mind, you shall accompany us in the expedition; I
will furnish you everyone with a royal vulture and
other accoutrements; we shall set out to-morrow.”
“With all my heart,” said I, “whenever
you please.” We stayed, however, and supped
with him; and rising early the next day, proceeded
with the army, when the spies gave us notice that
the enemy was approaching. The army consisted
of a hundred thousand, besides the scouts and engineers,
together with the auxiliaries, amongst whom were eighty
thousand Hippogypi, and twenty thousand who were mounted
on the Lachanopteri; {85a} these are very large birds,
whose feathers are of a kind of herb, and whose wings
look like lettuces. Next to these stood the
Cinchroboli, {85b} and the Schorodomachi. {85c} Our
allies from the north were three thousand Psyllotoxotae
{85d} and five thousand Anemodromi; {85e} the former
take their names from the fleas which they ride upon,
every flea being as big as twelve elephants; the latter
are foot-soldiers, and are carried about in the air
without wings, in this manner: they have large
gowns hanging down to their feet, these they tuck
up and spread in a form of a sail, and the wind drives
them about like so many boats: in the battle
they generally wear targets. It was reported
that seventy thousand Strathobalani {86a} from the
stars over Cappadocia were to be there, together with
five thousand Hippogerani; {86b} these I did not see,
for they never came: I shall not attempt, therefore,
to describe them; of these, however, most wonderful
things were related.
Such were the forces of Endymion; their arms were
all alike; their helmets were made of beans, for they
have beans there of a prodigious size and strength,
and their scaly breast-plates of lupines sewed together,
for the skins of their lupines are like a horn, and
impenetrable; their shields and swords the same as
our own.
The army ranged themselves in this manner: the
right wing was formed by the Hippogypi, with the king,
and round him his chosen band to protect him, amongst
which we were admitted; on the left were the Lachanopteri;
the auxiliaries in the middle, the foot were in all
about sixty thousand myriads. They have spiders,
you must know, in this country, in infinite numbers,
and of pretty large dimensions, each of them being
as big as one of the islands of the Cyclades; these
were ordered to cover the air from the moon quite to
the morning star; this being immediately done, and
the field of battle prepared, the infantry was drawn
up under the command of Nycterion, the son of Eudianax.
The left wing of the enemy, which was commanded by
Phaeton himself, consisted of the Hippomyrmices; these
are large birds, and resemble our ants, except with
regard to size, the largest of them covering two acres;
these fight with their horns and were in number about
fifty thousand. In the right wing were the Aeroconopes,
{87a} about five thousand, all archers, and riding
upon large gnats. To these succeeded the Aerocoraces,