This is one of the largest species of Python, some specimens being known which measured about 30 feet in length.
Fig. 157.–Python spilotes (the Carpet Snake). × ⅛.
As a sample of folk-lore connected with this monstrous snake the following Burmese fable has been recorded by Mason:–[[184]]
"According to a Karen legend all the poisonous serpents derive their virulence from the Python, which, though innocuous now, was originally the only one that was venomous. In those days he was perfectly white, but having seduced away a man's wife, Aunt Eu (Eve), he made her, while she was in his den, weave figures on his skin in the forms which are now seen. At that time, if he bit the footstep of a man in the road, such was the virulence of his poison that the man died, how far soever that man might have passed from the bitten track. The Python had not, however, an ocular demonstration of the fact, so he said to the Crow: 'Crow, go and see whether people die or not when I bite the foot-track.' The Crow went to the neighbourhood of a Karen cabin, and found the people, as is their custom at funerals, laughing, singing, dancing, jumping, and beating drums. He therefore returned to the Python, and told him that so far from his efforts producing death, on the contrary they produced joy. The Python was so angry when he heard this that he ascended a tree and spit up all his venom, but other creeping things came and swallowed it, and people die of their malignancy to this day. The tree, therefore, from which the Python spat up his venom became deadly, and its juice is used to this day for the purpose of poisoning arrows. The Python made the other creatures promise not to bite without provocation. The Cobra said: 'If there be transgression so as to dazzle my eyes, to make my tears fall seven times in one day, I will bite.' So said the Tiger (whose bite the Karens esteem as virulent as a serpent's) and others, and they were allowed to retain their poison. But the Water Snake and Frog said they would bite with or without cause as they liked; so the Python drove them into the water, where their poison melted away and their bite became harmless."
Fig. 158.–Python molurus. × ⅒.
P. molurus is the species of India and Ceylon, ranging, however, also into Indo-China. Boulenger quotes W. Elliot[[185]] as the authority for the statement that this species grows to the length of 30 feet. Only two pairs of upper labials are pitted. The general colour above is greyish or yellowish brown with a dorsal series of large reddish-brown, black-edged patches, and on the sides of the body with a series of smaller spots with light centres. On the head is a lance-shaped marking; a brown stripe passes from the eye backwards. The under parts are yellowish.
P. sebae and P. regius are African species. The former has two pairs of upper labials pitted, the latter four pairs. P. sebae is generally pale brown above with dark brown, black-edged cross-bars, which are usually connected by a sinuous dark stripe along each side of the back. The upper surface of the tail has a light stripe between two black stripes. The belly is spotted and dotted with dark brown. P. sebae ranges over the whole of Tropical and Southern Africa, perhaps with the exception of Eastern Africa. P. regius of West Africa is beautifully marked, and may be recognised by the dark brown, black-edged band along the back, sending down triangular or Y-shaped processes on the sides, which are pale brown. This dorsal band encloses a light streak on the neck and another on the tail. The belly is yellowish.
These African Pythons grow to a length of about 15 feet, but specimens so large as this are not often met with. The negroes of certain parts of the coast of Guinea are said to worship them and to keep them in special temples, where they are regularly attended to. Their food consists chiefly of small Mammals, notably rats, and of Birds. A couple of these snakes paired in the Zoological Gardens of London in the month of June. The female laid nearly one hundred eggs in the following January, and incubated them until April, when the embryos were found to be still unripe.