The Cobra said, “I drink it nowhere whatever. In this drought where is there water for anyone to drink?”
Again the Polan̆gā said, “Friend, do not you say so; you have drunk. Tell me also the quarter where you drink.”
After the Cobra had continued not telling it, it afterwards said, “At such and such a house a little child is playing and playing with the water in the bowl. Having gone there, as I drink the water the child throws water on my head with the coconut shell, and strikes me with hand and foot. Not becoming angry at all, I drink and come away. You, indeed, will be unable [to restrain yourself]. If you can [remain] without doing anything [to the child], go and drink, and come away.”
The Cobra having sent the Polan̆gā, went behind, and having got hid, while it remained looking on [the child] throws water on the [Polan̆gā’s] head with the coconut shell, and strikes it with hand and foot. Until the time when the Polan̆gā drinks its belly full, it remains doing nothing [to the child]. After it drank it bit the crown of the child’s head. At the blow the child fell into the bowl as though dead.
The Cobra having come running, sucked the poison from the crown of the child’s head, and having made it conscious pursued after the Polan̆gā. Having joined the Polan̆gā it bit and killed it.
From that day the Cobra and Polan̆gā are opposed.
North-western Province.
The Widow and the Mungus
I have not met with this tale as a true village folk-story, but it was related as one of the episodes in the series of tales included under the title of “The Four Paṇḍitayās,” in which various stories were told in order to induce a King not to execute the youngest Paṇḍitayā for wiping off the Queen’s body a drop of blood which fell on her at night when he cut in two a cobra that was about to bite the King. The whole story is an Indian one.