The Tank of Trial—p. 250.—I understand, from Professor Comparetti's note on Nakhshabī's story of the Father-in-Law (Researches, etc, p. 41), that the 15th tale of the Suka Saptatī is similar to the version I have cited from Cardonne's Mélanges in the incident of the “water trial,” to which a close parallel is found in the legendary “life” of Virgilius, as follows (from Thoms' English Prose Romances, ii, pp. 34-36):
Than made Virgilius at Rome a metall serpente with his
cunnynge, that who so euer put his hande in the throte of the
serpente, was to sware his cause ryght and trewe; and if hys
cause were false he shulde nat plucke his hande out a geyne; and
if it were trewe they shulde plucke it out a geyne without any
harme doynge. So it fortuned that there was a knyght of Lum-
“It is curious,” says Mr. Thoms, “that at this day there is a chapel at Rome called Santa Maria, built in the first ages of the church, which is likewise denominated ‘Bocca della verita,’ on account of a large round mask, with an enormous mouth, fixed up in the vestibule. Tradition says that in former times the Romans, in order to give a more solemn confirmation to oaths, were wont to put their hands into this mouth, and if a person took a false oath his hand would be bitten off.”