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many goose, the vulture, the crane, the woodpecker and
parrot, male and female, birds that strike with their
beaks, webfooted birds, the lapwing, those that wound
with strong talons, those that dive for fish, the heron, the
raven, all amphibious fish eaters, tame hogs and fish,
and—' "
" Cease !" cried Paulus Androcydes. " Do you desire
to rob mankind of all the flesh foods ? Do you expect
moderns to take up all these ancient prejudices ? Is the
world to become as abstemious as Iccus, that fool doctor,
who ate little or nothing, in order to live, and died like
the rest of humanity ? Methinks that Egyptian super-
stitions, like spirits, have transmigrated from age to age
in various disguises, and it is high time for modern
science to call a halt."
"Let modern people violate our ancient rules and
sanitary regulations and suffer the consequences,"
responded Athothis, defiantly. " They dare not! lest a
multitude of new plagues are sent to pester them."
" Yet wise men have scoffed at such regulations,"
replied Paulus Androcydes. " Hippocrates believed in
using pigeons, partridges, ducks, and geese, and his views
were coincided in by Galen, iEtius, and Rhazes,
although these writers admitted that water fowls are not
as cleanly as land birds. The praises of woodcock have
been sung by such delightful poets as Horace and Mar-
tial, while the thrush is spoken of by Perseus, who says:
" ' To use my fortune, Bassus, I intend :
Nor therefore deem me too profuse, my friend,
So prodigally vain, as to afford
The costly turbot for my freedmen's board;
Or so expert in flavors as to show
How by the relish thrush from thrush, I know.'