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COCKATRICE , a fabulous See also: monster, the existence of which was firmly believed in throughout See also: ancient and See also: medieval times,—descriptions and figures of it appearing in the natural See also: history See also: works of such writers as See also: Pliny and Aldrovandus, those of the latter published so See also: late as the beginning of the 17th century
.
Produced from a See also: cock's See also: egg hatched by a serpent, it was believed to possess the most deadly See also: powers, See also: plants withering at its touch, and men and animals dying poisoned by its look
.
It stood in
See also: awe, however, of the cock, the See also: sound of whose crowing killed it, and consequently travelers were wont to take this See also: bird with them in travelling over regions supposed to abound in cockatrices
.
The See also: weasel alone among mammals was unaffected by the glance of its evil See also: eye, and attacked it at all times successfully; for when wounded by the monster's teeth it found a ready remedy in rue—the only plant which the cockatrice could not See also: wither
.
This myth reminds one of the real contests between the weasel-like mungoos of See also: India and the deadly See also: cobra, in which the latter is generally killed
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The See also: term " cockatrice " is employed on four occasions in the See also: English See also: translation of the See also: Bible, in all o1 which it denotes nothing more than an exceedingly venomous reptile; it seems also to be synonymous with " basilisk," the mythical See also: king of serpents
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