HPB-SB-7-13: Difference between revisions

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{{Style P-HPB SB. Title continued |Isis Unvelled and the Todas|7-13}}
{{Style P-HPB SB. Title continued |Isis Unvelled and the Todas|7-13}}


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{{Style P-No indent|and the current authorities being on one side, and “H. M.” on the other, anthropologists may be able to draw their own conclusions as to the accuracy of statements which appear to be corroborated by those persons who are qualified to give evidence to scientific men as to points of Indian anthropology.}}
 
On a more particularly zoological subject I may note that Dr. Joseph Fayrer’s work, ''The Thanatophidia of India;'' ''being a Description of the Venomous Snakes of the Indian'' ''Peninsula, ''folio, Lond., 1872; and Dr. Albrecht Gurther’s ''Reptiles of British India, ''8vo, Lond., 1864 (Ray Society’s publication), will tell inquirers whether a traveller in the Nilgherry hills, if he had eyes, would have seen more than “two kinds of snakes, and neither of them poisonous.” “No snakes in Virginny” used to be an American proposition, equivalent to the assertion of an imaginative statement. “Few poisonous snakes in the Nilgherries,” is even stronger still.
 
{{Style P-Signature in capitals|Carter Blake.}}
 
London, March 12th, 1878.





Revision as of 08:11, 6 March 2024

vol. 7, p. 13
from Adyar archives of the International Theosophical Society
vol. 7 (March-September 1878)

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< Isis Unvelled and the Todas (continued from page 7-13) >

and the current authorities being on one side, and “H. M.” on the other, anthropologists may be able to draw their own conclusions as to the accuracy of statements which appear to be corroborated by those persons who are qualified to give evidence to scientific men as to points of Indian anthropology.

On a more particularly zoological subject I may note that Dr. Joseph Fayrer’s work, The Thanatophidia of India; being a Description of the Venomous Snakes of the Indian Peninsula, folio, Lond., 1872; and Dr. Albrecht Gurther’s Reptiles of British India, 8vo, Lond., 1864 (Ray Society’s publication), will tell inquirers whether a traveller in the Nilgherry hills, if he had eyes, would have seen more than “two kinds of snakes, and neither of them poisonous.” “No snakes in Virginny” used to be an American proposition, equivalent to the assertion of an imaginative statement. “Few poisonous snakes in the Nilgherries,” is even stronger still.

Carter Blake.

London, March 12th, 1878.



A Retrospective View of Spiritualism in 1877

...

<... continues on page 7-14 >



Editor's notes

  1. image by unknown author. colored picture
  2. A Retrospective View of Spiritualism in 1877 by unknown author
  3. image by unknown author. colored picture