lion-shaped one himself to saw up the wood small with his teeth, for burning in the unquenchable furnace for the Temple of God.
54. And I worshipped the Lord God of Israel, and bade another demon come forward. And there came before me a dragon, three-headed, of fearful hue. And I questioned him: "Who art thou?" And he answered me: "I am a caltrop-like spirit[1], whose activity is in three lines. But I blind children in women's wombs, and twirl their ears round. And I make them deaf[2] and mute. And I have again in my third head means of slipping in[3]. And I smite men in the limbless[4] part of the body, and cause them to fall down, and foam, and grind their teeth. But I have my own way of being frustrated, Jerusalem being signified in writing, unto the place called 'of the head[5].' For there is fore-appointed the angel of the great counsel, and now he will openly dwell on the cross. He doth frustrate me, and to him am I subject."
55. "But in the place where thou sittest, O King Solomon, standeth a column in the air, of purple. …[6] The demon called Ephippas hath brought [it] up from the Red Sea, from inner Arabia. He it is that shall be shut up in a skin-bottle and brought before thee. But at the entrance of the Temple, which thou hast begun to build, O King Solomon, lies stored much gold, which dig thou up and carry off." And I Solomon sent my servant, and found it to be as the demon told me. And I sealed him with my ring, and praised the Lord God.
56. So I said to him: "What art thou called?" And the demon said: "I am the crest[7] of dragons." And I bade him make bricks in the Temple. He had human hands.
57. And I adored the Lord God of Israel, and bade another demon present himself. And there came before me a spirit in woman's form, that had a head without any limbs[8], and her hair was dishevelled. And I said to her: "Who art thou?" But she answered: "Nay, who art thou? And why dost thou want to hear concerning me? But, as thou wouldst learn, here I stand bound before thy face. Go- ↑ (
Greek characters). The (
Greek characters) was a three-spiked instrument, thrown on the ground to wound horses' feet.
- ↑ (
Greek characters), an unknown word.
- ↑ (
Greek characters) is a word of doubtful sense.
- ↑ (
Greek characters) may bear this sense.
- ↑ i. e. Golgotha. The old legend was that Adam's skull reposed in this spot, and that the cross was planted upon it.
- ↑ (
Greek characters). The meaning of the last part of this compound is unknown.
- ↑ (
Greek characters).
- ↑ Here we seem to have the Greek head of Medusa transformed into a demon.