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Anonymous

"The Story of Ida Pfeiffer and Her Travels in Many Lands"

Recourse is not unfrequently
had to poison, which is used as a kind of ordeal or test. This is
applicable to all classes; and as any one may accuse another, on
depositing a certain sum of money,--and as, moreover, no accused person
is allowed to defend himself,--the ordeal does not fall into disrepute
for want of use. If the accused endures it without perishing, a third
part of the deposit is awarded to him, a third part goes to the court,
and the remainder is returned to the accuser. But if the accused die,
his guilt is considered to have been established, and the accuser
receives back the whole of his money.
The poisoning process takes place as follows:--
The material employed is obtained from the kernel of a fruit as large as
a peach, called the _Tanghinia venenifera_. The lampi-tanghini, or
person who administers the poison, announces to the accused the day on
which the perilous dose is to be swallowed. For eight-and-forty hours
before the prescribed time he is allowed to eat very little, and for the
last twenty-four hours nothing at all. His friends accompany him to the
poisoner's house. There he undresses, and takes oath that he has had no
recourse to magic. The lampi-tanghini then scrapes away as much powder
from the kernel with a knife as he judges necessary for the trial. Before
administering the dose, he asks the accused if he confesses his crime;
which the accused never does, because under any circumstances he would
have to swallow the poison.


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