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    Chapter 3

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    They Pass Through The Woods

    Refreshed by our stay in the grove, we rose, and placed ourselves
    under the guidance of Mohi; who went on in advance.

    Winding our way among jungles, we came to a deep hollow, planted with
    one gigantic palm-shaft, belted round by saplings, springing from its
    roots. But, Laocoon-like, sire and sons stood locked in the serpent
    folds of gnarled, distorted banians; and the banian-bark, eating into
    their vital wood, corrupted their veins of sap, till all those palm-
    nuts were poisoned chalices.

    Near by stood clean-limbed, comely manchineels, with lustrous leaves
    and golden fruit. You would have deemed them Trees of Life; but
    underneath their branches grew no blade of grass, no herb, nor moss;
    the bare earth was scorched by heaven's own dews, filtrated through
    that fatal foliage.

    Farther on, there frowned a grove of blended banian boughs, thick-
    ranked manchineels, and many a upas; their summits gilded by the sun;
    but below, deep shadows, darkening night-shade ferns, and mandrakes.
    Buried in their midst, and dimly seen among large leaves, all halberd-
    shaped, were piles of stone, supporting falling temples of bamboo.
    Thereon frogs leaped in dampness, trailing round their slime. Thick
    hung the rafters with lines of pendant sloths; the upas trees dropped
    darkness round; so dense the shade, nocturnal birds found there
    perpetual night; and, throve on poisoned air. Owls hooted from dead
    boughs; or, one by one, sailed by on silent pinions; cranes stalked
    abroad, or brooded, in the marshes; adders hissed; bats smote the
    darkness; ravens croaked; and vampires, fixed on slumbering lizards,
    fanned the sultry air.
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