There are still some other marvellous facts related, with
reference to the animals which we have mentioned. A dog
will not bark at a person who has any part of the secundines
of a bitch about him, or a hare's dung or fur. The kind of
gnats called "muliones,"[1] do not live more than a single day.
Persons when taking honey from the hives, will never be
touched by the bees if they carry the beak of a wood-pecker[2]
about them. Swine will be sure to follow the person who has
given them a raven's brains, made up into a bolus. The dust
in which a she-mule has wallowed, sprinkled upon the body,
will allay the flames of desire. Rats may be put to flight by
castrating a male rat, and setting it at liberty. If a snake's
slough is beaten up with some spelt, salt, and wild thyme, and
introduced into the throat of oxen, with wine, at the time
that grapes are ripening, they will be in perfect health for a
whole year to come: the same, too, if three young swallows are
given to them, made up into three boluses. The dust gathered
from the track of a snake, sprinkled among bees, will make
Of all known substances, it is a mule's[4] hoofs only that are not corroded by the poisonous waters of the fountain Styx: a memorable discovery made by Aristotle,[5] to his great infamy, on the occasion when Antipater sent some of this water to Alexander the Great, for the purpose of poisoning him.
We will now pass on to the aquatic productions.
SUMMARY.—Remedies, narratives, and observations, eight hundred and fifty-four.
ROMAN AUTHORS QUOTED.—M. Varro,[6] Nigidius,[7] M. Cicero,[8] Sextius Niger[9] who wrote in Greek, Licinius Macer.[10]
FOREIGN AUTHORS QUOTED.—Eudoxus,[11] Aristotle,[12] Hermippus,[13] Homer, Apion,[14] Orpheus,[15] Democritus,[16] Anaxilaiis.[17]
MEDICAL AUTHORS QUOTED.—Botrys,[18] Horus,[19] Apollodorus,[20]
Menander,[21] Archidemus,[22] Aristogenes,[23] Xenocrates,[24] Diodorus,[25]
Chrysippus,[26] Nicander,[27] Apollonius[28] of Pitanæ.
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