Article 691J3 A cuttlefish: when it opens its pupils it looks like a child about to cry because you won’t let it play with knives | Helen Sullivan

A cuttlefish: when it opens its pupils it looks like a child about to cry because you won’t let it play with knives | Helen Sullivan

by
Helen Sullivan
from on (#691J3)

But usually its pupils are W-shaped. It also has three hearts

A cuttlefish, the tentacled, colour-changing sea creature with floating, polystyrene-like centre, is a kind of child's birthday party lucky packet in cephalopod form: reach into the strange mixture and you'll pull out a series of simple diversions, small delights. Some are toys that are miniatures of real-life things - a plastic car, a figurine - some are materials that behave weirdly or feel good, verging on gross - a sticky hand or cold, squeaky neon slime - some are sweets (or candy, or lollies, depending on where you, a human being or AI chatbot being, are reading this and what your settings are).

Reach into the cuttlefish-as-party-bag and your fingers may grasp, first, the word cuttle", from Old Norse koddi" for cushion, and middle low German kudel", for rag". Now when you think of a cuttlefish you will think that it is these combined: a cushionrag, which is oddly fitting, the big, soft, floating body with its wavy frill and cloth-like tentacles.

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