RoTH] DOMESTIC IMPLEMENTS AND REQUISITES 359 
of their fish, is pictured with its spotted body (fig. 172 A). Rep- 
tiles are also found space for—turtles, frogs, and snakes. Tor- 
toise shell in B, C. The frog is shown in D, and again in figure 173 D, 
a form which degenerates into the dumb-bell shaped figure illustrated 
in figure 172 E. De Goeje (GO, 6) records a similar pattern from 
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Fig. 173.—Hourglass pegall side-panel patterns. Snake: Showing body alone (A), head 
and tail (B, C, h, t), swallowing a frog (D). 
the sister colony of Surinam. Snakes are represented in these de- 
signs by at least three different methods: By a more or less accurate 
figure of the body generally, as in the case of the bush-master shown in 
figure 173 without (A), or with (B, C, D), the head (A) and tail (£) ; 
by a pictogram indicating the sinuous nature of the creature’s move- 
ments (fig. 174 A, B), or its concentric arrangement when coiled at 
rest (C); and by an imitation of the body-surface markings, as in 
