Quantcast

Ch. 19: Eagle Stone

Ch. 19:  Eagle Stone Page of 501 Ch. 19:  Eagle Stone Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
THE EAGLE STONE.                        345
sight is not rebounded again by clearness of the light of the sun, neither disperpled. There is one manner of eagle that is full sharp of sight; and she taketh her own birds in her claws, and maketh them to look even on the sun, and that ere their wings be full grown ; and except they look stiffly, and stedfastly against the sun, she beateth them, and setteth them even before the sun. And if any eye of any of her birds watereth in looking on the sun, she slayeth him, as though he went out of kind, or else driveth him out of the nest, and despiseth him, and setteth not by him."
The Eagle Stone is a natural concretion, a variety of argillaceous oxide of iron.
The Imperial Eagle of ancient Rome,—symbol of its lofty power,— being on one memorable occasion threatened in the Capitol with stealthy assault by inva­sion, was saved by the timely cackling of geese, (birds the intelligence of which is much under-rated). After the same fashion (as a well-known fable relates), the lion, king of beasts, was rescued from the toils of the hunter, in which he had become entrapped, by the humble nibblings of a small mouse at the meshes of the hostile net, until a rift large enough to allow of escape had thus become helpfully made.
As to the domestic Goose, (in Latin, anser), a modern anecdote tells that when the Bursar of Worcester College, Oxford, 1850, was ruffled in temper by his futile endeavours at table to carve a very tough bird of this kind, he passed off his irritation by making a Latin joke—"'tis only a soft 'anser' that turneth away wrath."
Marbodus has said, in classical terms, about the Eagle Stone :—
Ch. 19:  Eagle Stone Page of 501 Ch. 19:  Eagle Stone
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page