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Mystical Unicorn
The unicorn has been
a topic of wonder and speculation for
centuries. The writings of such men as
Aristotle, Genghis Khan, Saint Thomas,
and Saint Gregory reflect the fact that
these men considered the unicorn as a
very real creature. Webster's Seventh
defines a unicorn as 'a mythical animal
generally depicted with the body and
head of a horse, hind legs of a stag,
tail of a lion, and a single horn in the
middle of its forehead'. The word
'unicorn' comes from the Latin 'Uni',
meaning one, and 'Cornu, meaning horn.
The unicorn has been depicted in the
folklore and legends of other cultures
besides ours. The Chinese believed that
they had the body of a deer, with
horses' hooves and an ox's tail. Where
in the west the horn was made of bone,
the Oriental unicorn's horn was made of
flesh. The coat of the unicorn was of
the five sacred colors of the Chinese;
red, yellow, blue, white, and black.
The Chinese
called the unicorn 'K'i-lin'.
To them, it was a symbol of wisdom.
Around 2800 BC, the Emperor Fu Hsi wrote
of seeing a k'i-lin. He saw markings on
the coat of the animal, and perceived
those symbols as a written language,
thus giving credit to the k'i-lin for
the establishment of the written Chinese
language. The sighting of a K'i-in was a
considered a good omen, and often
signified the birth of a good ruler.
Other times, it appeared to give a
warning to men. A scouting party for
Genghis Khan reported seeing a
Chio-tuan, a type of K'i-lin, that
warned the party to stop the war, and
that 'moderation will give boundless
pleasure'. Upon receiving the report,
the Mongol stopped his battle plans.
Unicorns were reported in India as well.
The Greek Ctesias wrote of seeing a
'wild ass' there, which was as large as
a horse. He said that the horn of the
unicorn was about a foot and a half
long, and three colored, with the base
being white, the middle black, and the
top red.
The
best known legends
surrounding the unicorn are in Western
culture. The common view of the unicorn
as a horse with a horn is popular, and
has been depicted in our heritage for
thousands of years. The unicorn is
mentioned in the Bible in several
verses. The Palm Sunday tract in the
Roman Catholic missal reads, 'Deliver me
from the lion's mouth, and my lowliness
from the horns of unicorns'. Saint
Ambrose, the Bishop of Milan in the
fourth century, considered the unicorn a
symbol of Christ as he wrote, 'Who then
has one horn, unless it be the only
begotten son, the unique word of God,
which has been next to God from the very
beginning?' Saint Augustine considered
the horn of the unicorn to be a symbol
of the unity of the faith of the Church.
The horn of
the unicorn has been
sought after for centuries. In the west,
it was thought to have magical
properties, and could purify poisons.
Therefore, it was a very valuable
commodity to have. Pope Paul III is said
to have paid 12,000 pieces of gold for
one, but James I of England got a much
better deal for his, only paying 10,000
pounds Sterling for one. The horn of the
narwhal was a common substitute for that
of the unicorn for those unscrupulous
businessmen. Because of that problem, a
common test to determine the validity of
a unicorn horn was to use its magical
properties of purification. David De
Pomis wrote, 'There is very little of
the true horn to be found, most of that
which is sold as such being either
stag's horn, or elephant's tusk. A true
test by which one may know the genuine
horn from the false: Place the horn in a
vessel of any sort of material you like,
and with it three or four large and live
scorpions, keeping the vessel covered.
If you find four hours later that the
scorpions are dead or almost lifeless,
the horn is a good one, and there is not
enough money in the world to pay for
it'.
The search for
the unicorn, and
proof of its existence, dates back
almost as far as the legends which
surround it. Ctesias spoke of the
unicorn in the court of Darius II, the
King of Persia in 416 BC. Chinese
writings date back to 2800 BC. The men
of the ancient world believed in the
existence of the unicorn, so the object
of their searching was to find it, not
to prove it existed. It wasn't until
later in history that man began to doubt
the unicorn's physical existence. In the
ninth century, Margoulies wrote, 'It is
universally held that the unicorn is a
supernatural being and of auspicious
omen; so say the odes, the annals, the
biographies of worthies, and other texts
whose authority is unimpeachable. Even
village women and children know the
unicorn is a lucky sign. But this animal
does not figure among the barnyard
animals, it is not always easy to come
across, it does not lend itself to
zoological classification, nor is it
like the horse or bull, the wolf or
deer. In such circumstances we may be
face to face with a unicorn and not know
for sure that we are. We know a certain
animal with a mane is a horse and that a
certain animal with horns is a bull. We
do not know what the unicorn looks
like'. Even though the existence of the
unicorn is questionable, its symbolism
is not. The beast, like all mythological
creatures, has been a reflection of
man's hopes and fears, dreams and
nightmares, and inner consciousness.
Freud considered mythological beasts as
representations of 'universal fears and
feelings'. Specifically, Jung thought
that the purity of the unicorn was of
greater importance. Most mythological
creatures represent man's worst traits,
and are usually more evil than animals,
or man. They kill for pleasure, and are
often involved in unspeakable
atrocities.
The unicorn is an exception to the rule,
being a symbol of purity, hope, love,
and majesty.
The decline of
the unicorn began with the Renaissance and
the advent of scientific thought. The
beliefs that had held for thousands of years
began to crumble when man could not prove
the existence of the unicorn.
Systematically, report after report of a
unicorn was attributed to a more believable
occurrence of a more mundane animal. Rhinos,
goats, and horses were all considered
explanations of unicorns. As technology
advanced, more exact tests and record
keeping were developed, which added to the
mounting evidence against the unicorn.
Finally, the unicorn was added to the list
of animals regarded as 'mythical', and would
later only be found in children's stories
and other fables.
What of the unicorn today?
The unicorn is returning, if only
symbolically. It is that symbolism that
people are seeking today, the idea of
natural truth, purity, and love that much of
society has lost in the shadow of
technology. Odell Shepard wrote, 'It is not
that the men of the Middle Ages who believed
in unicorns were less intelligent than we;
their intelligence was turned in a different
direction... we wrong ourselves when we
insist that if they cannot make good their
flesh and blood actuality on our level we
will have none of them'. To find the
unicorn, as the ancients did, we have to
unlearn what we have learned; we must go
back to an earlier way of looking at the
world. Only then will we find the unicorn.
'Well,
now we have seen each other,' said the
unicorn, 'if you'll believe in me, I'll
believe in you. Is that a bargain?'
--Lewis Carroll
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