Page:Chronicles of pharmacy (Volume 1).djvu/28

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and was changed into a willow, while Jaso in the only known monument on which she appears, is represented with a pot, probably of ointment, in her hand.


Prometheus.

More mythical than the story of Æsculapius, or even of Orpheus, who was also alleged to have discovered some of the secrets of medicine, is the legend of Prometheus who stole fire from heaven for the benefit of mankind. According to the older mythologists Prometheus was the same as Magog, and was the son of Japhet. Æschylus is the principal authority on his tradition. After recounting many other wonderful things he had done for humanity, the poet makes him say, "One of the greatest subtilties I have invented is that when any one falls ill, and can find no relief; can neither eat nor drink, and knows not with what to anoint himself; when for want of the necessary remedies he must perish; then I showed to men how to prepare healing medicine which should cure all maladies." Or as Dean Plumptre has rendered it:—

                      If any one fell ill
There was no help for him nor healing balm,
Nor unguent, nor yet potion; but for want
Of drugs they wasted till I showed to them
The blendings of all mild medicaments
Wherewith they ward the attacks of sickness sore.

In other words, Prometheus was the first pharmacist.


Melampus.

Melampus was a shepherd to whom we owe, as legend tells us, hellebore (Gr. Melampodion) and iron as