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Kirby, R. S. [Hrsg.]; Kirby, R. S. [Bearb.]
Kirby's Wonderful And Eccentric Museum; Or, Magazine Of Remarkable Characters: Including All The Curiosities Of Nature And Art, From The Remotest Period To The Present Time, Drawn from every authentic Source. Illustrated With One Hundred And Twenty-Four Engravings. Chiefly Taken from Rare And Curious Prints Or Original Drawings. Six Volumes (Vol. I.) — London: R.S. Kirby, 1820

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.70267#0059
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OF MERMAIDS.

43

head, which hung down to the surface of the water all round
about her; she held a fish with its head downwards, in her
right hand. I was told also, that in the same year, the
fishermen in Westerman-haven, on Stromoe, had, in their
fishery north of Faroe, seen a mer-maid.
That these creatures being fish of prey, sometimes quar-
rel with the sea-calf, is confirmed by a relation sent me,
with several others, by the Rev. Mr. Hanstrom, at Bergen.
It runs to this effect:—“ It happened at Nerse, in Nume-
dalen, that there was found a mer-man and sea-calf on a
rock, both dead and all over bloody ; from which it is con-
jectured that they had killed one another.”
In the year 1624, a mer-man, thirty-six feet, long, was
taken in the Adriatic Sea ; according to Henry Seebald’s
Breviar Histor. to this the last mentioned, was but a dwarf.
See p. 535. As to their form, it is said, that some have
a skin over their heads like a monk’s hood, which, perhaps,
serves them for the same purpose ; as does the skinny hood,
which a certain sort of sea-calves have on their heads,
which from thence are called Klap-mitzer, as has been ob-
served in the description of that creature. Olaus Magnus
speaks, in lib. xxi. cap. 1. of several monsters in the North
Sea, all which resemble thehuman kind, with a monk’s hood
on the head. His words are, “ Cucullate hominis forma
he adds, that if any of this company be catched, a number
of them set up a howl, put themselves in violent agitations,
and oblige the fishermen to set the prisoner at liberty. But
this last article is a mere romance, to which this too credu-
lous author in this, as well as some other particulars, has
given too much credit, without sufficient grounds.
Of this mer-man with a hood, Rondeletius writes thus, in
Gesner. de Aquatilibus, lib. iv, which I ought not to omit.
As this account confounds Norway with the Sound, and
Malmoe, which the Dutch call the Elbow, I conclude this
strange fish here spoken of, to have been just the same
with that which Arild Hvitfield in vita Christ, iii ad

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