418 Flint's natural history. [BookTX. 



it shifts from side to side, sometimes can7ing it on the right, 

 and sometimes on the left. It swims obliquely,^ with the 

 head on one side, which is of surprising hsirdness while the 

 animal is aUve, being puffed out with air." In addition to 

 this, they, have cavities^* dispersed throughout the claws, 

 by means of which, through suction, they can adhere to 

 objects ; which they hold, with the head upwards, so tightly, 

 that they cannot be torn away. They cannot attach them- 

 selyes, however, to the bottom of the sea, and their reten- 

 tive powers are weaker in the larger ones. These are the 

 only'' soft fish that come on dry land, and then only where 

 the surface is rugged : a smooth surface they will not come 

 near. They feed upon the flesh of sheU-fish, the shells of 

 which they can easily break in tiie embrace of their arms : 

 hence it is that their retreat may be easily detected by the pieces 

 of shell which lie before it. Although, in other respects, this 

 is looked upon as a remarkably stupid kind of animal, so much 

 so, that it will swim towards the hand of a man, to a certain 

 extent in its own domestic matters it manifests considerable 

 intelligence. It carries its prey to its home, and after eating 

 aU the flesh, throws out the debris, and then pursues such 

 small fish as may chance to swim towards them. It also 

 changes its colour'* according to the aspect of the place where 

 it is, and more especially when it is alarmed. The notion is 

 entirely unfounded that it gnaws** its own arms ; for it is from 

 the congers that this mischance befalls it ; but it is no other 



Mnged with the so-called feet, cannot be said to be distinguished into an 

 upper and lower side. 



"> Aristotle, Hist. Anim. B. iv. c. 2, says that the animal is obliged to 

 do BO, on account of the situation of the eyes. 



" But Aristotle says, KaGixTrtp Ijiinipvariiiiviiv, " as though it were 

 puffed out with air." 



32 " Acetabulis." The acetabulum was properly a vinegar cruet in 

 shape resembling an inverted cone ; from a supposed similarity, in the 

 appearance, it is here applied to the suckers of the polypus. The Greek 

 name is KOTvXrjSbtv. 



'' Aristotle, Hist. Anim. B. ix. c. 59. 



3' Cuvier says, that the changes of colour of the skin of the polypus 

 are continual, and succeed each other with an extreme rapidity; but that 

 it has not been observed, any more than the chameleon, to take the colour 

 of objects in its vicinity. 



'5 This notion is mentioned by Athenseus, Pherecrates, Alcasus, Hesiod, 

 Oppian, and Mliin. 



