CHAP. 35.—THE NATURE AND VARIOUS KINDS OF MYRRH.
Incisions are made in the myrrh-tree also twice a year, and at
the same season as in the incense-tree; but in the case of the
myrrh-tree they are all made the way up from the root as far as
the branches which are able to bear it. The tree spontaneously
exudes, before the incision is made, a liquid which bears the
name of stacte,[1] and to which there is no myrrh that is superior. Second only in quality to this is the cultivated myrrh:
of the wild or forest kind, the best is that which is gathered in
summer. They give no tithes of myrrh to the god, because it
is the produce of other countries as well; but the growers pay
the fourth part of it to the king of the Gebanitæ. Myrrh is
bought up indiscriminately by the common people, and then
packed into bags; but our perfumers separate it without any
difficulty, the principal tests of its goodness being its unctuousness and its aromatic smell. (16.) There are several[2] kinds
of myrrh; the first among the wild myrrhs is the Troglodytic; and the next are the Minæan, which includes the
Atramitic, and that of Ausaritis, in the kingdom of the Gebanitæ. A third kind is the Dianitic,[3] and a fourth is the
mixed myrrh, or "all-sorts;"[4] a fifth, again, is the Sambracenian, which is brought from a city in the kingdom of the
Sabæi, near the sea; and a sixth is known by the name of
Dusaritic. There is a white myrrh also, which is produced in
only one spot, and is carried for sale to the city of Messalum.
The Troglodytic myrrh is tested by its unctuousness, and its
peculiarly dry appearance: it has also a dirty, rough look
with it, but is more acrid than the other kinds. The Sambracenian myrrh has none of these faults, and is more sightly in
appearance than any of them, though it is far from being
so powerful. In general, however, the proof of its goodness
consists in its being separated in little pieces of uneven shape,
formed by the concretion of a whitish juice, which dries up
little by little. When broken it ought to exhibit white marks
like the finger-nails, and to be slightly bitter to the taste.
That of second quality is of a mottled appearance within;
while of worse quality is that which is of a black colour
within; the very worst of all is that which is black on the
outside as well.
The price of myrrh varies according to the number of purchasers. Stacte is sold at prices which vary from three denarii to forty per pound, while the very highest price of the
cultivated myrrh is eleven denarii. Erythræan myrrh, the
same, it is pretended, as Arabian myrrh, is sixteen denarii per
pound, Troglodytic also, is sixteen denarii; and that known as
odoraria, or odoriferous myrrh, sells at fourteen. Myrrh is
adulterated with pieces of mastich, and other gums; it is also
drugged with the juice of wild cucumber, in order to produce
a certain bitterness, and with litharge for the purpose of increasing its weight. Other sophistications may be discovered
on tasting it, and the gum will adhere to the teeth. But the
cleverest mode of adulterating it is with Indian myrrh,[5] a
substance which is gathered from a certain prickly shrub which
grows there. This is the only thing that India produces of
worse quality than the corresponding produce of other countries: they may, however, be very easily distinguished, that
of India being so very much inferior.
1. From the Greek sta/zw, "to drop." Fée observes, that the moderns
know nothing positive as to the mode of extracting myrrh from the tree.
See the account given by Ovid, Met. B. x. 1. 500 et seq. of the transformation of Myrrha into this tree,—" The warm drops fall from the tree. The
tears, even, have their own honour; and the myrrh that distils from the
bark bears the name of its mistress, and in no age will remain unknown."
2. Fée remarks, that at the present day we are acquainted only with one
kind of myrrh; the fragments which bear an impression like those of nails
being not a distinct kind, but a simple variety in appearance only. He
thinks, also, that Pliny may very possibly be describing several distinct
resinous products, under the one name of myrrh. An account of these
various districts will be found in B. vi. c. 32.
3. Hardouin suggests that it may be so called from the island of Dia,
mentioned by Strabo, B. xvi.
4. "Collatitia." The reading, however, is very doubtful.
5. What this was is now unknown. Fée suggests that it may have been
bdellium, which is found in considerable quantities in the myrrh that is
imported at the present day.