The description of the Erinys to be gathered from these two passages recalls Domhnall, the sorceress who fell in love with Cuchulainn in Alba and who persecuted him with enchantments when he slighted her—"Her form was very gruesome, her knees were large, her heels turned before her, her feet behind her; big dark-grey eyes in her head, her face black as a bowl of jet. A very large forehead she had, her rough bright-red hair in threads wound round her head."[1]
The connection of the Erinyes with snakes is interesting. Aeschylus in one passage in the Eumenides[2] uses the word (Greek characters), "the dragoness," as a name for them. Euripides calls them "Hades-snake" and (Greek characters), with the forms of snakes." [3] These names suggest that the Erinyes had at one time been snakes like Snakeskin (in the Magyar tale mentioned before), the prince who had been changed into a snake, and who, immediately on regaining his proper shape, took the form of a pigeon. This snake-aspect of the Erinyes recalls the New Caledonian story[4] of the creature that emerged from the body of a great snake when it was changing its skin. This demon was like a man, but with his joints reversed; his elbows were on the front of his arms, his knees at the back of his legs, he had small feet and eyes at the back of his head, and he apparently made a noise like whistling. Supernatural beings similar to this last, but unconnected with snakes, occur in the beliefs of some of the Melanesian Isles. These are either larger
- ↑ Miss Hull, The Cuchullin Saga, p. 72.
- ↑ Aesch. Eum. 126.
- ↑ Eur. Iphigenia in Tauris, 286. Orestes, 256.
- ↑ Cited by M. Gaidoz from an article by M. R. Lourdet, in Les Missions Catholiques, 29th Feb., 1893, p. 93.
And the analogous word (Greek characters), "bent tail," a synonym for (Greek characters), "the shady tail or squirrel," (Greek characters) meaning "tail," suggests that (Greek characters) means "with legs turned and bent backwards" under the body (as in birds when seated) in the same manner as the tail of a squirrel is bent backwards so as to lie along its back.