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ACITUS
reporteth that amongst certaine barbarous kings, for the confirmation
of
an inviolable bonde or covenant, their manner was to joyne their right
hands close and hard together with enterlacing their thumbs: and when
by
hard wringing them the blood appeared at their ends, they pricked them
with some sharp point, and then mutually entersuckt each one the
others.
Phisicians say thumbes are the master fingers of the hand, and that
their
Latine etymologie is derived of Pollere. The Græcians
call
it αντιχειρ, as a man would say, another hand. And
it seemeth the Latines
likewise, take them sometimes in this sense, id est, for the
whole
hand:
Sed nec vocibus
excitata
blandis, Molli pollice nec rogata
surgit.--
MART. 1. xii. Epig. xcix. 8.
It wil not rise, though with
sweet
words excited,
Nor with the touch of softest
thumb
invited.
In Rome it was heretofore
a signe
of favour to wring and kisse the thumbs:
Fautor utroque tuum
laudabit
pollice ludum -- HOR. 1. i. Epist. xviii. 66.
He that applaudes will praise,
With both his thumbs, thy plaies:
and of disfavor or disgrace to
lift
them up and turne them outward.
converso pollice vulgi Quemlibet occidunt populariter. -- JUVEN. Sat.
iii. 36
When people turne their thumbs
away,
They popularly any slay.
Such as were hurt or maymed
in
their thumbs were by the Romanes dispensed from going to warre, as they
who had lost their weapons hold-fast. Augustus did confiscate
all
the goods of a Roman knight, who through malice had cut off the thumbes
of two young children of his, thereby to excuse them from going to
warre
and before him the Senate in the time of the Italian warres had
condemned Caius
Vatienus to perpetuall prison, and confiscated all his goods,
forsomuch
as he had willingly cut off the thumb of his left hand, so to exempt
himselfe
from the voyage. Some one, whose name I remember not, having gained a
great
victory by sea, caused all the enemies whom he had vanquished and taken
prisoners to have their thumbs cut off, thinking thereby to deprive
them
of all meanes of fighting, or rowing, or handling their oares. The
Athenians
likewise caused them to be cut off from them of Ægina, to
take from them the preeminence in the art of navigation. In Lacedæmon
masters punished their schollers by byting their thumbs.