COLUBEINE SNAKES. 71 



" hood " on tlie nape, the ribs which support this hood being much 

 elongated. Two species are commonly recognised, the Cobra di 

 capella of Southern Asia [Naja tripudians), and the Asp (iV. haje) 

 of Africa ; but there are marked local varieties of both species, 

 and the N. sputatrix of the Malay countries should probably be 

 recognised as a third species. Those of India, with Ceylon, have a 

 mark like a pair of spectacles upon the hood, while those of Burmah 

 and the neighbouring countries eastward have only an oval black 

 spot upon it. In India the commonest colour of this formidable 

 reptile is uniform brown, though many are of a pale yellowish 

 straw colour, and there are others of every shade between that and 

 black. It grows to a length of about five feet, seldom more. 

 " Almost every writer on the natural productions of the East 

 Indies," remarks Dr. Giinther, " has contributed to the natural 

 history of this Snake, which has been surrounded by such a 

 number of fabulous stories, that their repetition and contradiction 

 would fill a volume." It is very generally diffused over the 

 Indian region, though, as Mr. Theobald notices, from its nocturnal 

 habits it is less often seen than many harmless species. " This 

 Snake is, I believe," he adds, " of inoffensive habits, unless 

 irritated, but is, of course, a dangerous n(M'ghbour to have in a 

 house.* Not only in Burmah, where the res^^ect for animal life is 

 greatest, but in India also I have known a Cobra enticed or forced 

 into an earthen jar, and then carried by two men across a river, or 

 some distance from the village, and liberated. Dr. Giinther 

 remarks that, ' singularly enough, it has never been obtained in 

 the valley of Nepal. ^ This is very easily accounted for," con- 

 tinues Mr, Theobald, " since few would venture to kill a Cobra, 

 even for scientific purposes, in the rigorously Hindu state of 

 Nepal. In British India, decent Hindus will not kill a Cobra ; 

 and if one has taken up his abode in a house, he is permitted to 

 remain, or else carefully inveigled into an earthen-pot, and carried 

 away as described. Of course only the orthodox Hindu is so 

 careful to abstain from injuring the Cobra, and their reverential 



* Although the Cobra di capella is so jilcntiful in India, we could never hear of 

 one instance of a European being stung by one during a lesidence of more than 

 twenty-one years in that countrj^. They prey chiefly on Rats, the presence of which 

 is the attraction which brings them about human habitations ; and they also prey 

 occasionally upon young chickens, and comuionly upon Toads.— Ej>. 



