For fabulous stories connected with it the crocodile may challenge the next place; and, indeed for cunning, the one[1] which lives both upon land and in the water is fully its equal: for I would here remark, that there are two varieties of this animal. The teeth of the right jaw of the amphibious crocodile, attached to the right arm as an amulet, acts as an aphrodisiac, that is, if we choose to believe it. The eye-teeth of the animal, filled with frankincense—for they are hollow—are a cure for periodical fevers, care being taken to let the patient remain five days without seeing the person who has attached them to his body. A similar virtue is attributed to the small stones which are found in the belly of this animal, as being a check to the cold shiverings in fevers, when about to come on; and with the same object the Ægyptians are in the habit of anointing their sick with the fat of the crocodile.
The other kind of crocodile[2] resembles it, but is much inferior in size: it lives upon land only, and among the most
odoriferous flowers; hence it is that its intestines are so greatly
in request, being filled as they are with a mass of agreeable
perfumes. This substance is called "crocodilea," and it is
looked upon as extremely beneficial for diseases of the eyes,
and for the treatment of films and cataract, being applied with
leek-juice in the form of an ointment. Applied with oil of
cyprus,[3] it removes blemishes growing upon the face; and, employed with water, it is a cure for all those diseases, the
nature of which it is to spread upon the face, while at the same
time it restores the natural tints of the skin. An application
of it makes freckles disappear, as well as all kinds of spots and
The ashes of the skin of either crocodile, applied with vinegar to such parts of the body as are about to undergo an incision, or indeed the very smell of the skin when burning, will render the patient insensible to the knife. The blood of either crocodile, applied to the eyes, effaces marks upon those organs and improves the sight. The body, with the exception of the head and feet, is eaten, boiled, for the cure of sciatica, and is found very useful for chronic coughs, in children more particularly: it is equally good, too, for the cure of lumbago. These animals have a certain fat also, which, applied to the hair, makes it fall off; persons anointed with this fat are effectually protected against crocodiles, and it is the practice to drop it into wounds inflicted by them. A crocodile's heart, attached to the body in the wool of a black sheep without a speck of any other colour, due care too being taken that the sheep was the first lamb yeaned by its dam, will effectually cure a quartan fever, it is said.
1. chamses, or common crocodile of the
Nile.
2. souchos of Geoffroy
Saint-Hilaire. It is equally amphibious with the other; and the account
of its habits given by Pliny is probably founded on the fact that Upper
Egypt, which it inhabits, is covered with a more aromatic vegetation than
the other parts of that country.
3.
4.