Fascinating! I never knew that Krishna departed his incarnation that way. I am 
reminded of the similarity to the Greek hero Achilles who was killed by an 
arrow to his heel. Perhaps that too was a poison arrow.

Max



Novels by Max and/or Ariana Overton (www.maxoverton.com)

The Lion of Scythia Trilogy - EPPIE winners 2005 and 2006
The Glass House Trilogy (Eppie finalists), A Cry of Shadows, The Devil is in 
the Details,  Trapdoor, Tapestry
Scarab - Akhenaten (Book 1 of the Amarnan Kings), Scarab - Smenkhkare (Book 2 
of the Amarnan Kings),
Scarab - Tutankhamen (Book 3 of the Amarnan Kings), Rakshasa, Glass Continuum, 
Ascension
Works in Progress: Scarab - Ay, and Scarab - Horemheb (Books 4 & 5 of the 
Amarnan Kings), Djinn



From: Anand Kumar Bhatt 
Sent: Monday, January 12, 2009 1:05 AM
To: indiantreepix 
Subject: [indiantreepix:7466] poison arrows and Vishkanyas


This is the sequel to Poisonous Plants of India. Hope you will like it. 
Best wishes,
akbhatt
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



Poison Arrows and Vishkanyas



Krishna was sitting under  a peepal tree. He was old and tired. Some say he was 
120+ at that time, but in any case he must have been in late eighties at that 
time. He had lost everything. His kingdom was under the sea (Tsunami?), and the 
womenfolk of his community were snatched away by robbers right under the eyes 
of Arjun, his dearest friend,  as he could not string his bow Gandiv: he had 
become so feeble in old age. And then his clan in a drunken brawl had been 
entirely annihilated. He sat with his sole turned up. And this was mistaken by 
a bahelia (A person who hunts for a living) for a deer or any other small 
animal, and he shot an arrow. Well, that killed Krishna who had won the battle 
of Kurukshetra. Why should he have did of a simple arrow shot in a non-vital 
organ. Well, it is said that it was a poison arrow, and very soon the blood 
took the lethal poison to different parts of the body, and he could not be 
saved. One can say that otherwise also Krishna had nothing to look forward to, 
and the death at that juncture was the most appropriate ending to the great 
tragedy of Mahabharat .



One has also read in Mahabharat and elsewhere about amogh astras (invincible 
weapons). In 1500 B.C. what could they be? It was certainly not agnibaan as it 
was already known.  Arrow-head made of some hard metal, sharpened like a razor? 
Or, what my guess is (yes, it is all a guesswork) that it was poison arrow with 
venom which did not have an antidote. Lakhman became unconscious when hit by a 
strange new weapon of Meghnad. It could be a poison whose only  antidote was 
the Sanjivani herb. A natural corollary is that all the weapons which one got 
with great difficulty from some deity who had developed it were arrows with 
arrowheads or darts slaked in a venom for which there was no known antidote 
aailable. It is interesting to note all such prized weapons were arrows, and 
not  mace or sword. It had to be a sharp projectile, capable of covering some 
distance. 



Poison arrows have been used in South America, Africa and Asia. The venom was 
either animal-derived or plant-derived. In South America, tribals dipped the 
blowgun darts in the poison made from the skin of three species of Phyllobates, 
a genus of poison dart frogs. The poison is collected by roasting the frogs 
over fire. 



Plant-derived poisons are generally known as  curare. Greeks and Trojans used 
poison arrows and spears during the Trojan war. Alexander faced poison arrows 
during his conquests in India, and maybe he died of a festering wound caused by 
such an arrow (in his thigh, I think). Curare is a generic term for 
arrow-poisons that contain D-tubocurarine. This is found in the bark of the 
trees strychnos toxifera, S. guianensis, chondrodendron tometosum or 
sciadotenia toxifera. This is muscle-relaxant, paralyzing the respiratory 
system and thus bringing about asphyxiation. In Africa arrow poison is made 
from Nerium oleander.In the jungle areas of Assam and other north eastern 
states, Burma and Malaysia poison arrows  are widely used and the poison is 
Antiaris toxicana strychnos and strophathus geneara. Aconite is used by Minaro 
tribe in Ladakh for hunting Ibex, and also by the Bhutia and Lepchas of Sikkim 
and Assam.



So as you see, in olden times, even the so-called advanced people like Greeks 
and Indians used poison arrows. And it was of course very commonly used by 
various tribes all over. 



And now to Vishkanyas. I am afraid I didn't get enough material on it. 
Beautiful girls were chosen from very young days to be Vishkanyas. They were 
given snake venom in small doses from the childhood, which was gradually 
increased. An adult girl was made to be bitten by venomous snakes, maybe more 
than once in the day and gradually her body became so venomous that conjugal or 
salivary contact with her proved fatal to the partner. Somewhere I read that 
the girls were administered sankhia (which I think is arsenic).  But arsenic is 
not that instantaneous in its effect. Somewhere I also read that the vishkanyas 
die after once biting the targeted person. It is difficult to believe, because 
human body should not behave like that of a bee and a snake can bite any number 
of times. I remember a novel by Acharya Chatursen Shastri in which a Vishkanya 
was able to kill a number of people in one night of 'orgy'. But that was 
fiction. Chanakya is reputed to have used vishkanyas for killing the enemies of 
Chandragupta. Somebody advised that I would get a lot of material in 
'Chandrakanta Santati' by Devakinandan Khatri. I got the novel. It is in 6 
parts, and needs some patience to go through. If I learn something, I will 
certainly let you know.  



We talked about the snake venom and snake bite, so it is worthwhile knowing 
about poisonous snakes of India in a few sentences. So far as I remember there 
are very few poisonous snakes: cobra, king cobra, viper and Krait. They have 
venom glands and it is injected through their specialized teeth (fangs) in a 
syringe-like action to the prey or the being defended against. A combination 
(polyvalent) anti venom is available (or should be available) in the hospitals 
which acts against almost all the snake venom. According to Daniel, death 
occurs quickly in cobra and krait poisoning, and delayed in viper bites. But if 
in the bite any vein is ruptured death may occur within 15 minutes in  either 
case.  



People cry hoarse now against biological warfare, battles are waged, kingdoms 
fall and rulers hanged. But use of poison to kill one's enemies has been there 
from pre-historic days. Not that there is any justification for either.  

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~








-- 
Anand Kumar Bhatt
A-59, B.S.F.Colony, Airport Road 
Gwalior. 474 005.
Tele: 0751-247 2233. Mobile 0 94253 09780.




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