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Lumberwoods
U N N A T U R A L   H I S T O R Y   M U S E U M

“  M E R M A I D   R E P O R T S  
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Real Mermaid
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THE BEDFORD INQUIRER — MARCH 04, 1870
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A REAL MERMAID.
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A REAL MERMAID.—A correspondent of the Delhi Gazette, writing from Benares, on December 19 says: “Some Mohammedans [Muslims, archaic] of Bengal have recently brought here a mermaid preserved in a case. It exactly resembles a fish covered with scales in the lower half, and a monkey having a head and two arms, with fingers and nails, in the upper. Of course, it is a curious thing to look at. I was quite astonished to learn from some of my friends that a real mermaid, exposed in the chouk of this city, could be seen on paying a single piece. So, as this filled my mind with great curiosity, I went there, yesterday, and saw that it was all true, and that a man, sitting at the door, with a bell in his hand was inviting the passers-by to that spectacle. I, with two friends, went in, saw the animal, and felt it with my own hands. I couldn’t make out anything fictitious in it. On inquiring of the man who was present there, I was informed that it was a real mermaid, found in the sea near Japan, and that a man bought it for five hundred rupees at a public auction in Calcutta. He further told me that another of the same sort, but as big as a man, was soid there for fourteen hundred rupees. The length of the one I saw here was about a foot and a half.”
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Bedford Inquirer. (Bedford, Pa.), 04 March 1870. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.
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