There was a little sea fish of good family, the name of which
I don't remember; that the more learned will have to tell you.
This little fish had eighteen hundred brothers and sisters,
all the same age; they didn't know their father or mother,
so they had to care for themselves and swim about on their
own, but that was a lot of fun. They had plenty of water to
drink - the entire ocean. They didn't think about their food;
that was sure to come their way. Each did as he pleased; each
would have his own story, but then none of them thought about
that.
The sun shone down into the water, making it light and clear.
It was a world full of the strangest creatures, some of them
enormously big, with great, horrible mouths that could sallow
all the eighteen hundred brothers and sisters, but none of
them thought about that, either, for none of them had ever
been swallowed.
The little ones swam together, close to one another, as the
herring and the mackerel swim. As they were swimming along
at their best and thinking of nothing in particular, there
sank from above, down into the midst of them, with a terrifying
noise, a long, heavy thing which seemed to have no end to it;
further and further it stretched out, and every one of the
small fish that it struck was crushed or got a crack from which
he couldn't recover. All the fishes, the small and the big
as well, were thrown into a panic. That heavy, horrible thing
sank deeper and deeper and grew longer and longer, extending
for miles - through the entire ocean. Fishes and snails, everything
that swims, everything that creeps or is driven by the currents,
saw this fearful thing, this enormous unknown sea eel that
all of a sudden had come from above.
What kind of thing was it? Yes, we know! It was the great
telegraph cable that people were laying between Europe and
America.
There were great fear and commotion among all the rightful
inhabitants of the ocean where the cable was laid. The flying
fish shot up above the surface as high as he could, and the
blowfish sped off like a gunshot across the water, for it can
do that; other fishes went to the bottom of the ocean with
such haste that they reached it long before the telegraph cable
was seen down there, and they scared both the codfish and the
flounder, who lived peacefully at the bottom of the ocean and
ate their neighbors. A couple of the starfish were so frightened
that they turned their stomachs inside out, but in spite of
that they lived, for they can do that. Many of the lobsters
and crabs got out of their fine shells and had to leave their
legs behind.
In all this fright and confusion, the eighteen hundred brothers
and sisters had all become separated, never again to know or
even meet each other, excepting ten of them who had remained
at the same place; and after these had held themselves still
for a couple of hours, they recovered from their first fright
and began to be curious. They looked about; they looked up
and they looked down, and there in the deep they thought they
saw the frightful thing that had scared them, scared everyone,
big and little. There it lay along the bottom of the ocean,
extending as far as they could see; it was quite thin, but
then they didn't know how thick it could make itself or how
strong it was. It lay very quiet, but that, they thought, could
be a trick.
"Let it lie where it is! It doesn't concern us," said the
most cautious of the little fish.
But the very smallest one of them insisted on gaining some
knowledge as to what that thing might be. It had come down
from above, so above one could best find out about it.
And so they swam up to the surface, where there was calm weather.
There they met a dolphin, which is a sort of jumping jack,
an ocean rover, that can turn somersaults in the water. As
these have eyes to see with, he must have seen what had happened
and should know all about it. They inquired, but the dolphin
had only been thinking of himself and his somersaults, had
seen nothing, and didn't know what to answer, so he kept quiet
and looked proud.
Thereupon they turned to the seal who had just ducked down;
he was more polite, although seals eat small fishes, for today
he had had his fill. He knew a little more than the dolphin.
"Many a night I have rested on a wet rock and looked far inland,
miles away from here; there live some sneaky creatures who,
in their language, are called people; they plot against us,
but often we slip away from them, which I know how to do, and
that is what the sea eel has done, too. He has been in their
power, up there on the earth, for a long, long time, and from
there they carried him off on a ship, to bring him across the
ocean to a distant land. I saw what trouble they had, but they
could manage him, because he had become weak on the earth.
They laid him down in coils and circles; I heard how he 'ringled'
and 'rangled' when they put him down, but still he got away
from them. They held on to him with all their might; many hands
held fast, but still he slipped away from them and reached
the bottom; there he lies now, for a while at least, I think."
"He is rather thin!" said all the little fish.
"They have starved him," said the seal, "but he will soon
be himself again, fat and big around. I suppose he is the great
sea serpent that people are so afraid of and talk so much about.
I had never seen him before and never believed he existed,
but now I do; I'm sure he's the sea serpent!" And with that
the seal dove down.
"How much he knew! How much he talked!" said all the little
fish. "We have never been so enlightened before! If only it
isn't all a lie!"
"We could swim down and investigate," said the smallest fish. "On
the way, we can hear what others think about it."
"We're not going to move a fin to find out anything more!" said
the others, and swam away.
"But I'm going to," said the smallest, and plunged down into
deep water.
But the little fish was a considerable distance from the place
where "that long sunken thing" lay. He looked and searched
in a direction down in the deep water. Never before had he
imagined the world to be so big. The herring swam in great
masses, each school of them shining like a mighty boat of silver;
the mackerel also swam together and looked even more magnificent.
There were fishes of all shapes and with markings in all colours.
Jellyfish, like half-transparent flowers, simply lay back and
let the currents carry them along. Great plants grew up from
the bottom of the ocean, as did fathom-high grass and palm-shaped
trees, every leaf beset with shining shellfish.
At last the little fish saw a long, dark streak way down and
swam toward it; but it was neither fish nor cable; it was the
gunwale of a large sunken vessel, the upper and lower decks
of which had been broken in two by the force of the ocean.
The little fish swam inside, where the many people who had
perished with the sinking of the ship had since been washed
away, except for two - young woman lay stretched out with a
little child in her arms. The water rocked them to and fro,
and they seemed to be asleep. The little fish became quite
frightened, for he didn't know that they never again could
awaken. Seaweed hung like cultivated foliage over the rail
above the fair forms of mother and child. It was so quiet there,
so lonely. The little fish hurried away as fast as he could,
out to where the water was clearer and there were fishes to
see. He hadn't gone far when he met a young and terribly large
whale.
"Don't swallow me!" said the little fish. "I'm so small that
I'm not even a tiny bite, and it's a great pleasure for me
to live!"
"What do you want way down here, where your kind never comes?" asked
the whale.
So the little fish told of the strange long eel, or whatever
that thing was, which had sunk and scared even the most courageous
of ocean creatures.
"Ho, ho!" said the whale, and drew in such a lot of water
that he had to make an enormous waterspout when he came to
the surface for a breath. "Ho, ho!" he said, "so that was the
thing that tickled my back when I turned around! I thought
it was a ship's mast that I could use for a backscratcher!
However, it wasn't in this location; no, that thing is much
farther out. I'll investigate it, though; I have nothing else
to do."
And so he swam forth, the little fish following, but not too
close, for there would be a powerful stream where the big whale
shot through the water.
They met a shark and an old sawfish. These two had also heard
of the strange sea eel that was so long and thin; they hadn't
seen it, but they wanted to.
Then a catfish appeared. "I'm coming with you!" he said, and
took the same course. "If the great sea serpent isn't thicker
than a cable, then I'll bite it in two with one bite!" And
he opened his mouth and showed his six rows of teeth. "I
can bite dents in a ship's anchor, so I can easily bite through
that stem!"
"There it is!" said the big whale. "I can see it!" He thought
he saw better than the others. "See how it rises, see how it
sways, bends, and curves!"
However, this was not the sea serpent, but an exceptionally
large eel, who was many yards long, and came closer.
"I've seen him before," said the sawfish. "He's never made
much fuss in the ocean here or frightened any big fishes."
And so they talked to him about the new eel and asked if he
wanted to join them on their voyage of discovery.
"If that eel is longer than I," said the sea eel, "then something
unfortunate will happen."
"That it will!" said the others. "There are enough of us not
to have to tolerate it." And then they hurried along.
But now, directly in their way, there appeared a strange monster,
bigger than them all. It looked like a floating island that
could not hold itself up. It was a very old whale. His head
was overgrown with seaweed, his back beset with barnacles and
so many oysters and mussels that his black skin was entirely
covered with white spots.
"Come along, old fellow," they said. "A new fish has come
that we will not tolerate!"
"I'd rather lie where I am," said the old whale. "Leave me
in peace. Let me lie. Oh, my, oh, my! I suffer from a dreadful
sickness. The only relief I have is when I go up to the surface
and get my back above it; then the big, nice birds come and
pick at me, and that feels so good, as long they don't drive
their beaks in too far; often they go right into my blubber.
Just see for yourself! There is a complete skeleton of a bird
stuck in my back. That bird struck his claws in too deep and
couldn't get loose when I went down to the bottom. Now the
little fishes have eaten him. Just see how he looks, and how
I look! I have a sickness!"
"That's just imagination!" said the other whale. "I am never
sick. No fish is sick!"
"I beg your pardon!" said the old whale. "The eel has a skin
disease, the carp has smallpox, and all of us have intestinal
worms!"
"Nonsense!" said the shark, and didn't care to hear more;
nor did the others; they had something else to do.
Finally, they came to the place where the telegraph cable
lay. It had a very long resting place indeed at the bottom
of the ocean, from Europe to America, over sandbanks and sea
mud, rocky formations and sea-plant wilderness, and, yes, entire
forests of coral. The currents down there change, and whirlpools
twist around; fishes crowd each other and swim in flocks greater
than the countless multitudes of birds that people see when
birds of passage are in flight. There are a commotion, a splashing,
a humming, and a rushing; a little of that rushing still remains
to haunt the big, empty conch shells when we hold them to our
ears.
Yes, now they came to the place.
"There lies the animal!" said the big fishes, and the little
one said so, too.
They saw the cable, its beginning and end beyond their horizon.
Sponges, polyps, and seaweed swayed from the ground, rising
and falling over the cable, so that now it was hidden and then
visible again. Sea porcupines, snails, and worms moved over
it. Gigantic spiders, with whole fringes of vermin on them,
crawled along the cable. Dark-blue "sea sausages," or whatever
the creatures are called that eat with their entire bodies,
lay beside it and smelled this new animal that had come down
to lie at the bottom of the ocean. Flounders and codfish turned
about in the water, in order to hear what was said from all
sides. The starfish, who could hold himself down in the mud
and keep his eyes outside, lay and stared to see what would
come of all this confusion. The telegraph cable lay motionless.
But life and thought were in it; human thoughts went through
it.
"That thing is cunning," said the whale. "It's able to hit
me in the stomach, and that's my weak point!"
"Let's feel our way," said a polyp. "I have long arms; I have
limber fingers. I have touched it. Now I'll feel it a little
more firmly." And then he stretched his longest and most flexible
arms down to the cable and around it. "It has no scales!" said
the polyp. "It has no skin! I don't believe it will ever bear
young ones!"
The sea eel laid down alongside the telegraph cable and stretched
himself as far as he could. "That thing is longer than I am!" he
said. "But it isn't length that counts; one must have skin,
stomach, and flexibility! The whale - that is, the young, strong
whale - dove down deeper than he ever had been. "Are you a
fish or a plant?" he asked the cable. "Or are you only some
piece of work from above that can't thrive down here among
us?"
But the telegraph cable didn't answer; it had no means of
contacting anyone at such a location. Thoughts were going through
it, people's thoughts, which in a single second were heard
from land to land, many hundreds of miles apart.
"Will you answer, or do you want to be broken?" asked the
fierce shark, and all the other big fishes asked the same. "Will
you answer, or do you want to be broken?"
The cable didn't move, but it had its own private thoughts,
which it had a right to have, considering that it was filled
with other's thoughts. "Let them break me; then I'll be hauled
up and put in order again - that has happened to others of
my kind who were in shallower waters." And so it didn't answer;
it had something else to do; it telegraphed and thereby did
its just duty at the bottom of the sea.
Up above, the sun was going down, as people say. It blazed
like the reddest fire, and all the clouds in the heavens glowed
with a fiery hue, each more magnificent than the other.
"Now we're getting the red lighting," said the polyps, "and
we may be able to see the thing better, if necessary."
"At it! At it!" shouted the shark, showing all his teeth.
"At it! At it!" said the swordfish, and the whale, and the
sea eel. They rushed forward, the shark leading, but just as
he was about to bite the cable, the swordfish, out of pure
anxiety, ran his saw right into the back of the shark; that
was a great mistake, and the shark had no strength left to
bite. Everything became muddled in the mud. Big fishes, little
fishes, "sea sausages," and snails ran into one another,
ate each other - clashed and gnashed. The cable lay still and
attended to its own business, as one should do.
The dark night brooded above; but in the ocean the millions
and millions of small living creatures lighted it. Crawfish,
not even as big as a pinhead, gave out light. It is quite wondrous,
but now that's the way it is.
The ocean creatures looked at the telegraph cable. "What is
that thing, and what isn't it?" Yes, that was the question.
Presently an old sea cow appeared. People call these mermaids
or mermen. This one was a she, and had a tail and two short
arms to splash with; she wore seaweed and parasites over her
breasts and head, and she was proud of this.
"Are you seeking knowledge and wisdom?" she said. "I am the
only one who can give you this; but in return I demand that
you guarantee safe pasturage on the bottom of the ocean for
me and mine. I am a fish like you are, but I am also a crawling
animal, through practice. I am the wisest in the ocean; I know
about everything that moves down here and about all that goes
on up above. That thing you are pondering over is from above,
and whatever falls down from up there is dead, or will be dead,
and powerless; let it lie there for what it is. It's only a
man-made invention.
"I believe there is more to it than that!" said the little
fish.
"Hold your tongue, mackerel!" said the big sea cow.
"Stickleback!" said the others, and that was even more insulting.
And the sea cow explained further to them that this alarming
thing, which, as a matter of fact, hadn't uttered a single
sound, was in its entirety nothing more than some new device
from the dry land, and she delivered a little lecture about
people's deceitfulness. "They want to catch us," she said; "that's
all they live for. They stretch out nets for us, and come with
bait on hooks to tempt us. That thing there is some sort of
big string that they think we are going to bite. They are so
stupid! But we are not! Don't touch that junk; in time it will
unravel and all turn to dust and mud. Everything that comes
from up there cracks and breaks - is good for nothing!"
"Good for nothing!" said the other ocean creatures, and held
onto the sea cow's opinion, so as to have an opinion.
The little fish, however, had his own thoughts. "Perhaps that
enormously long, thin serpent is the most wonderful fish in
the ocean. I have a feeling it is."
"The most wonderful," say we humans, too, and we say it with
knowledge and assurance.
The great sea serpent has long been the theme of song and
story. It was conceived and born by man's ingenuity and laid
on the bottom of the ocean, stretching from the eastern to
the western lands, and carrying messages as swiftly as light
flashes from the sun to our earth. It grows, grows in power
and length, grows year after year, through all oceans, around
the world; it is beneath the stormy seas and the glass-clear
waters, where the skipper, as if sailing through transparent
air, looks down and sees crowds of fishes resembling many -coloured
fireworks.
Deepest down of all lies the outstretched serpent, a blessed
Midgard snake, which bites its own tail as it encircles the
earth. Fishes and other sea creatures clash with it; they do
not understand that thing from above. People's thoughts rush
noiselessly, in all languages, through the serpent of science,
for both good and evil; the most wondrous of the ocean's wonders
is our time's.
THE END