurnard.
+9. Muroena.]
+
+These flattened Sharks must be a terror to their neighbours. We shall
+see, in our next lesson, what strange weapons are used in the battles of
+the fish. The Rays or Skates have their share of spines, stings, and
+poisons. One glance at their shape tells you that speed is not their
+strong point. If they wish to eat fast-swimming fish--and they often
+do--they must use cunning.
+
+The Skate, being sandy-coloured and flat, is nearly invisible as it lies
+on the bed of the sea. There it lurks, waiting for the first unwary
+fish. A sudden spring, and its wide body smothers its unlucky victim.
+
+Skates also flap their way slowly over the ocean floor, looking for a
+dinner. They can eat shell-fish, and are fitted with teeth suited to the
+work of crushing such hard fare. But, as we have seen, they have also
+the Shark's love of eating other fish.
+
+These Skates are the only members of the Shark family that we value as
+food. You can see Skates of several kinds in the fish market. They go by
+such names as Thorn-back Ray, Blue Skate, Spotted Ray, Starry Ray,
+Cuckoo Ray, Long-nosed Skate and Sting Ray.
+
+
+EXERCISES
+
+1. Of what use are Sharks? 2. How does the Thresher Shark hunt its prey?
+3. Give the names of several Dogfish and Rays. 4. What is the food of
+the Skate, and how is it obtained?
+
+
+
+LESSON VIII
+
+THE DANGERS OF THE DEEP
+
+The "game" of hide-and-seek is played by most of the dwellers in the
+sea. Many of them are "hiders" and "seekers" by turn. That is to say,
+they are always seeking other creatures to devour, but must also be
+ready to hide from their own enemies.
+
+_Eating and being eaten_--that is the life of the sea. The small and
+weak ones must hide, and their lives depend on their skill in hiding.
+Perhaps we should not call it a "game," as it is not done for fun. But,
+though the sea is full of danger for some creatures, you must not think
+that they live in fear. There is no doubt that they enjoy their lives,
+each in its own way.
+
+Many are the quaint dodges and tricks of the hiders and seekers in the
+sea. We can mention but a few in this lesson. Look at the Spider Crabs,
+and their trick of dressing up. They have hooks on their backs, which
+catch in the seaweed. Some of them even tear off weed with their
+pincers, and fix it on to these hooks, and succeed in looking like
+bundles of weed, and not a bit like living Crabs.
+
+Then there are the fish which wear a coloured scaly coat. Many of them
+are not easily seen in the glinting water, as you know. Others are lazy;
+they lie on the bed of the sea, and wear a disguise which hides them
+from prowling foes. The Plaice and other flat-fish, as we noticed in
+Lesson 2, are coloured and marked like the sand and pebbles of their
+home; and they can even change colour to suit their background. They are
+wonderfully hidden, owing to this useful dodge. It is as if Mother
+Nature had given them the marvellous "cloak of invisibility," of which
+we read in fairy-tales.
+
+Shrimps and young Crabs wear a coat of sand-colour or weed-colour. Our
+soldiers, for much the same reason, wear suits of _khaki_.
+
+Another common hide-and-seek trick is to look like nothing at all. That
+sounds difficult, but it is a favourite dodge in the sea. If a number of
+very young Herrings or Eels were placed in a glass tank of sea-water,
+you would have a hard task to find them. You can look _at_ them, and yet
+not see them. They are transparent--you look through them as if they
+were water or glass. You can imagine how well hidden they are in the
+open sea.
+
+It is well to be able to hide, when all around you are enemies who look
+on you as good food. But there is another way, and that is to wear
+armour. Then you can frighten your enemy, or at least prevent him from
+eating you. Some fish, like the Trunk Fish, (p. 52, No. 6), are covered
+with bony plates, jointed together like armour. Spines and prickles are
+a commoner defence.
+
+The little Stickleback of our ponds wears sharp spines, and knows well
+how to use them. Even the terrible Pike will not swallow such a
+dangerous mouthful unless driven by hunger.
+
+Sea-fish are the most hunted of all living things. From the day they
+leave the egg, enemies lurk on all sides to gobble them up. The weak
+ones are eaten, and none of them has the chance to die of old age! So we
+find a defence of spines and prickles worn by many sea-fish. Spines on
+the fins are the commonest, and no doubt help to keep away enemies; but
+some fish go one better than that, and wear a complete suit of spines.
+
+The Porcupine-fish, as his name tells us, is one of these. He is a small
+fish, living in warm seas. No doubt he has many enemies, eager to meet
+him and eat him. But, when they see this little fish puff out his sides
+like a balloon, and when pointed spines rise up all over the balloon,
+they think better of it! They leave him alone; and the Porcupine-fish
+goes back to his usual shape, the spines lying flat until wanted again.
+He is sometimes called the Sea-hedgehog or Urchin-fish, and well
+deserves his name.
+
+Many of the Skates or Rays wear terrible spikes. The Starry Ray (p. 52,
+No. 7) is not easy to handle, dead or alive, for he has spines all over
+his body. The Thornback is another ugly fellow of this family, having
+spines on his back and a double row of them down his tail. Fishermen are
+careful to avoid the lash of this armed tail. The Sting Ray shows us
+still another weapon. At the end of its long tail it has a horrible,
+jagged three-inch spike. As this fish likes to bury itself in wet sand,
+bathers sometimes tread on it. In a flash the tail whips round! A
+poisonous slime covers the spike, causing great pain to the unlucky
+bather.
+
+Several poisonous fish are common near our coast. You may have seen the
+one called the Great Weaver, also its small cousin, the Sting Fish. The
+Weaver is dreaded by fishermen; for the spines on its back fin, as well
+as the one on its gill-cover, cause poisoned wounds. They are grooved,
+to hold a very poisonous slime.
+
+Some fish have the power to kill their prey, and stun their enemies, at
+a distance! Instead of a spiny defence, they are _armed with
+electricity!_ The best-known sea-fish of this sort is the Electric Ray,
+also called the Cramp Fish or Torpedo (_see_ p. 48). It is a clumsy fish
+about a yard long, and very ugly. Being too slow to catch its swift prey
+in fair chase, it stuns them with an electric shock, and then eats them.
+The electric power comes from the body of the Ray; if it wishes it can
+send a deadly shock through any fish which ventures near. Without chance
+of escape, it is at once stunned, and falls helpless.
+
+We come now to some formidable dangers of the deep--big strong fish, so
+well armed that they roam the seas without fear. On page 52 you see a
+picture (No. 2) of the Saw-fish, one of the Shark family. It is a large
+fish, and carries a big saw on its head, with which it stabs sideways at
+its prey.
+
+Imagine, if you can, a Shark about fifteen feet long and weighing a ton
+or so. Now suppose the top jaw of this monster to be drawn out into a
+hard, flat blade six feet in length. Then suppose there are sharp ivory
+teeth, one inch apart, fixed on each side the blade, and you have an
+idea of the Saw-fish. This strange Shark is said to be as strong as it
+is fierce. It kills its prey by tearing them open with side blows from
+its sharp, two-edged saw. Its big mouth is fitted with a great many rows
+of needle-like teeth.
+
+The Sword-fish wears a different weapon--a lance instead of a saw. He is
+not a Shark, but a cousin of the beautiful Mackerel. This warrior of the
+deep is more dreaded than the Saw-fish, and braver than any Shark. His
+speed in the water is marvellous; it makes him safe from attack. He
+carries in front of him a terrible weapon, and all sea-creatures hasten
+from his path as fast as they can.
+
+You may have seen the Sword-fish in a museum. There is a fine one in the
+London Natural History Museum, where there is also a "sword" from one of
+these fish, driven eighteen inches into the solid oak of a ship. The
+Sword-fish never thinks twice about attacking, no matter if his enemy is
+ten or twenty times as large as himself. He sees a Whale, and, like a
+flash, hurls himself at it, stabbing his sword as deep as it will go
+into the Whale's side. With a twist of his body the sword is wrenched
+free, only to be driven savagely in again.
+
+
+EXERCISES
+
+1. Mention three ways in which sea-creatures try to escape their
+enemies. 2. How do the Sting-fish and Sting Ray defend themselves? 3.
+What is the Saw-fish like? 4. How does the Sword-fish attack its prey?
+
+
+
+LESSON IX
+
+THE FISH OF OUR ROCK-POOLS
+
+The pools left by the falling tide have many an interesting thing to
+show us. There are living creatures in plenty, besides the pretty weeds,
+shells, and other objects. Shrimps, Prawns and Crabs abound in the
+rock-pools and shallows, with anemones and shellfish of all kinds. In
+the rock-pools we shall also find the interesting little fish whose
+story we glance at in this lesson. Of course there are baby flat-fish,
+and large fish too, along the shore. But these are only visitors. The
+real rock-pool fish are those which live their lives there.
+
+Some of them are tiny things, two or three inches long. With quick
+movements like Shrimps they dart away as you approach. They have a way
+of hiding under weeds and rocks, being very clever at "hide-and-seek,"
+and knowing all the dodges. But, by using a net, you will soon capture a
+few of them. Then you can put them in a small pool and examine them; or
+even keep them in an aquarium, giving them clean sea-water, seaweed, and
+the small shrimps on which they feed.
+
+[Illustration: PIPE-FISH AND FLUTE MOUTH]
+
+In our lesson on fish-nurseries we saw how the Sea-stickleback, Sand
+Goby and Pipe-fish cared for their eggs or young ones. These three fish
+are often to be found by the shore. As you look into the clear and still
+waters of a pool you may see a Pipe-fish getting its dinner. This funny
+creature looks more like a pencil swimming than a fish. It may be a foot
+in length, but its body is no thicker than a pipe-stem!
+
+[Illustration: FISHES (No. 2).
+1. John Dory.
+2. Rock Cod.
+3. Sand Eel.
+4. Small Pipe Fish.
+5. Cuckoo-Wrasse.
+6. Angler.
+7. Whiting.
+8. Gattorngine.
+9. Sapphirnal Gurnard.
+10. Three-bearded Rockling.
+11. Red Gurnard.
+12. Pipe Fish.
+13. Bass.
+14. Red Mullet.
+15. Turbot.]
+
+It has very long jaws. They are quite useless, however, being fastened
+together! At their tip is an opening, though a very small one, and that
+is the mouth of the Pipe-fish. Of course, with such a mouth, the fish
+cannot bite its prey, and so has to suck in small creatures and swallow
+them. Its method of hunting them is strange. It stands on its head, as
+it were, takes in a mouthful of water, and spurts it out at the sandy
+bed of the sea. This stirs up the small living things, which are at once
+swallowed by the Pipe-fish.
+
+We have already seen how the male Pipe-fish carries his eggs in his
+"pocket." Another curious thing is his suit of armour. Instead of
+scales, he has hard plates all over his body. Very often you may see
+young Pipe-fish among Sprats and "Whitebait" in the fishmonger's shop.
+
+Most of the little shore-fish are either Gobies or Blennies. No doubt
+they have to avoid the sharp eyes of Gulls and Cormorants, for they are
+very anxious not to be seen. Some of these rock-pool fish do not mind
+being out of water for hours at a time. In every way Nature has fitted
+them for their life between sea and shore. They have cousins in warmer
+seas which love to come ashore at times. This is how a traveller
+describes one of these foreign Gobies:--
+
+"Though they are fish, and breathe by gills, they have a passion for the
+land, and during the daytime may always be seen ashore, especially where
+the coast is muddy. They bask in the sun, and hunt for food, raising
+themselves on their fleshy fins.... When pursued, they take great
+springs, using their tails and fins for the purpose; and if they cannot
+escape into the sea, they will dive down the burrow of a land-crab, or
+dash into a bunch of mangrove-roots." They are very wary, having eyes
+like swivels, to turn in all directions.
+
+[Illustration: A BUTTERFLY BLENNY]
+
+The Spotted Goby, as we have already noticed, makes a nest under a
+shell, and guards it until the eggs hatch. Two other Gobies are quite
+common in the pools of our south coast--the One-spot Goby and the
+Two-spot Goby. The back fin has the one spot, or two spots, from which
+they get their name. Though they are such mites, they have sharp teeth,
+as you may already know if you have caught them with your fingers!
+
+These lively little fellows are not very easy to catch! They have a
+cunning way of hiding amid sand and rock, and are coloured to suit such
+places. One strange thing about the Gobies is their trick of anchoring
+themselves to a stone.
+
+You may wonder what kind of anchor they can use. It is a simple matter,
+however. The fins on the stomach are pressed together to form a little
+disc. This acts as a strong sucker, much like that of the Sucking Fish
+(p. 43). If the Goby wishes to stay still in one place, it presses its
+sucker to a stone; then it cannot be washed away by the ever-moving
+water.
+
+In the Blenny family we find big, ugly fish as well as pretty little
+ones of strange shapes and lovely colours. There are several kinds of
+small Blennies in our rock-pools. The Eyed Blenny, or Butterfly Blenny
+is not very common along our shores, but may be seen now and again. It
+is only a few inches in length, with eyes like jewels, a kind of tuft
+over each eye, and a pretty spot on its tall back fin.
+
+It will live quite well in a glass tank of sea-water; someone who kept
+many interesting fish says of this Blenny:--
+
+"Our little Butterfly Blenny was not often to be seen. It was using an
+old whelk shell for a nursery. In this broken old shell the dainty fish
+was able to hide, and was so nervous that we seldom saw it. But we
+placed some food near the hole in the shell, and were rewarded by the
+sight of the Butterfly's head, and its lovely eyes, each with a little
+movable tassel above it."
+
+[Illustration: A SMOOTH BLENNY]
+
+Hidden under weed and stones is another small brownish fish of the
+shore, the Gunnell or Butter-fish. You may turn it out of its snug
+hiding-place, but you will have a hard task to catch it, even in a small
+rock-pool, and, once caught, it slips through your fingers like an eel.
+Its body is eel-shaped, with a narrow fin on the back, and covered with
+a layer of slime. It well deserves the name of Butter-fish.
+
+The eggs of this strange little fish are rolled into a mass by the two
+parents. By curling their long, slimy bodies around the eggs, a
+closely-packed ball is the result. This precious ball of eggs is then
+taken care of, and guarded by the two fish. In this nursery both the
+father and mother fish take their share as guardians.
+
+
+EXERCISES
+
+1. Name three rock-pool fish. 2. Describe the Pipe-fish. 3. How does the
+Sand Goby anchor itself? 4. In what ways are these rock-pool fish so
+well fitted to live in such places?
+
+
+
+LESSON X
+
+SOME CURIOUS FISHES
+
+Now and again that queer fish called the Sea-horse is found by our
+coast; a little brown fish, with bluish-white spots and lines on the
+sides and tail. But Sea-horses are common in warmer seas, in the banks
+of seaweed where they love to dwell. You would never guess that these
+curious creatures were fish.
+
+The shape of the head, and the curved neck, remind you of a horse. It is
+also rather like the knight of the chess-board; or it may make you think
+of the dragon of the fable; but, really, the Sea-horse is like nothing
+on the earth, or in the waters. Nature has given it a special pattern of
+its own.
+
+Sea-horses use their twisty tails as monkeys do, clinging to the seaweed
+with them. They swim along slowly, in an upright position. Every now and
+then they seem to be falling forward on their noses, and pull themselves
+up again, only to begin falling a moment after. It is fun to see them
+play hide-and-seek among the weed in an aquarium. Some Sea-horses are
+like floating scraps of torn weed; this, of course, hides them from the
+eyes of enemies.
+
+[Illustration: SEA-HORSES]
+
+They have no teeth, but a long mouth like a pipe; so you can be sure
+they eat only the smallest sea-creatures. To add to his odd look, the
+Seahorse moves his eyes in a comic fashion. One eye may roll round and
+look at you, while the other gazes forward.
+
+As if this were not strange enough, he surprises us again. Mr. Sea-horse
+turns himself into a living nursery. He carries the eggs about with him,
+in a special pouch of skin! You will remember that the Pipe-fish also
+carries the eggs in his pocket, as it were. So you will not be surprised
+to hear that these two quaint fish belong to the same family.
+
+We will leave the funny little Sea-horse, and look at a very different
+fish--the Sunfish. This remarkable fish often reaches a good size; even
+near our coast big ones are caught now and again, and in warmer seas,
+where they are often killed for the sake of the oil they contain, big
+fellows of half a ton are quite common.
+
+This Sunfish has a peculiar shape. It looks as if it had once been an
+immense fish of the usual fish shape, but someone cut off the head and
+shoulders, and placed a short fin where the rest of the body had been.
+Above and below there is a long pointed fin. The mouth is very small,
+and has no real teeth; so the Sunfish lives on small prey, such as the
+young of other fish, or small shell-fish.
+
+Far away from land these strange Sunfish are met with, asleep near the
+surface, with the back fin showing above water. They roll along lazily,
+not unlike big cart-wheels. The top and bottom fins are for balancing
+and guiding the body, which is moved forward by the fin which frills the
+back part of this odd fish.
+
+[Illustration: GLOBE FISH]
+
+In the fishmonger's shop you may sometimes see that ugly monster of the
+deep, the Angler-fish, or Fishing-frog. Now and again he finds his way
+into the fishermen's nets; and is also caught on the lines, for he is so
+greedy that he will snap at a hooked fish. Rather than let go of his
+prey, he will be drawn to the surface. Then he is knocked on the head,
+and thrown into the boat with the other fish.
+
+Being slow and clumsy, the Angler-fish cannot chase his prey, so gets
+his dinner by fraud. Nature has given him a fishing line and a bait! He
+has long spines on his head, so beautifully joined to the bones of the
+head that they can wave to and fro very easily. At the tip of the front
+spine there is a loose, shining strip of skin--that is the bait. Now,
+all anglers know how a fish is lured by a shining bait. The Angler-fish
+seems to know this too. He buries himself in the wet mud and sand at the
+bottom of the sea. Then he waves the long spine, so that the shining tip
+glistens as it shakes in the water, until a fish swims up to see what it
+is all about. A sudden snap, and that inquisitive fish is inside a huge,
+toad-like mouth, well furnished with rows of sharp teeth. The
+Angler-fish puts his catch in his pocket, and begins fishing again, for
+he is never satisfied. His pocket is a loose bag of skin in the throat.
+This bag is always examined by fishermen who capture the Angler, for it
+may contain a nice big Plaice or Sole, worth money in the market.
+
+There are Angler-fishes in every ocean, and some live in the very
+deepest parts. In those black depths the little waving "bait" would not
+be seen. So it is made to shine, like a bluish spark moving to and fro
+over the cold black slime of the sea-bed.
+
+Down in those awful deeps it is for ever dark, and freezing cold, There
+is no day or night, summer or winter. No plants can live there. Yet in
+that strange, still world there are numbers of living things, though we
+know very little about them. There are weird Crabs, blind Lobsters, and
+fish terrors such as are never seen elsewhere.
+
+In that darkness you would think that eyes would be of no use, but some
+of the deep-sea fish have great black owl-like eyes. Others are quite
+blind, or have eyes like pin-points. Some of them make their own light,
+glowing with rows of little lamps on their bodies, each like the lamp of
+the glow-worm of our country lanes. Blue, red, and green these lights
+are, but no one can tell you their real use, or why they are so
+coloured. The blind fish feel their way with long feelers, stretched out
+like the threads of a web.
+
+[Illustration: THE FISHING FROG.]
+
+As there are no plants down there, these strange fish must live mostly
+on one another! And here is a puzzle, for some of them have great big
+bodies, but small heads and tiny mouths; others have bodies like
+ribbons, but large heads and huge mouths, and some are such gluttons
+that they swallow fish twice their own size! This sounds absurd, but it
+is true. Their mouths gape open like trap-doors, and their stomachs are
+made to stretch, to hold their huge meals! There are other terrors of
+the deep with such big teeth that they cannot shut their mouths. No
+doubt the sea holds yet other weird fish which no man has seen.
+
+
+EXERCISES
+
+1. In what ways is the Sea-horse so different from most other fish? 2.
+In what ways are the Sea-horse and Pipe-fish alike? 3. How does the
+Angler-fish catch its prey? 4. Mention a few strange facts about the
+deep-sea fish.
+
+
+
+LESSON XI
+
+THE GARDEN OF THE SEA
+
+For many centuries men were puzzled over those strange growths in the
+sea--Corals and Sponges. Were they to be classed as animals or as
+vegetables? It was by no means an easy question to answer.
+
+Corals, with their pretty colour, and their stems and branches growing
+up from the sea-bed, were said to be shrubs, but they were as hard as
+rock, said some people, so how could they be vegetables? The reply to
+this was, that the Coral became hard as soon as it reached the air.
+Then, of course, it was found that Coral was as hard under water as
+above it, and the question was still unanswered.
+
+Sponges, too, were thought to be sea-plants for many, many years; though
+some people even said that they must really be made of hardened
+sea-foam! The Sponge took its place in the vegetable kingdom, then it
+was moved to the animal kingdom, and back again.
+
+This went on for long years. Then, by careful watching, it was found
+that the Sponge is an animal. True, it is a very lowly member of the
+great kingdom of animals, yet it is one, and not a plant.
+
+Like all other animals, the Sponge animal must eat, and its way of doing
+so is rather strange. If you look at any ordinary washing-sponge, you
+notice a great many very small openings and some larger ones amongst
+them. It is through the smaller holes, or pores, that the Sponge gets
+its supply of food. When it is alive, and in its own home, there is a
+current of water always passing through its and the Sponge depends on
+the food which the water brings. Now, if you could watch this
+water-current, you would see that it rushes into some of the holes, and
+out of others; it has a certain path to follow. It enters the small
+pores, or openings, of the Sponge, and goes along narrow canals, and is
+then led into larger ones. Finally, it rushes out again through those
+large openings we noticed. We may compare it with traffic coming into a
+city by many narrow streets, then passing into broader roads, and at
+last out again by big main roads.
+
+[Illustration: CUPS AND SOLID SPONGES]
+
+[Illustration: _Photo: A. F. Dauncey_. SEA FURZE]
+
+How does the Sponge animal cause this current; and how is it made to
+follow a certain path?
+
+The narrow canals in the Sponge are lined with lashes, or tiny hairs, so
+very small that you can just see them through a microscope. Now the
+secret of the wonderful water-current is a secret no longer. As long as
+the Sponge lives, these little lashes are always moving, always lashing
+the water along in one direction. They cause it to follow its proper
+course, through and through the Sponge, and out again into the sea. On
+its way it loses the tiny scraps of food which it contains, and carries
+away any waste stuff out of the Sponge.
+
+You will have noticed that there are various kinds of Sponges in the
+market; some are large and flat, others small and cup-shaped; some are
+soft, and others rather hard. They are all somewhat horny and elastic.
+This "spongy" material is the skeleton of the Sponge animal, cleaned and
+dried for your use. Some kinds of Sponge would tear your skin if you
+tried to use them, for they have a hard skeleton. It is made of lime,
+and sometimes of flint, which the Sponge obtains from its food. Of
+course we use only those sponge-skeletons which are soft; but the
+cheaper kinds do often contain little flinty needles.
+
+The best washing-sponges live in warm seas, attached to the rocks on the
+sea-bed. Divers go down and obtain them; or else they are dredged up,
+cleaned, dried, and sorted, and then sent to the market. Some Sponges,
+called Slime Sponges, have no skeleton, being merely a living mass of
+slime.
+
+Coral is also the hard skeleton of a little animal, known as the Coral
+Polyp. The rest of the polyp's body is soft jelly, which many fish
+regard as good food. The Sea Anemone--another jelly-animal--is first
+cousin to the Coral Polyp. And we may call the Jellyfish second cousin
+to these two, for it is in the same big division of the animal kingdom.
+
+The pretty red Coral, then, is really the hard part of a little
+jelly-animal. This animal is much like a Sea-anemone, with a hard
+skeleton of lime. Coral, as you know, looks like a solid rock; it is
+really made of needles of lime, fastened together into a solid mass by
+the little Coral Polyp.
+
+Now, many of the Coral animals have the strange habit of budding. The
+buds become perfect polyps, and then they, too, begin to bud. In this
+way, those marvellous _coral-reefs_ and _coral-islands_ have been made.
+Branch by branch, layer by layer, the hard Coral is built up by myriads
+of the small, soft-bodied creatures. This kind of polyp can live only in
+warm, clear water. So it is not found in the cold depths of the sea, nor
+in the seas near our islands, but in the warm shallow waters near
+tropical lands it flourishes so well that it builds up most wonderful
+Coral walls. So strong are they that they can defy the terrific force of
+the waves.
+
+[Illustration: THE PICTURE STORY OF A CORAL ISLAND.]
+
+Some coral-reefs are of immense size and strength. One, near the coast
+of Australia, is nearly a thousand miles in length. These marvellous
+works of the polyp are of great use, for they break the force of the
+waves, and so make a calm shelter for vessels.
+
+The brilliant masses of Coral make a world of colour in the clear seas
+of the tropics, a gay garden inhabited by fishes of gaudy hues. In dull
+seas we have, as a rule, dull creatures to match. And in bright, warm,
+sunny seas the fishes are also brightly coloured. A dull fish would show
+up amid such rich colours, so it is easy to know why Coral fish wear
+such fine clothes.
+
+Many of them spend all their time among the Coral, their food being the
+living tips of the Coral "branches," which they nip off with fine, sharp
+teeth. Others have teeth like millstones, fit for crushing the hard
+Coral, and eating the fleshy body of the polyp within.
+
+Blue, red and yellow, striped and spotted, and of wonderful shapes, are
+the fish which swim in these coloured gardens of the sea. Some of them
+have golden bands round their bodies, and fine spines which wave in the
+water like shreds of weed--all to help them hide in the bright, sunlit
+groves of Coral.
+
+Gorgeous Sea-anemones of all shapes and sizes add to the brightness; and
+even the Shrimps, Prawns, and Crabs are coloured to fit their
+background. Crabs are always surprising us with their queer ways and
+quaint "dresses"; and here, among the Coral, it is the same story. For
+there are Crabs whose shelly coats are covered with coloured knobs and
+spikes, so that the sharpest eye cannot pick them out from the Corals on
+which they rest.
+
+
+EXERCISES
+
+1. How does the Sponge obtain its food? 2. What is Coral? 3. How are
+Coral-reefs formed? 4. Why are there no Coral-reefs in our seas?
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Within the Deep, by R. Cadwallader Smith
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