The Oldie magazine - July 2021 issue (402)

Page 47

Books Pools win LUCY LETHBRIDGE The Sea Is Not Made of Water: Life Between the Tides By Adam Nicolson

GARY WING

William Collins £20 The great Victorian naturalist Philip Gosse is remembered in Adam Nicolson’s new book not for being the unbending religious fundamentalist of his son Edmund’s memoir, but as the godfather of rockpool wonderment. These shoreline cups, nourished by the in and out of the tides, are teeming miniature theatres of life. ‘Never more great than when minutely great’, Gosse said of the tiny glories of the rockpool. In The Sea Is Not Made of Water, Nicolson describes how he created three pools near his Scottish home, Ardtornish. He then lets the contemplation of these ‘micro-Arcadias’ take him on fascinating voyages through history, science, philosophy and literature. Over the course of several summers, he finds hosts of inhabitants in his pools, including winkles, whelks, sea urchins, starfish – and, in one, ten different kinds of seaweed. There is nothing that can’t be illuminated by the examination of life at its tiniest, of the ‘flitter and skitter’ of flux and flow. Nicolson finds in his pools ‘the cupping of reality in several layers of itself’. It is an experience akin to gazing into fractals with their dizzyingly infinite spirals: ‘The closer you look, the deeper it dives.’ Nicolson quotes from William Golding’s review of Gavin Maxwell’s Ring of Bright Water: ‘We stand among the flotsam, the odd shoes and tins, hotwater bottles and skulls of sheep or deer. We know nothing. We look daily at the mystery of plain stuff. We stand where

any upright food-gatherer has stood, on the edge of our own consciousness.’ Take the sandhoppers, those glossy little amphipods to be found on beaches all over Britain. We learn that they have sophisticated grooming rituals for keeping grit from their shiny carapace, and complicated social systems, and, most fascinating of all, that they have inner compasses that guide them across their territories, as they navigate by sun and moon. Could prawns be considered conscious? wonders Nicolson. Their meaty tail which makes them so delicious is actually a giant muscle which enables the prawn to flip out of danger at a sudden movement. But what are they thinking, if they are thinking? Scientists, we learn, have found that crayfish, similarly equipped, are sometimes flippers and sometimes freezers – and the circumstances they are in make no difference to their reactions. Then there is the ruthless, survivalist

efficiency of crabs. In one of Nicolson’s rockpools, there is a stand-off between a colony of small, green crabs and an old matriarchal mussel attached to the side. She is too old for the crabs to eat but they gobble her tiny offspring – and she eats theirs. Crab copulation takes place over two or three days – it can happen only when the female has moulted and her new shell is soft. Sometimes the male, seeing she is almost ready, will embrace a female in his pincers and hold her there for several days to keep her safe and out of range of the competition. Female crabs, like most rockpool crustaceans, lay millions of eggs over their lifetime, releasing their larvae into the deepest swell of the sea – because that is the safest place for them until they are ready to float inland on the tide and into a brimming rockpool of their own. Nicolson writes beautifully of how the tiniest organisms carry within them a cosmic echo. Everything is bound to

I can see the sea: Philip Gosse (1810-88) popularised the seawater aquarium The Oldie July 2021 47


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

On the Road: Ted Dexter

4min
pages 87-88

Crossword

3min
pages 89-90

Taking a Walk: Lost in books in

3min
pages 85-86

Bird of the Month: Rock

2min
page 79

Holidays for hermits

6min
pages 80-81

Overlooked Britain: Hadlow

5min
pages 82-84

Getting Dressed: Anne

4min
pages 76-78

Drink Bill Knott

4min
page 71

Golden Oldies Rachel Johnson

4min
page 67

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
page 68

Music Richard Osborne

3min
page 66

Television Roger Lewis

5min
page 65

History

4min
pages 61-62

Film: Elvis Presley: The

3min
page 63

Postcards from the Edge

4min
page 37

My Favourite Book

4min
page 59

Sorrow and Bliss, by Meg

7min
pages 55-58

Re-educated: How I Changed My Job, My Home, My Husband and My Hair, by Lucy Kellaway Kate Hubbard

5min
pages 51-52

The Sea Is Not Made of Water, by Adam Nicolson

3min
pages 47-48

My ten favourite rivers

4min
page 39

Readers’ Letters

6min
pages 42-44

Country Mouse

4min
pages 35-36

The Doctor’s Surgery

3min
page 41

Town Mouse

4min
page 34

Confessions of an MP’s wife and daughter Sasha Swire

4min
page 33

Poetry boom in lockdown

4min
page 26

MeToo hits classics

4min
page 32

Cleaning the loos at

4min
pages 24-25

Small World

3min
page 27

My stage fright

8min
pages 30-31

End of The Good Food Guide James Pembroke

4min
pages 28-29

Proust changed the

7min
pages 22-23

RIP the playboys of the

6min
pages 20-21

Have we found the White

3min
page 10

I guarded Albert Speer

4min
page 19

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9

School reports then and now

4min
page 13

Botham’s strokes of genius and

3min
page 11

The Old Un’s Notes

6min
pages 5-6

My film family’s greatest hits

9min
pages 14-18

Bliss on Toast Prue Leith

3min
pages 7-8
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.