“An eminent murderer has remarked that if people did not die so untidily, most men, and all women, would commit at least one murder in their lives.? [from “The Record Of Badalia Herodsfoot?.]Murder
“A native woman was found, this afternoon, lying with her throat cut, in the compound of the Civil and Military Gazette Office. The police are endeavouring to find some clue to the murder.?Accidental Death
As a result of this Kipling is thought to have written the verses “A Murder In The Compound? (Echoes - 1884).
“beams and earth lying three and four feet deep and a heap of smashed beds and three swathed figures on the cots, the sound of the midwives who had laid them out, whispering together, and the smell - the death smell of carbolic acid.?Kipling had known one of those killed, a boy of eighteen, only a few years younger than he was. He went back to the office where he “unburdened(his) soul and was violently sick?and spent “as unpleasant a night as you’d hope for in another and worse world?.He went on to say:
“Disease and deaths from disease I can stand because I’ve seen both often and it’s in the working of life but an accident like this one is horrible - ghastly- unnatural - and I would, if I could, avoid it.?Decapitation
[Information from Thomas Pinney, editor, The Letters of Rudyard Kipling, Vol.1, p.131-2.]
“Tom heaved Badalia against the bed. Her forehead struck the bed-post, and she sank, half-kneeling, on the floor....Tom kicked with the deadly intelligence born of whisky. The head drooped to the floor, and Tom kicked at that till the crisp tingle of hair striking through his nailed boot with the chill of cold water, warned him that it might be as well to desist?.A few minutes later, when Jenny bends over Badalia, “there was intelligence in the battered woman’s eyes - intelligence and much hate?. But Badalia is able to convey to Jenny, with her eyes, that she does not want Tom arrested.
“...Aunty Rosa had told him, a year ago, that if he sucked paint he would die. He went into the nursery, unearthed the now disused Noah’s Ark and sucked the paint off as many animals as remained. It tasted abominable, but he had licked Noah’s Dove clean by the time Aunty Rosa and Judy returned.?In 1894, Kipling’s aunt, Louisa Baldwin, sent his daughter, Josephine, a Noah’s Ark. Kipling “sucked the moo-cow hard?to remove the paint, but couldn’t get it all off so, to avoid the risk of lead poisoning, his father varnished all one hundred and twenty six animals. [Information from Thomas Pinney, editor, The Letters of Rudyard Kipling, Vol.2, p.130.]
“For the juice of that herb.... burns, blisters and wries the mouth. I know also the rictus, or pseudo-laughter, on the face of such as have perished by the strong poisons of herbs allied to this ranunculus?.John of Burgos says that when he was a boy in a convent he had made tetters round his mouth and on his neck with buttercup juice, to save having to go to prayers on cold nights. Of buttercups and their kin, David Bellamy has written:
“This is a family not to be messed about with: handling even the commonest of Buttercups can irritate the skin and cause sores. Beggars used to employ its poisons to give themselves rashes and blisters in order to gain pity and alms.? [Information from David Bellamy, Blooming Bellamy: Herbs and Herbal Healing, BBC Books, 1993, p.62-3.]Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
“the fumes of a charcoal brazier in a badly ventilated room have often caused death. When asphyxia is due to charcoal fumes, coal gas and other narcotic influences, death ensues gently and may occur in the course of sleep.?Carbon monoxide in itself is a colourless, odourless gas with an affinity for haemoglobin 300 times that of oxygen; as a result of the conversion of haemoglobin to carboxyhaemoglobin the oxygen-carrying power of the arterial blood is diminished and hypoxia results. Carbon monoxide may also have a direct toxic effect on cardiac muscle. [Information from Henry Matthew and AAH Lawson, Treatment of Common Acute Poisonings, 3rd edition, Churchill Livingstone, 1975, p.57.]
“The hook had fouled among a bunch of strawberries, red on one side and white on the other - perfect reproductions of the land fruit, except that there were no leaves, and the stem was all pipy and slimy.?When he touched them “his fingers throbbed as though he had grasped many nettles?.
“...And ship our masks in case of gasIn “The Janeites?, (1924), Humberstall and Macklin refixed sand-bag screens to the dug-out passage in case of gas.
Beyond Gethsemane..."
(from “Gethsemane?(1919)
“And Death is in the Garden,In “Reingelder and The German Flag? (1889) Reingelder and Hans Breitmann were collecting orchids and coral snakes in Uruguay. Reingelder examined a live snake called the 'German Flag', (so called because it was marked with the colours of the old Imperial German Ensign). Yates, an authority on the reptilia of South America, had written that it was not provided with poison-glands. The snake bit Reingelder. His companion, Breitmann, later told the Narrator how he had advised tying up the bitten arm, and told Rheingelder to drink as much whisky as he could, saying it happened before they knew the benefits of permanganate-potash injections. Reingelder’s arm became numb up to his collar-bone, and he developed symptoms of strychnine poisoning. “He vas doubled into big knots, und den undoubled, und den redoubled mooch worse dan pefore, und he frothed.?Breitmann thought he was unconscious as he didn’t answer his questions. Reingelder died having “wrop himself oop in von dremendous knot?.
A-waiting till we pass,
For the Krait is in the drain-pipe,
The Cobra in the grass !?
[from Nursery Rhymes For Little Anglo-Indians.(1884)
“There is immediate pain at the site of the bite. Faintness, loss of power in the legs, drowsiness, and sometimes nausea and vomiting, come next. Then the breathing becomes short and laboured, the pulse quick and irregular, the powers of speech and swallowing are lost, the tongue protrudes, and frothy saliva issues from the mouth. There are muscular twitchings, followed by loss of power to move the limbs. Cold sweats and convulsions often succeed, and the patient, becoming insensible, sinks, sometimes in a few hours.?William Moore advised tying a tight bandage around the bitten limb, a few inches above the bite. Then “the wound should be well sucked?. Afterwards four or five punctures should be made with a sharp knife one across each bite and the others a quarter of an inch or so from the bite. If this was not possible he recommended that a live coal or stick, a red-hot iron wire, or a drop of nitric or carbolic acid, or a solution of permanganate of potash, be passed into the wounds. Bleeding was then encouraged by immersing the limb in hot water. The strongest stimulant to hand, brandy, whisky, rum, wine, sal volatile or liquor ammoniae was to be given at once and repeated every 15 minutes, “until the first depressing efffect of the poison subsides?. He went on to advise that forest officers and others exposed to the danger of snakebite keep a supply of antivenin to hand. “Injected freely and at once it may neutralise the poison and save life.?
“in real life, as distinguished from romance, snakes are so seldom seen that no one who does not make a study of them can know one from another...I slay a poisonous snake when and where I find it, and if there is any doubt about its being poisonous, I slay it to settle the matter....a strong, supple walking cane is the prime weapon for encountering snakes.’ [Information from EHA, The Tribes On My Frontier, Thacker & Spink, 5th edition, 1892, p.197-8.In “Rikki-Tikki-Tavi?, (1893), there is a krait, and two cobras with a nest of 25 eggs, in the garden. Rikki-Tikki, the mongoose, kills the krait, almost kills Nag, the male cobra, (shot by Teddy’s father), destroys the eggs and eventually kills Nagaina, the female cobra. The common Indian mongoose, although naturally ferocious, is easily tamed and is a common household pet in India. It is famous as a destroyer of vermin and will attack and kill even the formidable cobra. It is not immune to snake venom but depends on its agility to avoid being bitten. [Information from Chambers’s Encyclopaedia, 1959, Vol.9, p.494(b).]
“was stung on the hand by a snake - a little snake that bit at me three times and on the string after many unpleasant matters followed the sickness of death which you have described. It was all I could do to wake and when awake to persuade myself that I had not been stung. I was sweating with apprehension and as wearied as though I had in real truth gone through the deadly faintness. Wasn’t that funny ? I wish I had written of it then.? [Information from Thomas Pinney, editor, The Letters of Rudyard Kipling, Vol.1, p.260.]At some time Kipling must have been present when somebody was bitten by a snake. He recorded, in Brazilian Sketches, how, in 1927, when he was in Brazil, some of the models in the museum at the snake farm brought back to him:
“the memory of a night when a half-fainting man’s leg was examined by matchlight for certain signs, and he broke into helpless tears on being told that he would live.?The bites of poisonous snakes, as a rule, show two marks. When there are more than two marks, it may be safely assumed that the reptile was not poisonous, or that the wound has not been inflicted by the poison-fangs. [Information from William Moore, A Manual of Family Medicine and Hygiene for India, reprint Delhi 1989, 6th edition 1893, p.538.]
“Time and time over we let them go;In Brazilian Sketches (1927), Kipling recorded how he was shown around a snake farm. This was where snakes were kept and their venom extracted and used to produce an antivenom serum. The snakes were brought in by collectors and farmers, who in return would be given a dose of serum in case they were bitten. The snakes were never fed because hunger apparently made the venom more poisonous. Kipling noted that the most effective serum was that made from the same type of snake as bit a person, but as people usually didn’t know what type of snake it was, a ‘general’ serum was made. He gave a detailed description of how anti-venom was made. When it was administered to a person who had been bitten:
Hearing and slipping aside;
Until they followed and troubled us - so
We struck back, and they died.
"Poison of asps is under our lips??
Why do you wrench them apart?
To learn how the venom makes and drips
And works its way to the heart?
[from “Poison Of Asps? (1927).]
“every muscle and nerve and blood corpuscle may be involved, as well as other powers that we know not of ; but normally, after the throes and disintegrations, the body recovers and - since it is sister to the soul - throws off and puts behind it in a very little while all that nightmare of experiences in restored health. But, they say, the process is not a pleasant one to watch; and men are thinking and working all their lives to make it less vehement.?Antivenins may still provoke serious allergic reactions which may be fatal. They are still prepared much as Kipling described, using horse serum. No antiserum effective against all venoms is available because of the great immunological differences in the venoms of the snakes of different continents. The custom is for each country to prepare antisera able to neutralise the venoms of the indigenous snakes. In the Indian subcontinent an antiserum is prepared to neutralise the venoms of the krait, cobra, Russell’s viper, and the saw-scaled viper. [Information from Martindale’s Extra Pharmacopoeia, The Pharmaceutical Press, 25th edition, 1967, p.1485.]
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Accidental death| Decapitation| Mummification| Lightning Another case of accidental death| Violent death| Undetected murder ? Poisoning by Dhatura| Poisoning with arsenic| Indian Hemp poisoning Opium poisoning| Lead poisoning| Poison from stinging plants Carbon monoxide poisoning| Poison gas| Snakebite
[June 23 2004] |