Histories, 4.67

Herodotus  translated by G. C. Macaulay

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67Diviners there are many among the Scythians, and they divine with a number of willow rods in the following manner:—they bring large bundles of rods, and having laid them on the ground they unroll them, and setting each rod by itself apart they prophesy; and while speaking thus, they roll the rods together again, and after that they place them in order a second time one by one.[67] This manner of divination they have from their fathers: but the Enareës or "man-women"[68] say that Aphrodite gave them the gift of divination, and they divine accordingly with the bark of the linden-tree. Having divided the linden-bark into three strips, the man twists them together in his fingers and untwists them again, and as he does this he utters the oracle.

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Notes

  • [67] Or, "and put them together in one bundle"

  • [68] See i. 105.