Page:Omens and superstitions of southern India.djvu/97

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ANIMAL SUPERSTITIONS
89

of the mythical bird Jatayu, which fought Rāvana, to rescue Sīta from his clutches.


3. Reptiles and Batrachians.

It is recorded by Canter Visscher[1] that, "in the mountains and remote jungles of this country (Malabar), there is a species of snake of the shape and thickness of the stem of a tree, which can swallow men and beasts entire. I have been told an amusing story about one of these snakes. It is said that at Barcelore a chego (Chogan) had climbed up a cocoanut tree to draw toddy or palm wine, and, as he was coming down, both his legs were seized by a snake which had stretched itself up alongside the tree with its mouth wide open, and was sucking him in gradually as he descended. Now, the Indian, according to the custom of his country, had stuck his teifermes (an instrument not unlike a pruning knife), into his girdle with the curve turned outwards; and, when he was more than half swallowed, the knife began to rip up the body of the snake so as to make an opening, by which the lucky man was most unexpectedly able to escape. Though the snakes in this country are so noxious to the natives, yet the ancient veneration for them is still maintained. No one dares to injure them or to drive them away by violence, and so audacious do they become that they will sometimes creep between people's legs when they are eating, and attack their bowls of rice, in which case retreat is necessary until the monsters have satiated themselves, and taken their departure."

Another snake story, worthy of the Baron Munchausen, is recorded in Taylor's "Catalogue raisonné of Oriental Manuscripts."[2]

  1. Letters from Malabar, Translation, Madras, 1862.
  2. 1862, iii. 464.