Underwater, by Elizabeth Kay
The sheer beauty of the underwater world is amazing |
I taught myself to read in secret whilst sitting on the lavatory. The girl next door was six months older than me, and started school six months earlier. She lorded it over me, saying she could read but I wouldn’t be able to until I went to school, so I felt I wasn’t allowed to tackle books yet although I really wanted to. I would struggle through a sentence of Brer Rabbit until it made sense, and then the next time I locked myself away in the only room in which that was permitted I would read my practised sentence, and then struggle through the next one. Consequently, I could read before I went to school but I kept it very quiet. The very first book that I couldn’t stop reading was The Deep Sea Horse, by Primrose Cumming. I don’t know how old I was, probably about six or seven, but I remember my mother saying “Put that book down now Elizabeth, it’s tea time”, and my father (noticing how engrossed I was) shaking his head at her and waving a finger. He was Polish, and therefore regarded education as far more important than my English mother, and I was left to read in peace.
Claud, a horse that ends up in
the sea, has many adventures underwater and I was completely entranced by this
undiscovered world. I learned a great deal about the creatures of the deep, and
as I was an animal-obsessed child I never forgot about any of them, which may
well have contributed towards my love of snorkelling later on. Claud first
encounters a shoal of small fishes, and when he speaks to them they disappeared
like so many flickers of light, then darted back again… I encountered two
such shoals off the coast of Indonesia, one electric blue and one electric
green. All the descriptions and the characters in the story were really good –
Cod, the Giant Octopus, the conger-eel… and Swordfish.
He was a long, racily built
fish, and his upper lip was drawn out into a slim, bony beak almost half as long again as himself…
“No need for alarm,” said the stranger. “My name is Swordfish, and my weapon is
entirely at your service.”
A few years later I became
equally obsessed with the Chronicles of Narnia, and The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
was my favourite. Lucy is watching The Sea People from the deck of the ship,
and suddenly they notice the hull of the boat above them and decide to investigate.
They’re bad news, and they approach the ship until they’re very close.
…their bodies were the colour
of old ivory, their hair dark purple. The King in the centre (no one could
mistake him for anything but the King) looked proudly and fiercely into Lucy’s
face and shook a spear in his hand. His knights did the same.
I moved on to science fiction in
my teens, when H.G.Wells and Isaac Asimov were accessible at the library – and
Jules Verne. And so, in 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (not twenty
thousand leagues deep, which would have been impossible, but twenty thousand
leagues in distance travelled) I moved onto more adult and scientific
descriptions of this other world.
…Japanese mackerel from the genus Scomber with blue bodies and silver heads, glittering azure goldfish whose name by itself gives their full description, several varieties of porgy or gilthead (some banded gilthead with fins variously blue and yellow, some with horizontal heraldic bars and enhanced by a black strip around their caudal area, some with colour zones and elegantly corseted in their six waistbands, trumpetfish with flutelike beaks that looked like genuine seafaring woodcocks and were sometimes a meter long, Japanese salamanders, serpentine moray eels from the genus Echidna that were six feet long with sharp little eyes and a huge mouth bristling with teeth.
After that, Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle’s Lost World became my favourite book, despite not having any
underwater scenes. It was the idea of undiscovered places, where anything
could happen, that fascinated me. And although I have travelled widely now,
there are not many places that haven’t been documented and frequently ruined by
man.
However, just a few metres from any beach there can be a landscape unmapped and unique. I have been down in a submarine three times, and the best by far was the Red Sea, where a diver went in and fed the fish. The water was incredibly clear, and I saw colourful wrasses, clownfish, parrotfish, even a lionfish. I now have an underwater camera, and although my photography isn’t very good I can nonetheless look back at some of my own adventures and marvel at them. The octopus I met off the Cornish coast, who was as intrigued by me as I was by him (or her).
Brown and prickly |
Cephalopods are surprisingly intelligent. I was swimming (Indonesia again) and a small part of the sea floor, covered with coral and plantlife, seemed to move. Eventually I realised it was a cuttlefish, changing its colour to match the substrate. After a bit I swam on, having the time of my life. And then I turned round and there it was, just hanging there watching me with real curiosity, newly camouflaged against the surface of the water above.
All stripey now |
I have yet to write an underwater
scene myself, as the breathing issue is a hard one to overcome unless you use
magic, or scary technology. I suppose I could always write something from the
point of view of a clownfish… oh hang on, that’s been done…
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