the water,  with    head    like    an  inverted    copper  (kawah),”   where   the water   rushes
down    the fall    between the rocks.
The Hantu   Longgak^58  is  continually looking up  in  the air.    Those   who are
attacked    by  him foam    at  the mouth.
The Hantu   Rimba   (Deep-forest    Demon), Hantu   Raya^59     (“Great”    Demon), Hantu
Dĕnei   (Demon  of  Wild-beast-tracks), the Hantu-hantuan   (Echo-spirits), and I
think   the Hantu   Bakal,  are all spirits of  the jungle, but are perhaps somewhat    less
localised   than    the large   class   of  spirits (such   as  the Malacca-cane,   gharu,  gutta,
and camphor-tree    spirits)    which   are specially   associated  with    particular  trees.
The Hantu   B’rok   is  the Baboon  Demon   (the    B’rok   being   what    is  generally   called
the “cocoa-nut  monkey,”    a   sort    of  big baboon);    it  is  sometimes   supposed    to  take
possession  of  dancers,    and enable  them,   whilst  unconscious,    to  perform
wonderful   climbing    feats.
The Hantu   Bĕlian, according   to  many    Selangor    Malays, is  a   tiger-spirit    which
takes   the form    of  a   bird.   This    bird    is  said    to  be  not unlike  the raquet-tailed   king-
crow    (chĕnchawi),    and to  sit on  the tiger’s back;   whence  it  plucks  out the tiger’s
fur and swallows it, never allowing it to fall to the ground.^60
The Hantu   Songkei^61  is  the spirit  who so  often   interferes  with    the toils   for
catching    wild    animals and snares  for wildfowl    (yang   kachau  jaring  dan rachik).
He  is  described   as  being   invisible   below   the breast, with    a   nose    of  enormous
length, and eye-sockets stretched   sideways    to  such    an  extent  that    he  can see all
round   him.
The following charm is recited in order to “neutralise” his evil influence:—
Peace   be  with    you,    grandson    of  the Spectre Huntsman,
Whose   Dwelling-place  is  a   solitary    patch   of  primeval    forest,
Whose   Chair   is  the nook    between the buttresses  (of trees),
Whose   Leaning-post    the wild    Areca-palm,
Whose   Roof    the (leaves of  the)    Tukas,
Whose   Body-hairs  are leaves  of  the Rĕsam,
Whose   Mattress    leaves  of  the Lerek,
Whose   Swing   the (tree)  Mĕdang  Jĕlawei,
