Sea monsters are the stuff of legend
- lurking not just in the depths of the oceans, but also the darker
corners of our minds. What is it that draws us to these creatures, asks
Mary Colwell.
"This inhuman place makes human monsters," wrote
Stephen King in his novel The Shining. Many academics agree that
monsters lurk in the deepest recesses, they prowl through our ancestral
minds appearing in the half-light, under the bed - or at the bottom of
the sea.
"They don't really exist, but they play a huge role in
our mindscapes, in our dreams, stories, nightmares, myths and so on,"
says Matthias Classen, assistant professor of literature and media at
Aarhus University in Denmark, who studies monsters in literature.
"Monsters say something about human psychology, not the world."
One
Norse legend talks of the Kraken, a deep sea creature that was the
curse of fishermen. If sailors found a place with many fish, most likely
it was the monster that was driving them to the surface. If it saw the
ship it would pluck the hapless sailors from the boat and drag them to a
watery grave.
This terrifying legend occupied the mind and pen of the poet Alfred
Lord Tennyson too. In his short 1830 poem The Kraken he wrote: "Below
the thunders of the upper deep, / Far far beneath in the abysmal sea, /
His ancient, dreamless, uninvaded sleep / The Kraken sleepeth."
The
deeper we travel into the ocean, the deeper we delve into our own
psyche. And when we can go no further - there lurks the Kraken.
Most
likely the Kraken is based on a real creature - the giant squid. The
huge mollusc takes pride of place as the personification of the terrors
of the deep sea. Sailors would have encountered it at the surface,
dying, and probably thrashing about. It would have made a weird sight,
"about the most alien thing you can imagine," says Edith Widder, CEO at
the Ocean Research and Conservation Association.
"It has eight
lashing arms and two slashing tentacles growing straight out of its head
and it's got serrated suckers that can latch on to the slimiest of prey
and it's got a parrot beak that can rip flesh. It's got an eye the
size of your head, it's got a jet propulsion system and three hearts
that pump blue blood."
Natural Histories is a new series about our relationships with the natural world
Listen to Giant Squid on BBC Radio 4 on Tuesday 23 June at 11:00 BST or online after broadcast
The
giant squid continued to dominate stories of sea monsters with the
famous 1870 novel, Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, by Jules
Verne. Verne's submarine fantasy is a classic story of puny man against a
gigantic squid.
The monster needed no embellishment - this
creature was scary enough, and Verne incorporated as much fact as
possible into the story, says Emily Alder from Edinburgh Napier
University. "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and another
contemporaneous book, Victor Hugo's Toilers of the Sea, both tried to
represent the giant squid as they might have been actual zoological
animals, much more taking the squid as a biological creature than a
mythical creature." It was a given that the squid was vicious and would
readily attack humans given the chance.
That myth wasn't busted until 2012, when Edith Widder and her colleagues were the first people to successfully film giant squid under water
and see first-hand the true character of the monster of the deep. They
realised previous attempts to film squid had failed because the bright
lights and noisy thrusters on submersibles had frightened them away.
By
quietening down the engines and using bioluminescence to attract it,
they managed to see this most extraordinary animal in its natural
habitat. It serenely glided into view, its body rippled with metallic
colours of bronze and silver. Its huge, intelligent eye watched the
submarine warily as it delicately picked at the bait with its beak. It
was balletic and mesmeric. It could not have been further from the
gnashing, human-destroying creature of myth and literature. In reality
this is a gentle giant that is easily scared and pecks at its food.
Another
giant squid lies peacefully in the Natural History Museum in London, in
the Spirit Room, where it is preserved in a huge glass case. In 2004 it
was caught in a fishing net off the Falkland Islands and died at the
surface. The crew immediately froze its body and it was sent to be
preserved in the museum by the Curator of Molluscs, Jon Ablett. It is
called Archie, an affectionate short version of its Latin name
Architeuthis dux. It is the largest preserved specimen in the world.
"It really has brought science to life for many people," says Ablett.
"Sometimes I feel a bit overshadowed by Archie, most of my work is on
slugs and snails but unfortunately most people don't want to talk about
that!"
And so today we can watch Archie's graceful relative on
film and stare Archie herself (she is a female) eye-to-eye in a museum.
But have we finally slain the monster of the deep? Now we know there is
nothing to be afraid of, can the Kraken finally be laid to rest?
Probably not says Classen. "We humans are afraid of the strangest
things. They don't need to be realistic. There's no indication that
enlightenment and scientific progress has banished the monsters from the
shadows of our imaginations. We will continue to be afraid of very
strange things, including probably sea monsters."
Indeed we are.
The Kraken made a fearsome appearance in the blockbuster series Pirates
of the Caribbean. It forced Captain Jack Sparrow to face his demons in a
terrifying face-to-face encounter. Pirates needed the monstrous Kraken,
nothing else would do. Or, as the German film director Werner Herzog
put it, "What would an ocean be without a monster lurking in the dark?
It would be like sleep without dreams."
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