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- Subject: Sauroids and Reptillians (1/3)
- Lines: 373
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- (INPUT 001)
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- In the June, 1948 issue of AMAZING STORIES Magazine, pp. 158-190,
- 'Chief Sequoyah' related the following account, which appeared
- under the title: 'SPIRIT OF THE SERPENT GOD':
- "Somewhere in the mountains of Oregon there is a hidden cave
- with a small stream flowing from its mouth. Within the cave lies
- a vast hoard of gold and jewelry surrounded by the crumbling
- bones of an ancient tribe of Indians. But watching over both,
- guarding them against theft by white man and hostile Indian
- alike, hovers the terrible spirit of the great serpent. He has
- already wreaked death upon intruders...
- "My own father told me this story, and his father told him,
- and for uncounted generations it has been a legend of our tribe
- which lived along the coastline of Oregon and northern
- California. My father was a medicine man and he knew the ancient
- legends well.
- "White people today have been taught to regard the serpent
- as the Devil himself, or at any rate his chief emissary on earth.
- "...Now in the east, far east of the mountains in the great
- plains, there was an Indian chieftain named Blue Eagle who had
- violated the sacred laws of his tribe, They did not kill Blue
- Eagle, because the tribe did not believe in the death penalty.
- Instead they banished him and all his belongings and his family
- forever from the plains. Westward they went, over the plains,
- the deserts, the mountains, and ultimately the clan came to the
- Oregon shore. Here they settled and after hundreds of years they
- became a great tribe. They prospected and mined gold and made
- golden ornaments and vessels of shining yellow metal.
- "But the curse of the first Chief Blue Eagle's evil deeds
- came at last to rest upon his children. An epidemic of disease
- hit the tribe at the height of its strength. Enemy tribes they
- could fight, and strong wild beasts of the mountains, but they
- could not fight this sickness. They died like mayflies in the
- early spring, men and women and children. They fell so fast that
- there were not enough well men and women to bury the dead. How
- could their spirits and their precious belongings be committed to
- the 'care' of the serpent god (which they worshipped) if graves
- could not be dug for them?
- "The medicine man called a last council of all the men in
- the tribe who could summon strength to attend. 'We are doomed,'
- he told them. 'The spirits of evil who roam the earth have fixed
- their eyes upon our spirits and our possessions. We must entrust
- them to the care of the serpent god.'
- "Since they believed thay had no hope in life, they decided
- that all they could do would be to protect themselves in death.
- They gathered their riches and precious belongings and their
- kinfolk and held sacred rites before the mouth of a cave in the
- mountainside. In the ceremony, the medicine man instructed the
- serpent to guard over the cave. Then they entered the cave with
- their belongings, and as each of them died in the cave, the
- spirit of the dead brave would enter into the serpent so that he
- would become the stronger to guard it. As a final protection, a
- landslide was started which closed the cave for hundreds of
- years.
- "A special curse was placed against any white man who might
- find the cave, and the serpent god who guarded it was enjoined to
- protect it especially against men of white skin. If a white man
- were to enter the cave, he must die by the strength of the great
- serpent. 'No other man but a Red Man, and one with the heart of
- the Red Man, can use the contents of the secret cave, and then
- only for the benefit of the Red Man'--so ran the injunction of
- the serpent god....
- "This was the legend. Now what has happened to the cave and
- its contents?
- "I have heard many stories of people finding the cave and
- never having been seen since (Note: whether these people were
- gold-hungry or whether they were innocent curiosity seekers,
- didn't seem to matter, if they were white and they entered the
- cave the chances were they never came out - Branton). I have
- tried to trace many of these stories down to find out what truth
- there may be to them and to the curse of the great serpent. I
- have not been able to verify any of these stories--except one.
- "In the early days of the gold rush, three prospectors
- started north from California to explore the mountains of
- Southern Oregon. They came in with pack mules and mining
- equipment, provisioned for a long stay. They panned numerous
- streams on their way, searching for the precious yellow color of
- gold. They found it one day in a small creek running around the
- base of a mountain. Up stream and down stream they panned,
- searching for concentrations of the yellow stuff, but they found
- very little except at the mouth of a tiny stream which came into
- the creek out of a cave in the mountain.
- "These men were Peter Jackson, an old-time mountain man;
- Mike Burns, who spoke in a Scottish burr so rough it had knobs on
- it, and Jed O'Hara, part Spanish, part Irish, and a host of other
- mixtures. Jackson was a cold, hard character, experienced in the
- wilderness and not caring a damn for Indian or grizzly bear.
- Burns was easy-going but stubborn once he got on the trail of
- something. O'Hara apparently was a carefree, hard-working man
- when the mood was on him, a great whiskey drinker if there was
- any whiskey to be had, and undoubtedly the most emotional of the
- trio. He was the only one who could rightly be held to be a
- superstitious man, and as it turned out this characteristic was
- to save his life--what was left of it, that is.
- "Every evidence seemed to point to the fact that the tiny
- stream issuing from the cave mouth was the source of the color.
- Considering that fact, it is an odd thing that the three
- prospectors did not immediately begin to explore the cave.
- Instead they gave the larger creek a thorough going over, and
- even explored streams in neighboring valleys from their main camp
- near the cave. In view of what happened later, it is probable
- that O'Hara dissuaded his two companions from exploring the cave
- to any depth until it became evident that if they were to find
- any gold at all it would have to be within the cave.
- "As they sat around the campfire at dusk, they could see the
- mouth of the cave beckoning to them with its promise of gold, and
- yet at the same time coldly warning them to stay away. As
- darkness fell it might have looked like the black pit of hell
- itself to the superstitious Jed O'Hara, and we can imagine him
- staring at it until it became indistinguishable against the black
- cloak of night. Exactly why he was so reluctant to enter the
- cave we cannot say. It may have been the innate
- superstitiousness of his nature or it may have been that with his
- part Mexican-Spanish origins he understood enough of the Indian
- lingo to have heard some legend of the lost tribe of Chief Blue
- Eagle and of their guardian great serpent. But the decision had
- been made. They would explore the cave.
- "It may have been after troubled dreams that the trio awoke
- to the greatest day of their lives. They ate their broiled
- venison for breakfast in silence and after pipes they prepared
- pine torches and were ready for the trip. At the mouth of the
- cave they built a large fire, hoping to see it glimmering as a
- guide from the dark interior. The entrance was very narrow at
- its lower level, and nearly blocked by a huge boulder around
- which the stream had eroded a channel just wide enough for them
- to squeeze by one at a time.
- "The passage continued narrow for several hundred feet.
- Jackson, the largest of the three, was in the lead, with Burns
- following close behind and O'Hara brought up a somewhat reluctant
- rear. They had proceeded about 500 yards when they heard a loud
- hissing sound. They halted abruptly. Jackson started to say
- something when he felt soft wings brush past him and Burns chimed
- in with the reassuring words that it was just a bat. They moved
- ahead, always more slowly, held back by a growing dread of the
- unknown. It is hard to see ahead very far with the aid of a pine
- torch, even when it is held high above the head. The holder is
- illuminated far better than anything he tries to illuminate; he
- is, in short, a target.
- "Realizing this in the stygian blackness of the high-vaulted
- cavern, the three continued their ever more-reluctant advance.
- And then Jackson screamed in mortal fear. Almost instantly Burns
- too began to scream hoarsely. In the light of their falling
- torches, O'Hara saw that the two men ahead had turned to run. He
- also saw what they were fleeing--a huge coiled serpent with eyes
- glowing red in the reflected torch light, jaws agape. The
- fearful vision seemed to freeze O'Hara's brain with terror but
- his feet grew wings.
- "One evening, perhaps three months later, the prospectors in
- a mining camp were on their last round of drinks when a fantastic
- creature stumbled into the saloon. He appearance was enough to
- make even these rugged miners halt the glass on its way to their
- lips. His matted filthy beard was long, his eyes sunken, his
- cheeks the cheeks of a starving man. He was nearly naked, his
- clothes ripped off or worn off by the clawing branches and
- unfriendly rocks of Southern Oregon's mountains. This was what
- was left of Jed O'Hara.
- "It was possible to nurse his body back into a semblance of
- health, his mind never. When he was able to force words where
- only gibberish had come, and eventually to link words into rare
- sentences, there gradually emerged, piece by piece over the
- months, a story so obviously fantastic that the prospectors shook
- their heads and said that Jed O'Hara would never be the same
- again.
- "As for his story, prospectors knew better than to believe a
- madman's babblings about a giant snake as large around as a
- hogshead and as long as a pack rope. But on the other hand,
- there might be something to his confused tale (prospectors being
- what they are) about an ancient Indian treasure in a cave. Once
- several of them organized an expedition around poor old Jed and
- tried to find his cave. They had no luck with it.
- "People would have forgotten the story of Jed O'Hara and his
- lost partners and his snake if two Indian hunters hadn't stumbled
- onto an old camp in the mountains 40 years later. There were
- some rusty guns, a couple of old cast iron pots, and the rotted
- remains of other paraphernalia which suggested their owners had
- left in a hurry. And nearby there was a cave, with a tiny stream
- emerging from its mouth. The Indians decided to explore the
- cave. To their horror they found the bones of two men a short
- way inside. They did not go further.
- "When they told their story on the outside, a search party
- was formed to investigate the mystery. The Indians guided the
- party to the cave and its grisly remains. The remains of the
- hunting knives, a belt buckle and a few coins indicated that
- (they) were the bones of white men. But what were they doing
- here, and what had killed them? A rock fall had blocked off the
- cave so it would be hard to penetrate it much beyond the site
- where the two skeletons lay. But it did not seem in any way
- responsible for their deaths. A further mystery appeared when
- the bones were carried out of the cave. The ribs and upper
- spinal columns seemed literally pulverized by some mighty
- crushing force, as a vise. But no satisfactory answer was ever
- found by the white men. The bones were buried near the old camp
- site and for many years the Indians avoided the place.
- "Now the cave is lost again, perhaps covered by the heavy
- undergrowth in the hidden mountains, perhaps by a landslide. The
- Indian hunters who discovered it have long since gone to the
- happy hunting ground... I hope some day to rediscover it an put
- its riches to the use of my people."
-
- * * *
-
- (INPUT 002)
-
- John A. Keel, in his book 'THE EIGHTH TOWER' (pp. 97,119), in
- keeping with his in depth study of 'monstrology' or in more
- scientific terms 'cryptozoology', describes some of the 'monster'
- accounts he has come across describing hominoid beasts which
- reeked of sulfurous fumes:
- "...(An) important characteristics of our monsters is that
- they nearly always appear close to water--lakes, streams,
- reservoirs, swamps. This has stimulated some discussion that the
- creatures might be amphibians who actually live at the bottom of
- bodies of water and only rarely venture onto land. If this were
- actually the case, they shouldn't be so desperately in need of a
- bath. They might be scented with the odor of stagnant water.
- But hydrogen sulfide?
- "...Eager would-be UFO photographers the world over have
- been puzzled when their expensive cameras failed to function at
- the critical moment, returning to normal as soon as the UFO had
- soared out of view. Holiday (a researcher referred to earlier in
- his text - Branton) cites a number of instances in which this has
- occurred at Loch Ness. In some cases, the cameras seemed to
- work, but the developed film came out completely blank. This has
- also happened to innumerable UFO photographers (and) ghost
- hunters."
-
- * * *
-
- (INPUT 003)
-
- F. W. Holiday, in his book 'THE DRAGON AND THE DISK' (W.W. Norton
- & Co., Inc. New York, N.Y. 1973) relates some unusual facts
- concerning the relationship between serpent or 'dragon' legends
- and the modern 'UFO' phenomena:
-
- "...To introduce further unknowns when you have not
- satisfactorily dealt with the first one is not an ideal way of
- solving equations. However, the ancients leave us no option.
- For they considered the dragon in relation to an even more
- remarkable set of phenomena -- phenomena that have produced a
- greater amount of controversy within the last two decades than
- any other mystery known to the modern world. This is the riddle
- of the Flying Disk or U.F.O.
- "Thanks to an excellent analysis of French and Spanish cave-
- art by Aime Michel in 1969, we can now be quite certain that
- people of the Magdalenian culture... observed the same or very
- similar U.F.O. phenomena to those described by recent witnesses.
- We can be confident about this because the Magdalenians were
- without equal as artists in the world of prehistory as is proved
- by their superb coloured murals. When they sketched a Flying
- Disc, therefore - and hundreds are depicted in cave art - it
- seems obvious that they actually observed such objects just as
- they observed the horses depicted at Lascaux and the mammoths at
- Rouffignac. Discs are particularly plentiful in one of the most
- famous caves of the period - Altamira. These people painted not
- only bison, bears and other wildlife, but also 'flying saucers'.
- In chapter thirteen, 'THE SERPENT PEOPLE', Holiday begins
- with a quote from a poem by the black sorcerer Aleister Crowley:
- "'...It seemed to all of them as though the air grew thick
- and greasy; that of that slime were bred innumerable creeping
- things, monsters misshapen, abortions of dead paths of evolution,
- creatures which had not been found fit to live upon the earth and
- so had been cast off by her as excrement.'
- Crowley however did not hide the fact that he worshipped
- such 'excrement', as can be seen by his own degenerate existence
- as a sorcerer. Holiday continues:
- "Satanism - that is to say the religion of the
- dragon...seems to have been contemporaneous in BABYLON and Bronze
- Age Britain. In both countries it was probably practiced by
- minority groups and became official only in times of decadence.
- "When Cryus occupied Ur...a form of dragon-worship seems to
- have been in vogue. The priests of this cult escaped the
- Persians by fleeing north with their PONTIFF into the mountains
- of Asia Minor. They finally came to rest at a place called
- Pergamos in Lydia (western Turkey) and there set up a religious
- centre which became known as 'Satan's seat'. St. John said: 'And
- to the angel of the church of Pergamos, write: These things saith
- he [God] which hath the sharp sword with two edges [judgement and
- mercy]: I know they works, and where thou dwellest, EVEN
- where Satan's seat it...'
- "The Romans also knew about Satan's seat AND ANNEXED IT INTO
- THEIR EMPIRE IN 133 B.C. after the death of Attalus III, the last
- of the Pergamite kings. About this period A PLAGUE BROKE OUT IN
- ROME and prayers were offered to the Roman 'gods' in vain. It
- was decided, therefore, to appeal to Satan at Pergamos.
- "The symbol of the cult was A SERPENT and a special ship
- was sent to Lydia TO TRANSPORT THE GOD TO ROME. There it was
- installed as a deity with great pomp. The disease had probably
- run its course and the resulting improvement in public health was
- attributed to Satan. The new religion was so popular that snakes
- of inoffensive species were allowed to glide around at parties --
- at least so Seneca says. In HISTORIA AUGUSTA they are called
- DRACUNCULI or little dragons.
- "The Aesculapian Serpent - as the 'god' was called - is
- shown on a carving at Pompeii and is unlike anything known to
- herpetologists. It had vertical humps and snail-like horns,
- exactly like the monsters of Scotland and Ireland. A bronze
- Urarian cauldron in Rome carries the erect head and neck of the
- creature modelled in the round. It is hideous. it has a shovel-
- like mouth, bulging eyes and tentacles or sensory-organs hanging
- on each side of the face.
- "No-one, of course, thought that snakes were dragons. The
- malignant Great Serpent of Babylonia was TYPHON or Teitan, Satan,
- the author of wickedness...
- "Politicians, however, never look a gift-horse in the mouth
- as long as it produces results. After giving the Roman people
- carnage in the guise of circus entertainment, there was no reason
- for the EMPERORS to shrink from a little devil-worship. Even the
- national flag was given the treatment. Ammianus Marcellinus
- describes the standard 'PURPUREUM SIGNUM DRACONIS'. And when
- Julius Caesar appeared in full regalia as the PONTIFEX MAXIMUS he
- was dressed in reddish-purple robes the same as the Pergamite
- dragon-priests. The reader can trace the rest of the story in
- Gibbon's 'RISE AND FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE'.
- "DRAGON-WORSHIP PERSISTED LONG AFTER CHRISTIANITY (and also
- 'Catholicism?' - Branton) HAD BEEN PROCLAIMED. Tertullian
- complained: 'These heretics magnify the serpent to such a degree
- as to prefer him even to Christ himself; for he, they say, gave
- us the first knowledge of good and evil.'
- "[Some of] the Babylonians strongly believed that the
- monsters were evil. R. C. Thompson, in 'THE DEVILS AND EVIL
- SPIRITS OF BABYLONIA', gives an 'incantation' that was used
- against the creatures:
- "'...Seven are they, seven are they. In the Ocean Deep,
- seven are they. They are reared in the home of the Ocean Deep.
- Neither male nor female are they. They are as the roaming
- wildbeast. No wife have they, no son do they beget. They know
- neither mercy nor pity. They harken not unto prayers and
- supplications. They are as the horses reared on the hills. The
- Evil Ones of EA, throne-bearers of the gods are they. They stand
- in the highway to befoul the path. Evil are they, evil are they.
- By Heaven be ye exorcised!'"
- Holiday continues: "Various Loch Ness witnesses have said
- that the head of a monster looks like the head of a goat... It is
- no surprise, therefore, to find that the Babylonians used the
- expression 'antelope of the deep' for the creatures. The exiled
- Jews at Ur called them chimera or goat-spirits. There are goat-
- spirits illustrated on some ancient British coins.
- "...Dragon-worship had various appeals. The believer was
- bound by no rigid moral code. But obviously the Pergamites had
- some sort of a code otherwise their community would hardly have
- survived for about 400 years. Another appeal was that Satan, on
- EARTH, was said to be more powerful than God. In fact a passage
- in the Bible calls him 'the god of THIS world' as distinct from
- the God of HEAVEN (According to Hebrew scripture the Evil One
- gained possession of this world when the Evadamic descendants
- 'sold out' the planet to it. The 'New Testament', especially
- in REVELATION, states that the 'title deed' to the earth was
- 'bought back' by Jesus the Messiah or Christ who, even though he
- was the ruler of countless billions of worlds nevertheless felt
- that this small world, the cradle of life, was worth the price -
- Branton). In view of some of the happenings on the planet, this
- is still a pretty good argument.
- "Our knowledge of Satanism in Bronze Age Britain is based
- almost entirely on archaeological remains. British dragon-
- worshippers used to build gigantic models of their deity out of
- earth and stones. A few examples still survive in Scotland
- overlooking waters where the monsters existed.
- "There is a huge dragon-simulation on the banks of the Clyde
- and another at Ach-na-Goul near Inverary. In 1969 I visited the
- dragon-simulation in Glen Feochan near Oban. The hundred yard
- long model is at the lower end of Loch Neil. John S. Phene,
- F.G.S., F.R.G.S., described it to the British Association in
- Edinburgh as being 'in the form of a serpent or saurian'. The
- head seems to be represented by a cairn.
-
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