![]() ![]() The deeper we travel into the ocean, the deeper we delve into our own psyche. In his short 1830 poem The Kraken he wrote: "Below the thunders of the upper deep, / Far far beneath in the abysmal sea, / His ancient, dreamless, uninvaded sleep / The Kraken sleepeth." This terrifying legend occupied the mind and pen of the poet Alfred Lord Tennyson too. If it saw the ship it would pluck the hapless sailors from the boat and drag them to a watery grave. If sailors found a place with many fish, most likely it was the monster that was driving them to the surface. One Norse legend talks of the Kraken, a deep sea creature that was the curse of fishermen. "Monsters say something about human psychology, not the world." "They don't really exist, but they play a huge role in our mindscapes, in our dreams, stories, nightmares, myths and so on," says Matthias Classen, assistant professor of literature and media at Aarhus University in Denmark, who studies monsters in literature. Many academics agree that monsters lurk in the deepest recesses, they prowl through our ancestral minds appearing in the half-light, under the bed - or at the bottom of the sea. "This inhuman place makes human monsters," wrote Stephen King in his novel The Shining. What is it that draws us to these creatures? Sea monsters are the stuff of legend - lurking not just in the depths of the oceans, but also the darker corners of our minds.
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