The Digital Ark: Early Modern Collections of Curiosities in England and Scotland, 1580-1700
Albert Kijper (1610 - 1655)
Other Links: http://ihm.nlm.nih.gov/luna/servlet/detail/NLMNLM~1~1~101420495~181820:Albertus-KyperusNotes: http://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2002-83098
Notes: References in Documents:
Sir
It is an entire one, eight feet
long, or about two yards
and three quarters. Very beautiful in
length, straitness,
whiteness, and its spiral Furrows bigger
and less, making
about seven Rounds from the bottom to the
top, or
point. At the Basis or bottom,
about seven inches round.
From thence, for about a foot, it
swells a little, and then
again grows slenderer, all the way,
and so ends in a sharp
point. 'Tis also conically hollow at
the Basis, for near
three quarters of a
foot deep.
The same Horn (together with the Fish it self, some
times above 30 Elns long,)
is described by c) c)
Wor.
But I cannot, with him, call it a Tooth. In that, it per
formeth not the office of a Tooth, but of a Horn.
Nei
ther doth it stand as a Tooth, but
horizontally. Nor is it
fixed in the Mouth, where all Teeth
stand, but in the Snout.
The reason why he calls it so, is,
because it is fastened in the
Snout, as Teeth are in the Jaw.
See also the Description
hereof in d) d)
Cent. 4
Gyris Intortum, is not (at least as to this
Horn) so clearly
expressed: the Horn it self being strait, and
not writhen,
but only surrounded with spiral Furrows. The same
is
also transcribed by
Musæum
Of the Virtue hereof,
ments. The one, upon its being given to a Dog, after
a
Dose of Arsenick: but he expresseth
the quantity of neither.
The other, upon twelve Grains hereof
given after a Drachm
of Nux Vomica.
Both the Dogs lived; whereas two other
Dogs having the same
Doses, without the Horn, died.
Both experiments are attested
by several Physitians of
Note.
The credit of these Persons is not doubted. But the
question is, Whether these Dogs might not have liv'd
without
the Horn. As some Dogs that have been bitten
by an Adder, have been observ'd to get over their
Con
vulsions, and recover. It is also said in one
of the Expe
riments, that the Dog which liv'd,
vomited: and in the
other, there is nothing said to the
contrary. The question
therefore is, Whether many other
things, which will cause
vomiting, may not do as well, as this
so much celebrated
Horn?
Whatever it may perform against Poison, it hath, saith
Malignant Fevers. As
in that, which at
years 1652, and 1653. was very
brief: and which it
carr'd off with very great Sweats. (a)
a)
Hist. Cent. 4
Case, and with the like success. (b)
b)
proceeded not meerly from Natures own strength over
the
Disease, but as she was helped by the use of the Horn;
seems
probable from what c)c)
That a Carduus-Water, or
other
convenient Liquor, causeth a free and copious
sweating, even
in those that are not used to sweat, except
with much
difficulty.
Heretofore, the chief Bishops in
their Episcopal Staffs of these Horns. (d) d)
Sea-Unicorne is taken,
arm the sharp ends of the thickest and longest of these
Horns with Iron Beards, and so use them for the wound
ing and taking of Whales.
The Sea-Unicorne is it self a lesser Whale, and is that
Species which the People of
Island, where there are many, call
Narwhal. The figure which
Head, is fictitious.