| FIRST PART
CHAPTER 4: Ned Land
 (continued)"But Ned, you're a professional whaler, a man familiar with all
 the great marine mammals--your mind should easily accept this
 hypothesis of an enormous cetacean, and you ought to be the last
 one to doubt it under these circumstances!" "That's just where you're mistaken, professor," Ned replied.
 "The common man may still believe in fabulous comets crossing
 outer space, or in prehistoric monsters living at the earth's core,
 but astronomers and geologists don't swallow such fairy tales.
 It's the same with whalers.  I've chased plenty of cetaceans,
 I've harpooned a good number, I've killed several.  But no matter
 how powerful and well armed they were, neither their tails or their
 tusks could puncture the sheet-iron plates of a steamer." "Even so, Ned, people mention vessels that narwhale tusks have
 run clean through." "Wooden ships maybe," the Canadian replied.  "But I've never seen
 the like.  So till I have proof to the contrary, I'll deny that
 baleen whales, sperm whales, or unicorns can do any such thing." "Listen to me, Ned--" "No, no, professor.  I'll go along with anything you want except that.
 Some gigantic devilfish maybe . . . ?" "Even less likely, Ned.  The devilfish is merely a mollusk, and even this
 name hints at its semiliquid flesh, because it's Latin meaning soft one.
 The devilfish doesn't belong to the vertebrate branch, and even if it
 were 500 feet long, it would still be utterly harmless to ships
 like the Scotia or the Abraham Lincoln.  Consequently, the feats
 of krakens or other monsters of that ilk must be relegated to
 the realm of fiction." "So, Mr. Naturalist," Ned Land continued in a bantering tone,
 "you'll just keep on believing in the existence of some
 enormous cetacean . . . ?" "Yes, Ned, I repeat it with a conviction backed by factual logic.
 I believe in the existence of a mammal with a powerful constitution,
 belonging to the vertebrate branch like baleen whales, sperm whales,
 or dolphins, and armed with a tusk made of horn that has
 tremendous penetrating power." |