CHAP. 30. (12.)—THE LEGUMINOUS PLANTS: THE BEAN.
We now come to the history of the leguminous plants,
among which the place of honour must be awarded to the
bean;
1 indeed, some attempts have even been made to use it
for bread. Bean meal is known as "lomentum;" and, as is
the case with the meal of all leguminous plants, it adds considerably, when mixed with flour, to the weight of the bread.
Beans are on sale at the present day for numerous purposes,
and are employed for feeding cattle, and man more particu-
larly. They are mixed, also, among most nations, with
wheat,
2 and panic more particularly, either whole or lightly
broken. In our ancient ceremonials, too, bean pottage
3 occupies its place in the religious services of the gods. Beans are
mostly eaten together with other food, but it is generally
thought that they dull the senses, and cause sleepless nights
attended with dreams. Hence it is that the bean has been
condemned
4 by Pythagoras; though, according to some, the
reason for this denunciation was the belief which he entertained that the souls of the dead are enclosed in the bean: it
is for this reason, too, that beans are used in the funereal banquets of the Parentalia.
5 According to Varro, it is for a
similar cause that the Flamen abstains from eating beans: in
addition to which, on the blossom of the bean, there are certain letters of ill omen to be found.
There are some peculiar religious usages connected with the
bean. It is the custom to bring home from the harvest a bean
by way of auspice, which, from that circumstance, has the
name of "referiva."
6 In sales by public auction, too, it is
thought lucky to include a bean in the lot for sale. It is a
fact, too, that the bean is the only one among all the grains
that fills out at the increase of the moon,
7 however much it
may have been eaten away: it can never be thoroughly boiled
in sea-water, or indeed any other water that is salt.
The bean is the first leguminous plant that is sown; that
being done before the setting of the Vergiliæ, in order that it
may pass the winter in the ground. Virgil
8 recommends that
it should be sown in spring, according to the usage of the parts
of Italy near the Padus: but most people prefer the bean that
has been sown early to that of only three months' growth;
for, in the former case, the pods as well as the stalk afford a
most agreeable fodder for cattle. When in blossom more particularly, the bean requires water; but after the blossom has
passed off, it stands in need of but very little. It fertilizes
9
the ground in which it has been sown as well as any manure
hence it is that in the neighbourhood of Thessaly and Macedonia, as soon as it begins to blossom, they turn up
10 the
ground.
The bean, too, grows wild in most countries, as in those
islands of the Northern Ocean, for instance, which for that
reason have been called by us the "Fabariæ."
11 In Mauritania,
also, it is found in a wild state in various parts, but so remarkably hard that it will never become soft by boiling.
In Egypt there is a kind of bean
12 which grows upon a
thorny stalk; for which reason the crocodiles avoid it, being
apprehensive of danger to their eyes. This stalk is four
cubits in length, and its thickness, at the very most, that of
the finger: were it not for the absence of articulations in it,
it would resemble a soft reed in appearance. The head is
similar to that of the poppy, being of a rose colour: the beans
enclosed in this head are not above thirty in number; the
leaves are large, and the fruit is bitter and odoriferous. The
root, however, is highly esteemed by the natives as a food,
whether eaten raw or well boiled; it bears a strong resemblance to that of the reed. This plant grows also in Syria
and Cilicia, and upon the banks of Lake Torone in Chalcidice.