A WORLD OF WONDERS (1845)
Albany Poyntz
Chapter 54
(Investigator 215, 2024 March)
THE ICHNEUMON AND THE HALCYON [Mongoose and Kingfisher]
Buffon assumes that the Ichneumon has been brought to a state of
domesticity. But he probably generalized from a single instance. The
Pacha of Egypt has a tame lion; and many other instances might be
cited. But the lion cannot be regarded as reduced to a domestic animal.
According to Pliny, the ichneumon was an object of veneration among the
Egyptians. So also was the crocodile; these two determined enemies
being equally objects of adoration. By the ancients, the ichneumon was
said to watch the moment of the crocodile’s sleep; when, finding the
monster’s jaws open, it instantly crept in, and having devoured the
bowels, made its way out by the way it entered.
Denon has given us the following account of the ichneumon in his Travels in Egypt.
"The ichneumon is seen lying upon the reeds of the Nile, in the
neighbourhood of the villages, to which it repairs in search of poultry
and eggs."
The supposed antagonism of the ichneumon and crocodile, the one eating
the eggs of the other, and the former creeping down the throat of the
latter, is pure invention. These two animals do not dwell in the same
regions. Crocodiles are not known in Lower, nor ichneumons in Upper
Egypt; so that there can be no grounds for the prejudice which has
existed twenty centuries:—for Pliny, himself, probably handed down a
tradition!"
The fable of the halcyon is so charming, that it ought to have been founded on fact. But Ovid was a better poet than naturalist.
To the power of tranquillizing the tempest, the halcyon was supposed to
add the gift of foretelling good or bad weather. By degrees, writers of
fiction endowed its feathers with the power of rendering silk proof
against the sting of insects, of yielding wealth and harmony, and
conferring grace and beauty on the wearers. The halcyon deposits its
eggs on the sea-shore, on the banks of lakes and rivers; and its
breeding season is that when the air is most calm and serene; but its
power of controlling the elements is wholly fabulous