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Ta'khay, or Alligator

Ta'khay, or Alligator.jpg Stepping down from the vase and crowding round Hugh's edThumbnailsTern, with young oneStepping down from the vase and crowding round Hugh's edThumbnailsTern, with young oneStepping down from the vase and crowding round Hugh's edThumbnailsTern, with young oneStepping down from the vase and crowding round Hugh's edThumbnailsTern, with young one

A very curious instrument is known as the Ta'khay, or Alligator: a glance at its form will readily account for its name. There seems a sort of satire in making one of the most silent of savage monsters a medium for the conveyance of sweet sounds. The Ta'khay is a stringed instrument of considerable power, and in tone is not unlike a violoncello. The three strings pass over eleven frets or wide movable bridges, and the shape of the body is rather like that of a guitar. It is placed on the ground, raised on low feet, and the player squats beside it. The strings are sounded by a plectrum, or plucker, shaped like an ivory tooth, fastened to the fingers, and drawn backwards and forwards so rapidly that it produces an almost continuous sweet dreamy sound.