beasts  of  prey.   This    wall,   however,    is  being   bored   through by  people  called
Yajuj   and Majuj   (Gog    and Magog), and when    they    succeed in  their   task    the end
of  all things  will    come.   Besides these   mountains   which   surround    the earth   there
is  a   great   central mountain    called  Mahameru    (Saguntang  Maha    Biru,   or  merely
Saguntang-guntang).^2   In  many    Malay   stories this    hill    Mahameru    is  identified
with    Saguntang-guntang   on  the borders of  Palembang   in  Sumatra.
The account which   I   shall   now give,   however,    differs considerably    from    the
preceding.  It  was taken   down    by  me  from    an  introduction    to  a   Malay   charm-
book    belonging   to  a   magician    (one    ʿAbdul  Razzak  of  Klang   in  Selangor),  with
whom    I   was acquainted, but who,    though  he  allowed me  to  copy    it, would   not
allow me either to buy or borrow the book:^3 —
“In the days    when    Haze    bore    Darkness,   and Darkness    Haze,   when    the Lord    of
the Outer   Silence Himself was yet in  the womb    of  Creation,   before  the existence
of  the names   of  Earth   and Heaven, of  God and Muhammad,   of  the Empyrean
and Crystalline spheres,    or  of  Space   and Void,   the Creator of  the entire  Universe
pre-existed by  Himself,    and He  was the Eldest  Magician.   He  created the Earth   of
the width   of  a   tray    and the Heavens of  the width   of  an  umbrella,   which   are the
universe    of  the Magician.   Now from    before  the beginning   of  time    existed that
Magician—that   is, God—and He  made    Himself manifest    with    the brightness  of
the moon    and the sun,    which   is  the token   of  the True    Magician.”
The account proceeds    to  describe    how God “created    the pillar  of  the Kaʿbah,^4
which   is  the Navel   of  the Earth,  whose   growth  is  comparable  to  a   Tree,   ... whose
branches    are four    in  number, and are called, the first,  ‘Sajeratul  Mentahar,’  and
the second  ‘Taubi,’    and the third,  ‘Khaldi,’   and the fourth  ‘Nasrun ʿAlam,’
which   extend  unto    the north,  south,  east,   and west,   where   they    are called  the
Four    Corners of  the World.”
Next    we  read    that    the word    of  God Almighty    came    in  secret  to  Gabriel,    saying,
“Take   me  down    the iron    staff   of  the ‘Creed’ which   dangles at  the gate    of  heaven,
and kill    me  this    serpent Sakatimuna.”^5  Gabriel did so, and the serpent brake
asunder,    the head    and forepart    shooting    up  above   the heavens,    and the tail    part
penetrating downwards   beneath the earth.^6    The rest    of  the account is  taken   up
with    a   description,    that    need    not here    be  repeated,   of  the transformation  of  all the
various parts   of  the serpent’s   anatomy,    which   are represented as  turning with    a
