The
Great Sea-Serpent
By Hans Christian Andersen
(1872)
There was a little fish, a salt-water fish
of good family: I don’t recall the name you
will have to get that from the learned
people. This little fish had eighteen
hundred brothers and sisters all just as old
as he; they did not know their father and
mother, and were obliged to look out for
themselves at the very beginning, and swim
round, but that was great sport. They had
water enough to drink, the entire ocean;
they thought nothing about their food, it
came when they wanted it. Each did as it
pleased, each was to make out its own story,
rather none of them thought at all about
that. The sun shone down on the water that
was light about them, so clear was it. It
was a world with the strangest creatures,
and some very horrid and big, with great
gaping mouths that could gulp down all the
eighteen hundred brothers and sisters, but
neither did they think of that, for none of
them as yet had been swallowed. The small
ones swam side by side close together, as
herrings and mackerel swim. But as they were
swimming their prettiest in the water and
thinking of nothing, there sank with
prodigious noise, from above, right down
through them, a long heavy thing that looked
as if it never would come to an end; it
stretched out farther and farther, and every
one of the little fishes that scampered off
was either crushed or got a crack that it
could not stand. All the little fishes, and
the great ones with them, from the level of
the sea to the bottom, were thrown into a
panic. The great horrid thing sank deeper
and deeper, and grew longer and longer,
miles and miles long. The fishes and snails,
everything that swims, or creeps, or is
driven by the current, saw this fearful
thing, this enormous incomprehensible
sea-eel which had come down upon them in
this fashion.
What was the thing, anyway? ah, we know; it
was the great interminable telegraph cable
that people were laying between Europe and
America.
There was a confusion and commotion amongst
all the rightful occupants of the sea where
the cable was laid. The flying fishes shot
up above the surface as high as they could
fling themselves; the blow-fish took a leap
an entire gunshot in length over the water,
for it can do that; the other fish made for
the bottom of the sea, and went down with
such haste that they reached it long before
the telegraph was seen or known about down
there; they poured in on the cod and
flounders that lived peaceably at the bottom
of the sea and ate their neighbors. One or
two of the sea-anemones were so agitated
that they threw up their stomachs, but they
lived after it just the same, for they can
do that. A good many lobsters and crabs got
out of their excellent shells, and were
obliged to wait for their bones to grow back
again.
In all this fright and confusion, the
eighteen hundred brethren and sisters became
separated, and never agan met, or ever knew
each other after that; only some ten of them
remain ed still in the same place, and so in
a few hours they got over the first fright
and began to be curious about the affair.
They looked about them, they looked up and
they looked down, and down in the depths
they fancied they saw the fearful thing that
had scared them—yes, had scared all, great
and small, lying on the bottom of the sea,
as far as their eyes could reach; it was
quite thin, but they did not know how thick
it might be able to make itself, or how
strong it was; it lay very quiet, but then
that might be a part of its cunning, they
thought.
“Let it lie; it does not come near us!” said
the most cautious of the little fishes; but
the smallest one of all would not give up
trying to find out what the thing could be.
It had come down from above, so it was up
above that one could best find out about it.
So they swam up to the surface. It was
perfectly still. They met a dolphin there.
The dolphin is a sprightly fellow that can
turn somersaults on the water, and it has
eyes to see with, so iht must have seen this
and known all about it. They asked him, but
he had only been thinking about himself and
his somersaults, he’d seen nothing, had no
answer for them, and only looked high and
mighty.
Then they turned to the seal, which was just
plunging in; it was more civil, for all that
it eats small fish; but to-day it had had
enough. It knew little more than the dolphin.
“Many a night have I lain upon a wet stone
and looked far into the country, miles away
from here; there are crafty creatures called
in their speech men-folk. They plot against
us, but usually we slip away from them; that
I know well, and the sea-eel too, that you
are asking about, he knows it. He has been
under their sway, up there on the earth,
time out of mind, and it was from there that
they were carrying him off on a ship to a
distant land. I saw what a trouble they had,
Shut they could manage him, because he had
become weak on the earth. They laid him in
coils and circles. I heard how he ringled
and rangled when they laid him down and when
he slipped away from them out here. They
held on to him with all their might—ever so
many hands had hold of him, but he kept
slipping away from them down to the bottom;
there he is lying now—till further notice, I
rather think.”
“He is quite thin,” said the small fishes.
“They have starved him,” said the seal, “but
he will soon come to himself, and get his
old size and corpulence again. I suppose he
is the great sea-serpent that men are so
afraid of and talk so much about. I never
saw him before, and never believed in a
sea-serpent; now I do. I believe he is the
sea-serpent,” and with that down went the
seal.
“How much he knew! how he talked!” said the
small fishes; “I never was so wise before;
if it only isn’t all an untruth.”
“We can, anyway, swim down and see for
ourselves,” said the littlest fish; “on the
way we can hear what the others think about
it.”
“I wouldn’t make a stroke with my fins to
get at something to know,” said the others,
and turned away.
“But I would !“ said the littlest fellow,
and put off down into deep water; but it was
a good distance from the place where “the
long thing that sank” lay. The little fish
looked and hunted on all sides down in tne
deep water. Never before had it imagined the
world to be so big. The herrings went in
great shoals, shining like a mighty ribbon
of silver; the mackerel followed after, and
looked even finer. There were fishes there
of all fashions and marked with every
possible color: jelly-fish, like
half-transparent flowers, borne along by the
currents. Great plants grew up from the
floor of the ocean; grass, fathoms long, and
palm-like trees, every leaf tenanted by
shining shell-fish.
At last the little fish spied a long dark
streak away down, and made his way toward
it, but it was neither fish nor cable: it
was the gunwale of a sunken vessel, which
above and below the deck was broken in two
by the force of the sea. The little fish
swam into the cabin, where the people who
perished when the vessel sank were all
washed away, except two: a young woman lay
there stretched out, with her little child
in her arms. They seemed to be sleeping. The
little fish was quite frightened, for it did
not know that they never again could waken.
Sea-weed hung like a net-work of foliage
over the gun- wale above the two beautiful
bodies of mother and babe. it was so quiet,
so solitary: the little fish scampered away
as fast as it could, out where the water was
bright and clear, and there were fishes to
see. It had not gone far before it met a
whale, fearfully big.
“Don’t swallow me!” cried the little fish;
“I am not even to be tasted, I am so small.
and it is a great comfort to me to live.”
“What are you doing away down here, where
your kind never come?” asked the whale.
So then the little fish told about the
astonishingly long eel, or whatever the
thing was, that had sunk down from above and
produced such a panic amongst all the other
creatures in the sea.
“Ho, ho!” said the whale, and he drew in
such a rush of water that he was ready to
make a prodigious spout when he came to the
surface for a breath. “Ho, ho! so that was
the thing that tickled me on the back when I
was turning round. I thought it was a ship’s
mast, that I could break up into
clothes-pins. But it was not here that it
was; no, a good deal farther out lies the
thing. I’ll go with you and look for it, for
I have nothing else to do;” and so it swam
off, and the little fish behind it, not too
near, because there was a tearing stream, as
it were, in the wake of the whale.
They met a shark and an old saw-fish; they,
too, had heard of the famous sea-eel, so
long and so thin; they had not seen it, but
now they would.
“I’ll go with you,” said the shark, who was
on the same road; “if the great sea-serpent
is no thicker than a cable, then I can bite
through it in one bite,” and he opened his
mouth and showed his six rows of teeth—” I
can bite dents in a ship’s anchor, and
certainly can bite off the shank.”
“There it is!” said the great whale ; “I see
him.” He thought he saw better than the
others. “See how it rises, how it bends and
bows and curves!”
But it was not the sea-serpent, but an
extraordinarily great eel, ever so many ells
long, that drew near.
“Why, I have seen him before!” said the
saw-fish. “He never has made a hullabaloo in
the sea or frightened any big fish out of
his wits.” And so they talked to him of the
new eel, and asked him if he would go with
them on their voyage of discovery.
“If that eel is longer than I am,” said the
sea-eel, “there will be something
disagreeable happening.”
“Ay, that there will,” said the others;
“there are enough of us not to tolerate him!”
and so they shot ahead. But then there came
right in their way a great monster, bigger
than all of them put together; it looked
like a floating island, that could not stop
itself. It was a venerable whale. Its head
was grown over with sea-weed, its back
covered with barnacles, and such innumerable
oysters and mussels, that its black skin was
altogether whitened.
“Come with us, old fellow!” said they. “Here
is a new fish come, and we won’t stand it.”
“I would rather lie where I am lying,” said
the whale. “Leave me alone; leave me alone.
O ah, 0 ah! I suffer from a dreadful disease!
My only relief is to get up toward the
surface and get my back up higher; then the
great sea-fowl can come and pick at me. That
feels so good! only when they do not drive
their beaks in too far; sometimes they go in
too deep, quite into my blubber. You can see
now how a complete skeleton of a fowl is
fixed in my back; she struck her claws in
too deep, and could not get them out when I
went down to the bottom. And now the little
fishes have picked at her. See how she
looks, and how I look. I am all diseased!”
“That is all imagination!” said the shark.
“I am never sick. No fish is ever sick.”
“Pardon me,” said the whale. “The eel
suffers from headache, the carp has the
smallpox, and we all have intestinal worms.”
“Nonsense!” said the shark, and refused to
hear any further, and the others also would
rather not; they had something else to
attend to.
At last they came to the place where the
telegraph cable lay. It has a pretty long
bed on the floor of the sea from Europe to
America, over sand-banks and sea-mud, rocky
ground and weedy places, entire forests of
coral. The currents down there, too, change,
whirlpools eddy, and fishes swarm in greater
masses than the countless flocks of birds
that men see when birds of passage take
their flight. There is a stir, a splashing
there, a humming and rushing; the rushing
still haunts a little the great empty
conch-shells when we hold them to our ears.
“There lies the fellow!” cried all the great
fishes and the little one with them. They
saw the cable, the beginning and end of
which vanished beyond the reach of their
eyes. Sponges and polyps swayed from the
ground, rose and fell over it, so that now
it was hidden, now came to view.
Sea-porcupines, snails, and worms moved over
it. Gigantic crabs, that had a complete
fringe of creeping things, stalked about it.
Dark sea-anemones, or whatever the creature
is called that eats with its entire body,
lay beside it and smelled of the new
creature that had stretched itself on the
bottom of the sea. Flounders and codfish
turned over in the water so as to get an
idea about it from all sides. The star-fish,
that always bores down into the mud and can
keep its eyes outside, lay and stared to see
what was to come of all this bustle.
The telegraph cable lay without stirring,
but life and thought were in it. Human
thought went through it. “The thing is
crafty,” said the whale; “it is able to
strike me in the stomach, and that is my
weak point.”
“Let us grope along,” said the polyps. “I
have long arms and limber fingers; I have
been moving by the side of it; now I’ll go a
little faster,” and so it stretched its most
flexible, longest arms down to the cable and
round about it. “It has no scales!” said the
polyps; “it has no skin at all. I do believe
it never feeds its own young.”
The sea-eel laid itself by the side of the
telegraph cable and stretched out as far as
it could. “The thing is longer than I am,”
it said; “but it is not length that does
anything; one must have skin, stomach, and
flexibility.”
The whale dove down deeper than it ever had
been. “Art thou fish or art thou plant?” it
asked, “or art thou only some piece of work
made up above that cannot thrive down here
amongst us?”
The telegraph cable did not answer; it has
no power for that. Yet thoughts go through
it, men’s thoughts, that rush in one second
miles upon miles from land to land.
“Will you answer, or will you take a crack?”
asked the fierce shark, and all the other
great fishes asked the same thing.
The cable did not stir, but it had its
private thought, and such a one it had a
right to have when it was full of thoughts.
“Let them only give me a crack! then I shall
be hauled up and be myself again; that has
happened to others of my race in shallower
waters.” So it gave no answer; it had
something else to attend to; it telegraphed
and lay in its lawful place at the bottom of
the ocean.
Up above, the sun now went down, as men say.
It became like flaming fire, and all the
clouds glowed with fiery color, each more
splendid than the other. “Now we shall get
the red light,” said the polyps, “and can
see the thing better, if need be.”
“At it! at it!” shouted the shark. “At it!
at it!” said the sword-fish and the whale
and the eel. They rushed forward, the shark
foremost. But just as it was about to grip
the wire, the sword-fish, out of pure
politeness, ran his saw right into the back
of the shark. It was a great mistake, and
the shark lost all his strength for biting.
There was a hubbub down in the mud. Great
fishes and small, sea-anemones and snails
rushed at one another, ate each other,
mashed and squeezed in. The cable lay
quietly and attended to its affairs, and
that one ought to do.
The dark night brooded over them, but the
ocean s millions upon millions of living
creatures lighted it; craw-fish, not so big
as a pin-head, gave out light. Some were so
small that it took a thousand to make one
pin-head, and yet they gave light. It
certainly is wonderful, but that’s the way
it is.
These sea creatures looked at the telegraph
wire. “What is that thing?” they asked, “and
what isn’t it?” Ay, that was the question.
Then there came an old sea-cow. Folks on the
earth call its kind a mermaid, or else a
merman. This was a she, had a tail and two
short arms to splash with, hanging breasts,
and sea-weed and sponges on her head, and
that was what she was proud of.
“Will you have the society of intelligent
people?” said she. “I’m the only one down
here that can give it. But I ask in return
for it perfectly secure pasturage on the
bottom of the sea for me and mine. I am a
fish, as you see, and I am also an
amphibious animal—with practice. I am the
wisest cow in the sea. I know about
everything that goes on down here, and all
that goes on above. That thing you are
pondering over is from above, and whatever
plumps down from up there is either dead or
comes to be dead and powerless; let it lie
there for what it is; it’s only some
invention of man.”
“Now I think there is something more to it,”
said the little fish.
“Hold your tongue, mackerel !” said the
great sea-cow.
“Stickleback!” said the rest, and that was
even more insulting.
And the sea-cow explained to them that this
terrible thing, which, to be sure, had not
given out a single mutter, was only some
invention from the dry land. And it
delivered a little oration upon the
rottenness of men.
“They want to get hold of us.” said she.
“That’s all they live for. They stretch nets
for us, and come with bait on a hook to
catch us. That thing there is some kind of
big string which they think we are going to
bite at. They are such stupids! We are not.
Only do not touch it, and it will shrivel up
and all turn to dust and mud. Everything
that comes down from up there is full of
cracks and breaks—it’s good for nothing.”
“Good for nothing!” said all the creatures
in the sea, and held fast to the sea-cow’s
opinion, so as to have an opinion. The
little fish had its own thoughts. “That
exceedingly long, thin serpent is perhaps
the most wonderful fish in the ocean. I have
a feeling it is.”
“The very most wonderful,” say we human
folks, and say it with knowledge and
assurance. It is the great sea-serpent, long
ago the theme of song and story. It was born
and nourished and sprang forth from men’s
cunning and was laid upon the bottom of the
sea, stretching from the Eastern to the
Western land, bearing messages, quick as
light flashes to our earth. It grows in
might and in length, grows year by year
through all seas, round the world, beneath
the stormy waves and the lucid waters, where
the skipper looks down as if he sailed
through the transparent air, and sees the
swarming fish, brilliant fireworks of color.
Down, far down, stretches the serpent,
Midgard’s snake, that bites its own tail as
it encircles the earth. Fish and shell beat
upon it with their heads—they understand not
the thing—it is from above. Men’s thoughts
in all languages course through it
noiselessly. “The serpent of science for
good and evil, Midgard’s snake, the most
wonderful of all the ocean’s wonders, our
Great Sea-Serpent !”
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