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<h3>Chapter Thirteen.</h3>
<h4>The Sucking-Fish.</h4>
<p>The fish that had thus singularly fallen into their hands was, as Ben had stated, the sucking-fish, <i>Echeneis remora</i>,—one of the most curious creatures that inhabit the sea. Not so much from any peculiarity in appearance as from the singularity of its habits.</p>
<p>Its appearance, however, is sufficiently singular; and looking upon it, one might consider the creature as being well adapted for keeping company with the ferocious tyrant of the deep, on whom it constantly attends.</p>
<p>Its body is black and smooth, its head of a hideous form, and its fins short and broadly spread. The mouth is very large, with the lower jaw protruding far beyond the upper, and it is this that gives to it the cast of feature, if we may be permitted to speak of “features” in a fish.</p>
<p>Both lips and jaws are amply provided with teeth; and the throat, palate, and tongue are set profusely with short spines. The eyes are dark, and set high up. The “sucker” or buckler upon the top of its head consists of a number of bony plates, set side by side, so as to form an oval disc, and armed along the edges with little tentacles, or teeth, as the boy William had observed.</p>
<p>His companion’s account of the creature was perfectly correct, so far as it went; but there are many other points in its “history” quite as curious as those which the sailor had communicated.</p>
<p>The fish has neither swim-bladder nor sound; and as, moreover, its fins are of the feeblest kind, it is probably on this account that it has been gifted with the power of adhering to other floating bodies, by way of compensation for the above-named deficiencies. The slow and prowling movements of the white shark, render it particularly eligible for the purposes of the sucking-fish, either as a resting-place or a means of conveyance from place to place; and it is well-known that the shark is usually attended by several of these singular satellites. Other floating objects, however, are used by the sucking-fish,—such as pieces of timber, the keel of a ship; and it even rests itself against the sides of submerged rocks, as the sailor had stated. It also adheres to whales, turtles, and the larger kinds of albacore.</p>
<p>Its food consists of shrimps, marine insects, fragments of molluscous animals, and the like; but it obtains no nutriment through the sucking-apparatus, nor does it in any way injure the animal to which it adheres. It only makes use of the sucker at intervals; at other times, swimming around the object it attends, and looking out for prey of its own choice, and on its own account. While swimming it propels itself by rapid lateral movements of the tail, executed awkwardly and with a tortuous motion.</p>
<p>It is itself preyed upon by other fish,—diodons and albacores; but the shark is merciful to it, as to the pilot-fish, and never interferes with it.</p>
<p>Sucking-fish are occasionally seen of a pure white colour associating with the black ones, and also attending upon the shark. They are supposed to be merely varieties or <i>albinos</i>.</p>
<p>When sharks are hooked and drawn on board a ship, the sucking-fishes that have been swimming around them will remain for days, and even weeks, following the vessel throughout all her courses. They can then be taken by a hook and line, baited with a piece of flesh; and they will seize the bait when let down in the stillest water. In order to secure them, however, it is necessary, after they have been hooked, to jerk them quickly out of the water; else they will swim rapidly to the side of the ship, and fix their sucker so firmly against the wood, as to defy every attempt to dislodge them.</p>
<p>There are two well-known species of sucking-fish,—the common one described, and another of larger size, found in the Pacific, the <i>Echeneis australis</i>. The latter is a better shaped fish than its congener, can swim more rapidly, and is altogether of a more active habit.</p>
<p>Perhaps the most interesting fact in the history of the <i>Echeneis</i> is its being the same fish as that known to the Spanish navigators as the <i>remora</i>, and which was found by Columbus in possession of the natives of Cuba and Jamaica, <i>tamed, and trained to the catching of turtles</i>!</p>
<p>Their mode of using it was by attaching a cord of palm sennit to a ring already fastened round the tail, at the smallest part between the ventral and caudal fins. It was then allowed to swim out into the sea; while the other end of the cord was tied to a tree, or made fast to a rock upon the beach. The <i>remora</i> being thus set—just as one would set a baited hook—was left free to follow its own inclinations,—which usually were to fasten its sucking-plates against the shell of one of the great sea-turtles,—so famed at aldermanic feasts and prized by modern <i>gourmets</i>, and equally relished by the ancient Cuban <i>caciques</i>.</p>
<p>At intervals, the turtle-catcher would look to his line; and when the extra strain upon it proved that the <i>remora</i> was <i>en rapport</i> with a turtle, he would haul in, until the huge <i>chelonian</i> was brought within striking distance of his heavy club; and thus would the capture be effected.</p>
<p>Turtles of many hundreds’ weight could be taken in this way; for the pull upon the <i>remora</i> being towards the tail,—and therefore in a backward direction,—the sucking-fish could not be detached, unless by the most violent straining.</p>
<p>It is a fact of extreme singularity, that a similar method of capturing turtles is practised on the coast of Mozambique at the present day, and by a people who never could have had any communication with the aborigines of the West Indian Islands, much less have learnt from them this curious craft of angling with a fish!</p>
<p>A smaller species of the sucking-fish is found in the Mediterranean,—the <i>Echeneis remora</i>. It was well-known to the ancient writers; though, like most creatures gifted with any peculiarity, it was oftener the subject of fabulous romance than real history. It was supposed to have the power of arresting the progress of a ship, by attaching itself to the keel and pulling in a contrary direction! A still more ridiculous virtue was attributed to it: in the belief that, if any criminal in dread of justice could only succeed in inducing the judge to partake of a portion of its flesh, he would be able to obtain a long delay before the judge could pronounce the verdict of his condemnation!</p>
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