The alectorius or “cock-stone” is one of the most famous of those real or supposed animal concretions that were known in ancient times. From the age of Pliny—and unquestionably long before his time—there was a popular belief that this stone was only to be found in the gizzard of a cock which had been caponed when three years old, and had lived seven years longer. This was believed to allow the substance to acquire its boasted virtue, for the longer it remained in the body of the capon, the greater its power. Such a “cock-stone” never exceeded the size of a bean. From its association with the pugnacious fowl, the alectorius became a favorite stone with wrestlers, and the great and invincible Milo of Croton is said to have owed many of his victories to the possession of one, for if held in the mouth, it quenched the thirst and thus refreshed the combatant.
Many other virtues of this stone are recorded; it rendered wives agreeable to their husbands, dissolved enchantments, brought new honors and powers in addition to those already enjoyed, and helped kings to acquire new dominions. How persistent was the faith in the virtue of the alectorius is shown by the fact that the great astronomer Tycho Brahe greatly valued a stone of this kind, not larger than a bean, and believed that it brought him luck in gambling and in love. Thomas de Cantimpré[[371]] says that the name signifies an allurer or enticer, because the stone excites the love of husbands for their wives.[[372]] In order to secure the due effect it should be held in the mouth, possibly because this would render the wife less eloquent.
ALECTORIVS
Alectorius. From Mercati’s “Metallotheca Vaticana,” Romæ, 1719.
A specimen of the alectorius is listed in the inventories of Jean Duc de Berry (1401–1416). It is called there a “capon-stone” and is described as having red and white spots. Several other objects to which talismanic virtues were ascribed are also noted, such, for instance, as the “molar of a giant,” set in leather; probably the tooth of a hippopotamus, or the fossil tooth of some antediluvian creature. There is also what is termed a “tester,” composed of several “serpent’s teeth” (glossopetræ?), horns of the “unicorn” (narwhal’s teeth) and stones regarded as antidotes to poison. These were all suspended by golden chains, and were valued at seventy-five livres tournois.[[373]]
As a companion piece to the “cock-stone,” the hen furnished a concretion possessing special virtues. This came from the fowl’s gizzard and was of a sky-blue color; its Arabic name was hajar al-ḥattaf. If it were worn by an epileptic, the attacks of his malady would cease; it favored procreation and also nullified the effects of the Evil Eye, and it kept children from having bad dreams if placed beneath their heads when they were sleeping. Thus the effects it was fancied to produce differed from those ascribed to the alectorius.[[374]]
In medieval times bunches of dried “serpent’s tongues” were sometimes hung around salt-cellars or attached to spits; but frequently, for royal or princely use, such tongues, or the jawbones of snakes, were set with valuable precious stones and constituted a peculiar jewel termed in old French a languier, or épreuve (tester); for these utensils, often very rich and tasteful specimens of the goldsmith’s art, were believed to show in some way the presence of the much-dreaded poison in any viands with which they were brought in contact.[[375]]
The Indians and Spaniards in South America made remedial use of a stone said to be obtained from the cayman or alligator, at Nombre de Dios, Cartagena, etc. This was employed as a cure for various intermittent fevers. Monardes writes that he applied two of these lapides caymanum to the temples of a young girl suffering from an attack of fever, and found that the fever was alleviated thereby; but he doubts that fevers could be entirely cured by this treatment.[[376]]
From New Spain was also brought the lapis manati, taken from the manatee, or sea-cow. This does not appear to have been a stone, but rather the cochleæ of the animal, the small bones in the head which transmit the auditory vibrations to the sensorium. They were highly valued by the Indians for their remedial action in cramps and colic, and the Spaniards collected them and brought them to Spain to enrich their very miscellaneous pharmacopœia. Sometimes they were taken internally, but often they were set in rings or worn suspended from the neck as amulets. This stone, or bone, is described as oval in shape and of a hue resembling that of ivory. When pulverized and dissolved, the solution was odorless and tasteless. They are in size often as large as a woman’s clinched fist.[[377]]