Thursday, April 23, 2020
Unicorns Essays - Mythological Horses, Unicorn, Chinese Mythology
Unicorns In ancient Greek and Roman mythology, a mystical creature known as the unicorn made many appearances. As described throughout much of literature, the unicorn is reputed to look somewhat like a white horse, although it has a long, twisted horn protruding from its forehead.1 The earliest description of the unicorn was by Ctesias (400 BC) (The New Book of Knowledge, Vol. U-V 19: 391). Unicorns have cloven hooves that are somewhat yellow in color; some are said to have a lion-like tail. Male unicorns can be distinguished from their female counterparts mainly in part of the goat-like beard beneath the chin. Also, the females are more elegant and have a slimmer muscle frame. The typical European unicorn has a coat of hair that is pure white, and has eyes that are either deep sea blue or fiery pink. Long and silky strands of white hair hand down from its mane and forelock. In his book, The Last Unicorn, Peter S. Beagle describes this mythological creature as looking nothing like a horned ho rse...[as she was] smaller and cloven-hoofed (1). In his book, Beagle's unicorn was the color of sea foam when it was young; as it aged, its color changed to the color of snow falling on a moonlit night (1). A unicorn's horn is white, silver, or golden in color, is about two to three feet in length, and is said to have special healing powers. Throughout time, there have been many varied descriptions of the unicorn. In Asia, for example, mention of the animal dates back as far as 26 century BC.1 The animal described is far more different than the European unicorn. Rather than looking like a horse, the Asian unicorn, known as the k'i-lin, appears more like a dragon, although it has cloved hooves.1 The k'i-lin's body was made predominately of shimmery fish scales that shone in every color of the rainbow, and its horn was also thought to contain magical healing powers.1 The k'i-lin is reported to have wandered through the palace of the emperor Huang-ti in 2697 BC, and was honored as the king of all the land animals.1 Of the two, the European is the more widely known unicorn, and thus, more information is readily available on that type of unicorn. In Beagle's book, he states that it is their nature to live alone in one place: usually a forest... (1). As they are vain creatures, they prefer to live in solitary places where there is a shallow pool of water nearby were they can see themselves clearly (Beagle, 1). They normally dwell only in temperate woodlands, away from human activity. They are herbivorous creatures, living mainly off of tender leaves of the forest and its grasses. Although unicorns are immortal, they do have enemies and can be killed. Its enemies include the harpy, dragon, and chimera (Beagle, 95). Not much is known about the unicorn's reproductive habits, only that it rarely ever mates (Beagle, 1). However, it is believed that when they do, it is for life. As the unicorn's horn was reputed to have mystical healing powers, unicorn hunts were popular throughout the Middle Ages. Since baby unicorns were almost non-existent, if one could catch a baby, he was even more richly rewarded. The unicorn's horn was thought to be a healing source. It was claimed to cure many diseases and ward off many others, such as epilepsy and different stomach illnesses. It was also believed to a neutralizer against poison.3 The horn was continuously sought after to be given to apothecaries; they would grind up the horn to make a poison neutralizing powder. Also, the horn was said to bleed if poison was brought near it.3 For these reasons, over 40,000 gold pieces were offered for the horn of a unicorn (which almost always turned out to be the horn of the narwhal, or unicorn of the sea). Although it was a healer of wounds, the unicorn was a ruthless, savage fighter when cornered. She had killed dragons with it [the horn], and healed a king whose poisoned wound would not close... (Beagle, 1). Beagle clearly shows that the unicorn's horn was its means of protection, as well as its healing strength. He clearly emphasizes
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