DHARAMPAL • COLLECTED WRITINGS

(Sean Pound) #1

and noted the number of women-midwives (there is not a man-
midwife in the country) in the villages of Nattore, and find that
they amount to 297. They are no doubt sufficiently ignorant, as
are probably the majority of women-midwives at home.


Still lower than the village doctors there is a numerous
class of pretenders who go under the general name of conjurors
or charmers. The largest division of this class are the snake-
conjurors, their number in the single police sub-division of
Nattore being not less than 722. There are few villages without
one, and in some villages there are as many as ten. I could, if it
were required, indicate the villages and the number in each; but
instead of incumbering Table I with such details, I have judged it
sufficient to state the total number in this place. They profess to
cure the bites of poisonous snakes by incantations or charms. In
this districts, particularly during the rainy season, snakes are
numerous and excite much terror among the villagers. Nearly
the whole district forming, it is believed, an old bed of the
Ganges, lies very low; and the rapid increase of the waters
during the rainy season drives the land-snakes from their holes,
and they seek refuge in the houses of the inhabitants, who hope
to obtain relief from their bites by the incantations of the
conjurors. These take nothing for the performance of their rites,
or for the cures they pretend to have performed. All is pecuniar-
ily gratuitous to the individual but they have substantial advan-
tages which enable them to be thus liberal. When the
inhabitants of a village hitherto without a conjuror think that
they can afford to have one, they invite a professor of the art
from a neighbouring village where there happens to be one to
spare, and give him a piece of land and various privileges and
immunities. He possesses great influence over the inhabitants. If
a quarrel takes place, his interference will quell it sooner than
that of any one else; and when he requires the aid of his
neighbours in cultivating his plot of ground or in reaping its
produce, it is always more readily given to him than to others.
The art is not hereditary in a family or peculiar to any caste. One
I met with was a boatman, another a chowkidar and a third a
weaver. Whoever learns the charm may practise it, but it is
believed that those who practise it most successfully are ‘to the
manner born’, that is, who have been born under a favourable
conjunction of the planets. Every conjuror seems to have a
separate charm, for I have found no two the same. They do not
object to repeat it merely for the gratification of curiosity, and
they allow it to be taken down in writing. Neither do they appear
to have any mutual jealously, each readily allowing the virtue of
other incantations than his own.

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