|
|
Re: Wake snakes and come to TawPosted by Lewis on January 31, 2005 In Reply to: Re: Wake snakes and come to Taw posted by mugball-us on January 31, 2005 : : : This is the first line of a funny little ditty my Grandmother would recite. Her ancestors came to Georgia from England. I know there is a Taw River in Devon. I don't see one in Georgia. Is this line a part of something else- a poem, song, etc.? I do not bother to give the rest of the ditty as it has nothing to do with this one line. Thanks. : : It might have a Biblical origin. The Tau (Taw) cross and serpents feature in some of the Books of the Bible. The rest of the ditty might give us a clue. : I have no idea where the Taw is. There is a Haw River in North Carolina, and a Wake County too, but that is a stretch. : The line seems to have been pretty well known in Kentucky in the late 19th Century. I found the following reference in Irvin S Cobb's "Exit Laughing". The book speaks of a country lawyer whose shingle reads, : "WAKE SNAKES AND COME TO TAW : I am curious about your grandmother's ditty, too. The river Taw is in Devon (South West England). I think that the Tau cross was like Aldous Huxley's "T". The cross had many variations the Tau, the Ankh etc. The cross with a snake has its origins in the Staff of Hermes if I remember correctly - the intertwined snakes used as a symbol for medicine. L
|