<SPAN name="l10"></SPAN>
<h4>LESSON X</h4>
<h3>SOME CURIOUS FISHES</h3>
<p>Now and again that queer fish called the Sea-horse
is found by our coast; a little brown fish, with bluish-white
spots and lines on the sides and tail. But
Sea-horses are common in warmer seas, in the banks
of seaweed where they love to dwell. You would
never guess that these curious creatures were fish.</p>
<p>The shape of the head, and the curved neck,
remind you of a horse. It is also rather like the
knight of the chess-board; or it may make you think
of the dragon of the fable; but, really, the Sea-horse
is like nothing on the earth, or in the waters. Nature
has given it a special pattern of its own.</p>
<p>Sea-horses use their twisty tails as monkeys do,
clinging to the seaweed with them. They swim along
slowly, in an upright position. Every now and then
they seem to be falling forward on their noses, and
pull themselves up again, only to begin falling a
moment after. It is fun to see them play hide-and-seek
among the weed in an aquarium. Some Sea-horses
are like floating scraps of torn weed; this, of course,
hides them from the eyes of enemies.</p>
<p><SPAN href="images/img19L.jpg">
<ANTIMG align="right" alt="[Illustration: SEA-HORSES]" src="images/img19.jpg"></SPAN>
They have no teeth, but a long mouth like a
pipe; so you can be sure they eat only the smallest
sea-creatures. To add to his odd look, the Seahorse
moves his eyes in a comic fashion. One
eye may roll round and look at you, while the other
gazes forward.</p>
<p>As if this were not strange enough, he surprises
us again. Mr. Sea-horse turns himself into a living
nursery. He carries the eggs about with him, in a
special pouch of skin! You will remember that the
Pipe-fish also carries the eggs in his pocket, as it were.
So you will not be surprised to hear that these two
quaint fish belong to the same family.</p>
<p>We will leave the funny little Sea-horse, and look at
a very different fish--the Sunfish. This remarkable
fish often reaches a good size; even near our coast
big ones are caught now and again, and in warmer
seas, where they are often killed for the sake of the
oil they contain, big fellows of half a ton are quite
common.</p>
<p>This Sunfish has a peculiar shape. It looks as if
it had once been an immense fish of the usual fish
shape, but someone cut off the head and shoulders,
and placed a short fin where the rest of the body had
been. Above and below there is a long pointed fin.
The mouth is very small, and has no real teeth;
so the Sunfish lives on small prey, such as the young
of other fish, or small shell-fish.</p>
<p>Far away from land these strange Sunfish are
met with, asleep near the surface, with the back fin
showing above water. They roll along lazily,
not unlike big cart-wheels. The top and bottom
fins are for balancing and guiding the body, which
is moved forward by the fin which frills the
back part of this odd fish.</p>
<p><SPAN href="images/img20L.jpg">
<ANTIMG align="left" alt="[Illustration: GLOBE FISH]" src="images/img20.jpg"></SPAN>
In the fishmonger's shop you may sometimes
see that ugly monster of the deep, the
Angler-fish, or Fishing-frog. Now and again
he finds his way into the fishermen's nets;
and is also caught on the lines, for he is so
greedy that he will snap at a hooked fish. Rather
than let go of his prey, he will be drawn to the surface.
Then he is knocked on the head, and thrown into the
boat with the other fish.</p>
<p>Being slow and clumsy, the Angler-fish cannot
chase his prey, so gets his dinner by fraud. Nature
has given him a fishing line and a bait! He has long
spines on his head, so beautifully joined to the bones
of the head that they can wave to and fro very easily.
At the tip of the front spine there is a loose, shining
strip of skin--that is the bait. Now, all anglers
know how a fish is lured by a shining bait. The
Angler-fish seems to know this too. He buries himself
in the wet mud and sand at the bottom of the sea.
Then he waves the long spine, so that the shining
tip glistens as it shakes in the water, until a fish swims
up to see what it is all about. A sudden snap, and
that inquisitive fish is inside a huge, toad-like mouth,
well furnished with rows of sharp teeth. The Angler-fish
puts his catch in his pocket, and begins fishing
again, for he is never satisfied. His pocket is a loose
bag of skin in the throat. This bag is always examined
by fishermen who capture the Angler, for it
may contain a nice big Plaice or Sole, worth money
in the market.</p>
<p>There are Angler-fishes in every ocean, and some
live in the very deepest parts. In those black depths
the little waving "bait" would not be seen. So it
is made to shine, like a bluish spark moving to and
fro over the cold black slime of the sea-bed.</p>
<p>Down in those awful deeps it is for ever dark, and
freezing cold, There is no day or night, summer or
winter. No plants can live there. Yet in that
strange, still world there are numbers of living things,
though we know very little about them. There are
weird Crabs, blind Lobsters, and fish terrors such as
are never seen elsewhere.</p>
<p>In that darkness you would think that eyes would
be of no use, but some of the deep-sea fish have
great black owl-like eyes. Others are quite blind,
or have eyes like pin-points. Some of them make their
own light, glowing with rows of little lamps on their
bodies, each like the lamp of the glow-worm of our
country lanes. Blue, red, and green these lights are,
but no one can tell you their real use, or why they are
so coloured. The blind fish feel their way with long
feelers, stretched out like the threads of a web.</p>
<center><SPAN href="images/img21L.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="[Illustration: THE FISHING FROG.]" src="images/img21.jpg"></SPAN></center>
<p>As there are no plants down there, these strange
fish must live mostly on one another! And here is
a puzzle, for some of them have great big bodies,
but small heads and tiny mouths; others have bodies
like ribbons, but large heads and huge mouths,
and some are such gluttons that they swallow fish
twice their own size! This sounds absurd, but it is
true. Their mouths gape open like trap-doors, and
their stomachs are made to stretch, to hold their huge
meals! There are other terrors of the deep with such
big teeth that they cannot shut their mouths. No
doubt the sea holds yet other weird fish which no man
has seen.</p>
<h4>EXERCISES</h4>
<p>1. In what ways is the Sea-horse so different from most
other fish? 2. In what ways are the Sea-horse and Pipe-fish
alike? 3. How does the Angler-fish catch its prey?
4. Mention a few strange facts about the deep-sea fish.</p>
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