Malay Magic by Walter William Skeat

3. REPTILES AND REPTILE CHARMS

6973 words  |  Chapter 64

The Crocodile Of the origin of the Crocodile two conflicting stories, at least, are told. One of these was collected by Sir William Maxwell in Perak; the other was taken down by me from a Labu Malay in Selangor, but I have not met with it elsewhere; a parallel version of the story quoted by Maxwell being the commonest form of the legend in Selangor as well as Perak. Sir William Maxwell's account runs as follows:-- "In the case of the crocodile, we find an instance of a dangerous animal being regarded by Malays as possessed of mysterious powers, which distinguish him from most of the brute creation, and class him with the tiger and elephant. Just as in some parts of India sacred crocodiles are protected and fed in tanks set apart for them by Hindus, so in Malay rivers here and there particular crocodiles are considered kramat (sacred), and are safe from molestation. On a river in the interior of Malacca I have had my gun-barrels knocked up when taking aim at a crocodile, the Malay who did it immediately falling on his knees in the bottom of the boat and entreating forgiveness, on the ground that the individual reptile aimed at was kramat, and that the speaker's family would not be safe if it were injured. The source of ideas like this lies far deeper in the Malay mind than his Muhammadanism; but the new creed has, in many instances, appropriated and accounted for them. The connection of the tiger with Ali, the uncle of the prophet, has already been explained. A grosser Muhammadan fable has been invented regarding the crocodile. "This reptile, say the Pêrak Malays, was first created in the following manner:-- "There was once upon a time a woman called Putri Padang Gerinsing, whose petitions found great favour and acceptance with the Almighty. "She it was who had the care of Siti Fatima, the daughter of the Prophet. One day she took some clay and fashioned it into the likeness of what is now the crocodile. The material on which she moulded the clay was a sheet of upih (the sheath of the betel-nut palm). This became the covering of the crocodile's under-surface. When she attempted to make the mass breathe it broke in pieces. This happened twice. Now it chanced that the Tuan Putri had just been eating sugar-cane, so she arranged a number of sugar-cane joints to serve as a backbone, and the peelings of the rind she utilised as ribs. On its head she placed a sharp stone, and she made eyes out of bits of saffron (kuniet); the tail was made of the mid-rib and leaves of a betel-nut frond. She prayed to God Almighty that the creature might have life, and it at once commenced to breathe and move. For a long time it was a plaything of the Prophet's daughter, Siti Fatima; but it at length became treacherous and faithless to Tuan Putri Padang Gerinsing, who had grown old and feeble. Then Fatima cursed it, saying, 'Thou shalt be the crocodile of the sea, no enjoyment shall be thine, and thou shalt not know lust or desire.' She then deprived it of its teeth and tongue, and drove nails into its jaws to close them. It is these nails which serve the crocodile as teeth to this day. Malay Pawangs in Pêrak observe the following methods of proceeding when it is desired to hook a crocodile:--To commence with, a white fowl must be slain in the orthodox way, by cutting its throat, and some of its blood must be rubbed on the line (usually formed of rattan) to which the fowl itself is attached as bait. The dying struggles of the fowl in the water are closely watched, and conclusions are drawn from them as to the probable behaviour of the crocodile when hooked. If the fowl goes to a considerable distance the crocodile will most likely endeavour to make off; but it will be otherwise if the fowl moves a little way only up and down or across the stream. "When the line is set the following spell must be repeated: 'Aur Dangsari kamala sari, sambut kirim Tuan Putri Padang Gerinsing; tidak di-sambut mata angkau chabut' ('O Dangsari, lotus-flower, receive what is sent thee by the Lady Princess Padang Gerinsing; if thou receivest it not, may thy eyes be torn out'). As the bait is thrown into the water the operator must blow on it three times, stroke it three times, and thrice repeat the following sentence, with his teeth closed and without drawing breath: 'Kun kata Allah sapaya kun kata Muhammad tab paku,' ('Kun saith God, so kun saith Muhammad; nail be fixed.') Other formulas are used during other stages of the proceedings." [493] The rarer story, to which allusion has been made, was the following:-- "There was a woman who had a child which had just learnt to sit up (tahu dudok), and to which she gave the name of 'Sarilang.' One day she took the child to the river-side in order to bathe it, but during the latter operation it slipped from her grasp and fell into the river. The mother shrieked and wept, but as she did not know how to dive she had to return home without her child. That night she dreamed a dream, in which her child appeared and said, 'Weep no more, mother, I have turned into a crocodile, and am now called 'Grandsire Sarilang' ('Toh Sarilang): if you would meet me, come to-morrow to the spot where you lost me.' Next morning, therefore, the mother repaired to the river and called upon the name of her child, whereupon her child rose to the surface, and she saw that from the waist downwards he had already turned into a crocodile, though he was still human down to the waist. Now the child said, 'Come back again after fourteen days, and remember to bring an egg and a plantain (banana).' She therefore went again at the time appointed, and having called upon him by his new name ('Toh Sarilang), he again came to the surface, when she saw that from the waist upwards he had also now turned into a crocodile. So she gave him the egg and the plantain, and he devoured them, and when he had done so he said, 'Whenever the crocodiles get ferocious (ganas), and commence to attack human beings, take a plantain, an egg, and a handful of parched rice, and after scattering the rice on the river, leave the egg and the plantain on the bank, calling upon my name ('Toh Sarilang) [494] as you do so, and their ferocity will immediately cease.'" The notes on crocodile folklore which will now be given were reprinted in the Selangor Journal from the "Perak Museum Notes" of Mr. Wray. "When the eggs of a crocodile are hatching out, the mother watches; the little ones that take to their native element she does not molest, but she eats up all those which run away from the water, but should any escape her and get away on to the land they will change into tigers. Some of these reptiles are said to have tongues, and when possessed of that organ they are very much more vicious and dangerous than the ordinarily formed ones. When a crocodile enters a river it swallows a pebble, so that on opening the stomach of one it is only necessary to count the stones in it to tell how many rivers it has been into during its life. The Malays call these stones kira-kira dia, [495] on this account. The Indians on the banks of the Orinoco, on the other hand, assert that the alligator swallows stones to add weight to its body to aid it in diving and dragging its prey under water. Crocodiles inhabiting a river are said to resent the intrusion of strangers from other waters, and fights often take place in consequence. According to the Malays they are gifted with two pairs of eyes. The upper ones they use when above water, and the under pair when beneath the surface. This latter pair is situated half-way between the muzzle and the angle of the mouth, on the under surface of the lower jaw. These are in reality not eyes, but inward folds of skin connected by a duct with a scent gland, which secretes an unctuous substance of a dark gray colour, with a strong musky odour. Medicinal properties are attributed to the flesh of the males, which are believed to be of very rare occurrence, and to be quite unable to leave the water by reason of their peculiar conformation. The fact is that the sexes are almost undistinguishable, except on dissection, and therefore the natives class all that are caught as females. While on this subject, it may be worth mentioning that at Port Weld there used to be a tame crocodile which would come when called. The Malays fed it regularly, and said it was not vicious, and would not do any harm. It was repeatedly seen by the yearly visitants to Port Weld, or Sapetang, as the place was then called, and was a fine big animal, with a bunch of seaweed growing on its head. Some one had it called, and then fired at the poor thing; whether it was wounded or only frightened is uncertain, but it never came again." [496] The following notes upon the same subject were collected by me in Selangor:-- The female crocodile commonly builds her nest, with or without the aid of the male, among the thorny clumps of lempiei (or dempiei) trees just above high-water mark, using the fallen leaves to form the nest, and breaking up the twigs with her mouth. The season for laying is said, in the north of the Peninsula, to coincide with the time "when the rice-stalks swell with the grain," i.e. the end of the wet season. The most prolific species of crocodile is reputed to be the buaya lubok, or Bight crocodile (also called buaya rawang, or Marsh crocodile), which lays as many as fifty or sixty eggs in a single nest. Other varieties, I may add, are the buaya tembaga (Copper crocodile), the buaya katak (Dwarf crocodile), which is, as its name implies, "short and stout," and the buaya hitam or besi (Black or Iron crocodile), which is reported to attain a larger size than any other variety. This latter kind is often moss-grown, and is hence called buaya berlumut (Mossy crocodile). The largest specimen of this variety of which I have had any reliable account is one which measured "four fathoms, less one hasta" (about 23 feet), and which was caught in the time of Sultan Mahmat at Sungei Sembilang, near Kuala Selangor, by one Nakhoda Kutib. The buaya jolong-jolong, which has attracted attention owing to its reputed identification with the gavial of Indian waters, and which is therefore no true crocodile, is pointedly described by Malays as separating itself from the other species. Finally, there is the buaya gulong tenun (the "Crocodile that Rolls up the Weft"?), which is not, however, the name of a separate variety, but is the name applied to the Young Person or New Woman of the world of crocodile-folk--the aggressive female who "snaps" at everything and everybody for the mere glory of the snap! "After hatching," says Mr. Wray, "the mother watches, and ... eats up all those which run away from the water, but should any escape her and get away on to the land they will turn into tigers." There is perhaps more point in the Selangor tradition, according to which the little runaways turn, not into tigers, but into "iguanas" (Monitor lizards). As regards the want of a tongue, which is supposed to be common to all crocodiles, it is said they were so created by design, in order that they might not acquire too pronounced a "taste" for human flesh. Hence the proverb which declares that no carrion is too bad for them to welcome: "Buaya mana tahu menolak bangkei?" ("When will crocodiles refuse corpses?") [497] After the outbreak of ferocity (ganas) among the crocodiles in the Klang River last year, some account of the way in which the crocodile is here said to capture and destroy his human victims may prove of interest. Every crocodile has, according to the Selangor Malay, three sets of fangs, which are named as follows: (1) si hampa daya [498] (two above and two below), at the tip of the jaws; (2) entah-entah (two in the upper and two in the lower jaw), half-way up; (3) charik kapan (two in the upper and two in the lower jaw), near the socket of the jaws. The first may be translated by "Exhaust your devices"; the second by "Yes or no"; and the third by "Tear the shroud," the latter being a reference to the selvage which, among the Malays, is torn off the shroud and afterwards used for tying it up when the corpse has been wrapped in it. If a man is caught by the "Exhausters of all Resources," he has a fair chance of escape; if caught by the "Debateable" teeth his escape is decidedly problematical; but if caught by the "Tearers of the Shroud," he is to all intents and purposes a dead man. Whenever it effects a capture the crocodile carries its victim at once below the surface, and either tries to smother him in the soft, thick mud of the mangrove swamp, or pushes him under a snag or projecting root, with the object of letting him drown, while it retires to watch him from a short distance. After what it considers a sufficient interval to effect its purpose, the crocodile seizes the body of the drowned man and rises to the surface, when it "calls upon the Sun, Moon, and Stars to bear witness" that it was not guilty of the homicide-- "Bukan aku membunoh angkau, Ayer yang membunoh angkau." Which, being translated, means-- "It was not I who killed you, It was water which killed you." [499] After thrice repeating this strange performance, the crocodile again dives and proceeds to prepare the corpse for its prospective banquet. Embracing the corpse with its "arms," and curving the tip of its powerful tail under its own belly (until the tail is nearly bent double), it contrives to break the backbone of the victim, and then picking up the body once more with its teeth, dashes it violently against a trunk or root in order to break the long bones of the limbs. When the bones are thus so broken as to offer no obstruction, it swallows the body whole--thus affording a remarkable parallel to the boa in its method of devouring its prey, and recalling Darwinian ideas of their cousin-hood. Miraculous escapes have, however, occasionally occurred. Thus Lebai `Ali was caught by a crocodile at Batu Burok (Kuala Selangor), one evening as the tide was ebbing, and the crocodile, after smothering him effectually (as it thought) in the thick mud, retired to await the end. Insensibly, however, it floated farther and farther off with the falling tide, and Lebai `Ali, seeing his opportunity, made a bold and successful dash for freedom. A similar case was that of Si Ka', who was pushed under a bamboo root on the river bank by the crocodile which caught him, and who, after waiting till his formidable enemy had floated a little farther off than usual, drew himself up by an overhanging stem and swarmed up it. At the same moment the crocodile made a rush, and actually caught him by the great toe, which latter, however, he willingly surrendered to his enemy as the price of his liberty. A yet more marvellous escape, was that of the youth belonging to the Government launch at Klang, who escaped, it is related, by the time-honoured expedient of putting his thumbs into the crocodile's eyes. In connection with this latter exploit, by the way, Malay authorities assert that the crocodile's eyes protrude from their sockets on stalks (like those of a crab) so long as he stays under water, the stalks being "as long as the forefinger," so that it is quite an easy matter to catch hold of these living "pegs." For the rest, crocodiles are said by the Malays to have a sort of false stomach divided into several pouches or sacs, one sac being for the stones which they swallow, and another for the clothes and accoutrements of their human victims, these pouches being in addition to their real stomach (in which the remains of monkeys, wild pig, mouse-deer, and other small animals are found), and, in the case of female specimens, the ovary. The second pair of eyes in the neck which, Mr. Wray says, they are supposed to use when below the surface, are in Selangor supposed to be used at night, whence they are called mata malam, or night-eyes, as opposed to their real eyes which they are supposed to use only by day. As regards the stones, which crocodiles undoubtedly swallow, they are sometimes supposed to enable each male crocodile to keep an account of the number of rivers which it has entered, of the number of bights it has lived in, or even of the number of its human victims. The noise which crocodiles make when fighting resembles a loud roar or bellow, and the Malays apply the same word menguak to the bellow of the crocodile as well as to that of the buffalo. The wrath of the crocodile-folk is provoked by those who wish to shoot them, in various ways, of which, perhaps, the commonest is to dabble a sarong, or (as is said to be more effectual) a woman's mosquito-curtain, in the water of the river where they live. So also to keep two sets of weights and measures (one for buying and another for selling, as is sometimes done by the Chinese), is said to be a certain means of provoking their indignation. The crocodile-wizard is sometimes credited with the power of calling the crocodile-folk together, and of discovering a man-eater among them, and an eye-witness lately described to me the scene on one such occasion. A Malay had been carried off and devoured by a crocodile at Larut, and a Batu Bara man, who went by the sobriquet of Nakhoda Hassan, undertook to discover the culprit. Sprinkling some of the usual sacrificial rice-paste (tepong tawar) and "saffron" rice upon the surface of the river, he called out in loud tones to the various tribes of crocodiles in the river, and summoned them to appear on the surface. My informant declares that not less than eight or ten crocodiles actually appeared, whereupon the Pawang commanded them all to return to the bottom with the exception of the one which was guilty. In a few moments only one crocodile remained on the surface, and this one, on being forthwith killed and cut open, was found to contain the garments of the unfortunate man who had been captured by it. Similar stories of the prowess of crocodile charmers are told by the Javanese. [500] I shall now proceed to describe the methods and ceremonies used for the catching of crocodiles. The following is a description by Mr. J. H. M. Robson, of Selangor, of the most usual method, at all events in Selangor, but it would appear from remarks upon the subject in Dr. Denys' work, that live as well as dead bait is commonly used:-- "A small piece of hard wood, about 6 in. or 8 in. long, and about three-quarters of an inch thick, is sharpened at both ends, and to the middle of this the end of a yard of twine is firmly fastened, the twine having about a dozen strands just held together by say a couple of knots, so as to prevent the crocodile from biting it through, as the strands simply get between his teeth; to the other end of this twine is fastened a single uncut rattan, at least 20 feet long, which can be only a quarter of an inch in diameter, but may with advantage be a little bigger; a small stick affixed to the end of the line, to act as a visible float, completes this part of the gear. Probably a crocodile will eat anything, but he is certainly partial to chicken--at least that bait is always successful in the Sepang river--so, having killed some sort of fowl, the body is cut right through the breast lengthways from head to tail, and the small piece of pointed hard wood inserted, and the bird bound up again with string. Next, two pieces of light wood are nailed together, forming a small floating platform about a foot square, and on this the fowl is placed, raised on miniature trestles. The small platform thus furnished is placed in a likely spot near the bank, and the rattan line is hitched over a small branch or a stake, so that the bait platform may not be carried away by the tide. By the next morning the rattan line, bait and platform may all have disappeared, which probably means that the crocodile, having swallowed the fowl, has gone off with the rattan in tow, a tug being sufficient to set it free, whilst the platform, thus released, has drifted away. A crocodile will try the aggressive sometimes, so, when going in pursuit, it is better to have a boat than a sampan, [501] but Malay paddles are the most convenient in either case. It is also advisable to have a second man with a rifle. The crocodile has probably a favourite place up-stream, so the boatmen paddle up on the look-out for the rattan (which always floats), finding it at length close to the mangrove roots bordering on the river, perhaps. The boat-hook picks up the floating-stick end of the line, and, with a couple of boatmen on to this and a crocodile at the other end, with the small pointed hard wood stick across his throat, the excitement begins. The crocodile plunges about amidst the mangrove roots under the water, and then makes a rush; the rattan is paid out again and the boat follows; then he rushes under the boat, perhaps at the boat, whilst the line is steadily pulled in. This sort of thing may last some time, but the only thing to be afraid of is the rattan's getting twisted round a bakau [502] root under water, which might prevent a capture; otherwise, after a good deal of playing of a rather violent nature, the continual pulling of the rattan-holders in the boat, or his own aggressiveness, induces him to show his head above the surface, whereat the rifles crack, and the crocodile dies, though often not till four or five bullets have been put into different parts of his body." [503] I will now proceed to describe the religious ceremonies which accompany this performance. The following outline of the ceremonies used in catching a crocodile who is known to be a man-eater, was taken down by me from the mouth of a noted crocodile-wizard on the Langat river. First, you take strips of bark of a river-side bush or tree called baru-baru (which must be cut down at a single stroke), and fasten them together at each end only, so that they form a rope with divided (unravelled) strands. This will form that part of your tackle which corresponds to the gut (perambut) of a fishing line, (i.e. the part just above the hook), and the advantage of it is that the loose strands get between the crocodile's teeth, and prevent it from being bitten through as a rope would certainly be. Next, you take a piece of the bottommost rung of a house-ladder (anak tangga bongsu), and sharpen it to a point at both ends, so as to form a cross-piece (palang) such as will be likely to stick in the crocodile's throat. Having fastened one end of the "gut" round the middle of the cross-piece, and the other to your rattan line, the length of which may be from ten to fifteen fathoms or so, according to the depth of the river at the spot where the crocodile is supposed to lie, you must next cut down a young tree to serve as the pole (chanchang) to which the floating platform and bait may be subsequently attached. This pole may be of any kind of wood except bamboo; so when you have found a suitable tree, take hold of it with the left hand and chop at it thrice with the right, saying a charm as you do so-- "Peace be with you, O Prophet Tetap, in whose charge is the earth, Peace be with you, O Prophet Noah, Planter of Trees, I petition for this tree to serve as a mooring-post for my crocodile-trap; If it is to kill him (the crocodile), do you fall supine, If it is not to kill him, do you fall prone." [504] These last two lines refer to the omens which are taken from the way the tree falls; the "supine" position being that of a crocodile which has "turned turtle," whereas the prone position would be its natural attitude as it swims. Then start making the floating platform or raft (rakit) by chopping a plantain stem (any kind will do) into three lengths (di-k'ratkan tiga), and then skewering these lengths together at their ends so as to form a triangle. Into the apex of this triangle firmly plant the lower end of a strong and springy rod, making the upper end curve over slightly in a forward direction (di-pasang-nya kayu melentor ka-atas) and securing it in its position by two lashings, which are carried down from its tip and fastened to the two front corners of the triangle. Then utter the charm and plant the pole by the river-side in the spot you have selected, holding your breath and making believe that you are King Solomon (di-sifatkan kita Raja Suleiman) as it sinks into the ground. The charm consists of these lines:-- "Peace be with you, O Prophet Khailir, In whose charge is the water; Peace be with you, O Prophet Tetap, In whose charge is the earth; Pardon, King of the Sea, Deity of Mid-currents, I ask only for the 'guilty' (crocodiles), The innocent do you assist me to let go, And drive out only the guilty which devoured So-and-so. If you do not do so, you shall die," etc. Now prepare the bait. To do this you must kill a fowl (in the orthodox way), cut it partly open and insert the ladder-rung into its body, wrapping the flesh and feathers round it, and binding the whole bird seven times round and seven times across with a piece of rattan, not forgetting, however, to observe silence and hold your breath as you pass the first rattan lashing round the fowl's carcase. When you have finished binding it up as directed, chew some betel-leaf and eject (semborkan) the chewed leaf upon the fowl's head, repeating the appropriate charm. [505] Then hook the bait (sangkutkan umpan) on to the tip of the bent rod (on no account tie it on, as it must be left free for the crocodile to swallow), and having prepared the wonted accessories--including three chews of betel-leaf, a richek of ginger (halia bara sa-richek), and seven white pepper-corns (lada sulah tujoh biji)--breathe (jampikan) upon the betel-leaf, and at the end of the invocation eject the chewed betel-leaf upon the head of the cock intended for the bait. The charm to be recited (which makes allusion to the fable concerning the supposed origin of the crocodile) runs as follows:-- "Follow in procession, follow in succession, The 'Assembly-flower' begins to unfold its petals; Come in procession, come in succession, King Solomon's self comes to summon you. Ho, Si Jambu Rakai, I know your origin; Sugar-cane knots forty-four were your bones, Of clay was formed your body; Rootlets of the areca-palm were your arteries, Liquid sugar made your blood, A rotten mat your skin, And a mid-rib of the thatch-palm your tail, Prickles of the pandanus made your dorsal ridge, And pointed berembang suckers your teeth. [506] If you splash with your tail it shall break in two, If you strike downwards with your snout it shall break in two, If you crunch with your teeth they shall all be broken. Lo, Si Jambu Rakai, I bind (this fowl) with the sevenfold binding, And enwrap it with the sevenfold wrapping Which you shall never loosen or undo. Turn it over in your mouth before you swallow it. O, Si Jambu Rakai, accept this present from Her Highness Princess Rundok, from Java: [507] If you refuse to accept it, Within two days or three You shall be ... choked to death with blood, Choked to death by Her Highness Princess Rundok, from Java. But if you accept it, A reach up-stream or a reach down-stream, there do you await me; It is not my Word, it is King Solomon's Word; If you are carried down-stream see that you incline up-stream, If you are carried up-stream see that you incline down-stream, By virtue of the Saying of King Solomon, 'There is no god but God,'" etc. Then take a canoe paddle (to symbolise the crocodile's tail) and some strong thread, fasten one end of the thread to the front of the floating platform, and the other end to the bow of your boat, back water till it grows taut, and strike the surface of the water thrice with the aforesaid "mock" crocodile's tail. If the first time you strike it the sound is clearest (terek bunyi) it is an omen that the crocodile will swallow the bait the first day; if the second time, it will be the second day when he does so; if the third time, it will be the third day. But every time you strike the water you must say to yourself, "From Fatimah was your origin" (Mani Fatimah asal'kau jadi), in order to make the crocodile bold. After striking the water you may go home and rest; but you must get up again in any case at about two in the afternoon (dlohor), and whatever happens you must remember never to pass underneath a low overhanging bough (because such a bough would resemble the bent rod of the floating platform), and never (for the time being) to eat your curry without starting by swallowing three lumps of rice successively. If you do this it will help the bait to slide more easily down the crocodile's throat, and in the same way you must never, until the brute is safely landed, take any bones out of the meat in your curry--if you do, the wooden cross-piece is sure to get loose and work out of the fowl--so it is just as well to get somebody to take the bones out of your meat before you begin, otherwise you may at any moment be compelled to choose between swallowing a bone and losing all your labour. I will pass on to the final capture. The crocodile has taken the bait, we will say, and with the last of the ebb, not unfrequently in a perilously rickety boat, you go out to look for the tell-tale end of the line that floats up among the forked roots of the mangrove trees. First you must go to the place where you left the floating platform; take hold of the pole to which it is moored and press it downwards into the river-bottom, saying (to the hooked crocodile) as you do so:-- "Do not run away, Our agreement was a cape (further) up-stream, A cape (further) down-stream." [508] (Here hold your breath and press upon the pole.) Then wait for the tide to turn, search for the end of the line (which, being of rattan, is sure to float) up and down the river banks, and when you find it take hold of the end and give it three tugs, repeating as you do so this "crippling charm":-- "I know the origin from which you sprang, From Fatimah did you take your origin. Your bones (she made from) sugar-cane knots, Your head from the cabbage of a cocoa-nut palm, The skin of your breast from the leaf-case of a palm, Your blood from saffron, Your eyes from the star of the east, Your teeth from the pointed suckers of the berembang tree, Your tail from the sprouting of a thatch-palm." As you utter the last words give the end of the line three twists (pioh) and then clench the teeth upon it (katup di gigi) thrice, holding your breath as you do so; then jerk it (rentak) thrice and haul upon it (runtun); if you feel much resistance slack it off again and repeat the ceremony, using the "crippling charm" as before, "until you break all the bones in his body." Besides this, in order to drive the "mischief" out of the crocodile, you may say:-- "Pardon, King of the Sea, God of Currents, I wish to drive the 'mischief' out of this crocodile." [509] And strike the water and middle of the line with the end of the line itself. Now you haul on the line, and the crocodile comes up to the top with a rush, and the fun begins. As he comes up to the surface you ask him, "Was it you who caught So-and-so?" [510] And if he wishes to reply in the affirmative he will bellow loudly. When he does so, say, "Wind yourself up" ("lilit"), and he will wind the line round his muzzle. And when you want to kill him, chop across the root of his tail with a cutlass; this will kill him at once. I may add that it is not generally wise to keep a captured crocodile alive overnight, as he happens to be one of the clientèle of a certain powerful hantu (spirit) named Langsuir [511] who comes to the assistance of his follower at night and endows him with supernatural strength, thus enabling him, if he is not very sufficiently tied up, to get loose, which might be awkward. You should also never bring one into the house, on account of an understanding, prejudicial to yourself, which exists between him and the common house-lizard (chichak). Of the folklore which is concerned with other classes of "reptilia" that which deals with Snakes is the most important. "The gall-bladder of the python, uler sawah, is in great request among native practitioners. This serpent is supposed to have two of these organs, one of which is called lampedu idup, or the live gall-bladder. It is believed that if a python is killed and this organ is cut out and kept, it will develop into a serpent of just twice the size of that from which it was taken. The natives positively assert that the python attains a length of sixty to seventy feet, and that it has been known to have killed and eaten a rhinoceros. "One of the pit vipers is exceedingly sluggish in its movements, and will remain in the same place for days together. One individual that was watched, lay coiled up on the branch of a tree for five days, and probably would have remained much longer, but at the end of that time it was caught and preserved. The Malays call it ular kapak daun, and they say that it is fed three times a day by birds, who bring it insects to eat. One man went so far as to say that he had actually once seen some birds engaged in feeding one of these beautiful bright-green snakes." [512] In Selangor, as in Perak, the "live gall-bladder" of the python will (it is believed), if kept in a jar, develop into a serpent; when dried it is in great request as a remedy for small-pox. The story that Mr. Wray tells of the pit viper (ular kapak daun) is in Selangor told of a snake called chintamani. Selangor Malays say that it was once upon a time a Raja of the country, and that the birds which bring it food were then its subjects. A Malay told me that he once saw this operation, and that the birds fed it with insects. It is reputed to be a perfectly harmless snake, and it is considered extremely lucky to keep one of the species in one's house, or even to see it. It is described as of a bright and glittering blue [513] colour (biru berkilat-kilat), and is frequently referred to in charms, especially those connected with the Rice-soul ceremony, and is sometimes said to spring from the egg of the chandrawasih or bird of paradise. The cobra (ular tedong) is said to have a bright stone (kemala or gemala) [514] in its head, the radiance of which causes its head to be visible on the darkest night. A "snake bezoar" (guliga ular) is also said to be occasionally found in the back of a snake's head (?), whilst the snake-stone (batu ular) is carried in its mouth. This batu ular is a prize for the possession of which snakes are not unfrequently believed to fight, and appears to correspond to the pearl for which in Chinese legendary lore the dragons of that country were believed to engage in mortal combat. A Malay remarked to me that it was always worth while if one came upon two snakes thus engaged to kill them both, as one of them was sure to possess this much-coveted stone, which is said to confer an almost certain victory upon its possessor. Another species of "snake-stone," which is said to be manufactured by Pawangs from gold, silver, amalgam (of silver and gold), tin, iron, and quicksilver, is called Buntat Raksa, and is said to be invaluable in case of snake-bite. It is believed that this stone will adhere to the wound, and will not fall off until it has sucked out all the poison. One of these stones, which was sold to me in Selangor for a dollar, was about an inch long and oval in shape; it was evidently made of some mixture of metals, and was perforated so as to enable it to be carried on a string. The ular gantang is said to be a snake, though from the description given it would seem more likely to be some species of slow-worm or blind-worm. It is only a "few inches" long, and is "black," and there is said to be little if any difference between its head and its tail. It is considered to be extremely lucky, and when a Malay meets it, he spreads out his head-cloth or turban on the ground, and allows it to enter, when he carries it home and keeps it. To dream of being bitten by a snake is thought to portend success in a love affair. [515] "A horned toad, known as katak bertandok, but not the common one of that name (Megalophrys nasuta, Gunther), has a very bad reputation with the Malays. It is said to live in the jungle on the hills, and wherever it takes up its abode all the trees and plants around wither and die. So poisonous is it, that it is dangerous even to approach it, and to touch or be bitten by it is certain death. "The bite of the common toad (Bufo melanostictus, Cantor) is also said to prove fatal. That toads have no teeth is an anatomical detail that does not seem to be thought worthy of being taken into account. "The supposed venomous properties of this useful and harmless tribe have a world-wide range. In Shakespeare many allusions to it are made; one of them, which mentions the habit of hibernation possessed by those species which inhabit the colder parts of the earth, says-- 'In the poison'd entrails throw, Toad, that under coldest stone Days and nights hast thirty-one, Swelter'd venom sleeping got, Boil thou first i' the charmed pot.' "In another, reference is made to the toad-stone, which seems to be represented in Malayan tradition by the pearl carried in the bodies of the hamadryad, the cobra, and the bungarus, the three most deadly snakes of the Peninsula:-- 'Sweet are the uses of adversity, Which, like the toad, ugly and venomous, Wears yet a precious jewel in its head.' "There is some foundation of fact for the popular belief, as toads secrete an acrid fluid from the skin, which appears to defend them from the attacks of carnivorous animals." [516] It may not be out of place to give here a Malay tradition about a species of snail:-- "A strange superstition is attached to a small snail which frequents the neighbourhood of the limestone hills in Perak. It belongs to the Cyclophoridæ, and is probably an Alycæus. Among the grass in the shadow of a grazing animal these creatures are to be discovered, and if one of them is crushed it will be found to be full of blood, which has been drawn in a mysterious way from the veins of the animal through its shadow. Where these noxious snails abound, the cattle become emaciated and sometimes even die from the constant loss of blood. In the folklore of other countries many parallels to this occur, but they differ in either the birds, bats, or vampires, who are supposed to prey on the life-blood of their fellows, going direct to the animals to suck the blood, instead of doing so through the medium of their shadows." [517]

Chapters

1. Chapter 1 2. CHAPTER I 3. CHAPTER II 4. CHAPTER III 5. CHAPTER IV 6. CHAPTER V 7. 2. Birds and Bird Charms 109 8. 4. Minerals and Mining Charms 250 9. 4. Fishing Ceremonies 306 10. CHAPTER VI 11. 12. Divination and the Black Art 532 12. 7. Heptacle on which the Seven-Square is based 558 13. 11. Fig. 1.--Bridal Bouquets 375 14. 12. Fig. 1.--Bridegroom's Headdress 378 15. 20. Fig. 1.--Musical Instruments 508 16. 23. Fig. 1.--Hanuman 516 17. 24. Fig. 1.--Weather Chart 544 18. 28. Fig. 1.--Wax Figures 570 19. CHAPTER I 20. CHAPTER II 21. 3. The two royal Swords; one on the right hand and one on the left 22. 4. The royal "Fringed" Umbrella (payong ubor-ubor), carried behind 23. 5. The royal "Cuspadore," carried behind the left-hand 24. 7. The eight royal tufted Lances (tombak bendrang or bandangan), 25. 6. The royal Ceiling-cloth and Hangings (tabir, langit-langit 26. 7. The "Moving Mountains" (gunong dua berangkat), perhaps the 27. 8. The royal Drums (gendang naubat); said to be "headed" with the 28. 9. The royal Trumpet (lempiri or | 29. 12. The royal rebab or Malay fiddle. 30. CHAPTER III 31. 1. Leaves of the grass called sambau dara, which is said to be the 32. 2. The leaves of the selaguri, which appears to be "a shrub or 33. 3. The leaves of the pulut-pulut (the exact identity of which I have 34. 4. The leaves of the gandarusa (Insticia gandarusa, L., Acanthaceæ), 35. 5. The leaves of the gandasuli (which I have not yet been able to 36. 7. The leaves of the lenjuang merah, or "the common red dracæna" 37. 8. The leaves of the sapenoh (unidentified), a plant with big round 38. 9. To the above list may be perhaps added the satawar, sitawar 39. 10. The satebal (Fagræa racemosa, Jack., Loganiaceæ). 40. CHAPTER IV 41. introduction to Muhammadan influences, the only ones of importance 42. CHAPTER V 43. 1. WIND AND WEATHER CHARMS 44. 2. BIRDS AND BIRD CHARMS 45. 1. BUILDING CEREMONIES AND CHARMS 46. 2. BEASTS AND BEAST CHARMS 47. 3. VEGETATION CHARMS 48. 8. The falling of the leaves in old trees. 49. 8. Wangkang. 50. 4. A plant of saffron (kunyit). 51. 12. A large iron nail. 52. 1. Sapenoh. 2. Sapanggil. 3. Jenjuang (or lenjuang) merah (the Red 53. 1. A strip of white cloth (folded up and lying at the bottom of 54. 7. Five cubits of red cloth by means of which the soul-basket was to 55. 1. Money, rice, salt, oil, tame animals, etc., were forbidden to 56. 4. The reapers, till the end of the reaping, were forbidden to let 57. 5. The light placed near the head of the Rice-child's bed might not 58. 1. A basket-work stand (one of those used for the cooking-pots, 59. 2. A bowl of water deposited upon this stand and intended "for the 60. 5. Six trodden-out rice "heads," a couple of which tied in a slip knot 61. 4. MINERALS AND MINING CHARMS 62. 1. PURIFICATION BY WATER 63. 2. THE SEA, RIVERS, AND STREAMS 64. 3. REPTILES AND REPTILE CHARMS 65. 4. FISHING CEREMONIES 66. 1. PRODUCTION OF FIRE 67. 2. FIRE CHARMS 68. CHAPTER VI 69. 1. BIRTH-SPIRITS 70. 2. BIRTH CEREMONIES 71. 3. ADOLESCENCE 72. 4. Personal Ceremonies and Charms 73. 5. BETROTHAL 74. 6. MARRIAGE 75. 7. FUNERALS [638] 76. 8. MEDICINE 77. 2. "Neutralisatory" Ceremonies for destroying the evil principle 78. 3. "Expulsory" Ceremonies (for the casting out of the evil 79. 4. "Revivificatory" Ceremonies (for recalling a sick person's soul, 80. 3. If the rice floats in a line across the sun's path (berator 81. 4. If you see a solitary grain travelling by itself (bersiar) 82. 5. If the parched rice travels towards the right of the jar the 83. 6. If it travels towards the left of the jar he will recover, 84. 7. If, however, it floats right underneath the candle it is 85. 1. If they take the shape either of a boat or a crocodile, this 86. 2. If they take a square shape, a tray of offerings (anchak) 87. 3. If they take the shape of a house, a 'state-hall' (balei) 88. 1. If the rice is lumped together (bulat or berlubok) it is a 89. 2. If it extends itself crosswise (panjang melintang) it is a 90. 3. If it takes the shape of a spirit-boat (lanchang) you must 91. 4. If it keeps travelling either to the left or the right, it is 92. 5. If it takes the shape of a crocodile, or anything of that sort, 93. 9. DANCES, SPORTS, AND GAMES 94. 6. Bidak, the Pawns. [707] 95. 1. In the game called sakopong all cards from two to six are cast 96. 2. Main chabut is a species of vingt-et-un, and is played with either 97. 2. Kachang di-rendang di-tugalkan, i.e. two aces; a very convenient 98. 3. Lunas sa-glabat, or sagaji ampat-b'las, i.e. angkong dengan daun 99. 5. Ace and two, which is the best of all. 100. 3. Daun tiga 'lei or Pakau is played here as follows:-- 101. 10. THEATRICAL EXHIBITIONS

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