| E. Cobham Brewer 18101897. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. 1898. |
| | | Speaking Heads and Sounding Stones. | | |
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(1) Jabel Nagus [mountain of the bell], in Arabia Petræa, gives out sounds of varying strength whenever the sand slides down its sloping flanks. | 1 |
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(2) The white dry sand of the beach in the isle of Eigg, of the Hebrides, produces, according to Hugh Miller, a musical sound when walked upon. | 2 |
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(3) The statue of Memnon, in Egypt, utters musical sounds when the morning sun darts on it. | 3 |
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(4) The speaking head of Orpheus, at Lesbos, is said to have predicted the bloody death which terminated the expedition of Cyrus the Great into Scythia. | 4 |
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(5) The head of Minos, brought by Odin to Scandinavia, is said to have uttered responses. | 5 |
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(6) Gerbert, afterwards Pope Sylvester II., constructed a speaking head of brass (tenth century). | 6 |
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(7) Albertus Magnus constructed an earthen head in the thirteenth century, which both spoke and moved. Thomas Aquinas broke it, whereupon the mechanist exclaimed, There goes the labour of thirty years! | 7 |
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(8) Alexander made a statue of Esculapios which spoke, but Lucian says the sounds were uttered by a man concealed, and conveyed by tubes to the statue. | 8 |
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(9) The ear of Dionysius communicated to Dionysius, Tyrant of Syracuse, whatever was uttered by suspected subjects shut up in a state prison. This ear was a large black opening in a rock, about fifty feet high, and the sound was communicated by a series of channels not unlike those of the human ear. | 9 |
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