(Orobas, from Collin de Plancy's Dictionnaire Infernal, 1863)
"Orobas is a great prince, he commeth foorth like a horsse, but when he putteth on him a mans idol, he talketh of divine vertue, he giveth true answers of things present, past, and to come, and of the divinitie, and of the creation, he deceiveth none, nor suffereth anie to be tempted, he giveth dignities and prelacies, and the favour of freends and foes, and hath rule over twentie legions." (Scot, Discoverie of Witchcraft, page 224)
This demon has the unusual quality of complete truthfulness. An honest nature is often the path to winning the good will of both friends and enemies. Not only does he refuse to lie, but he will not allow the magician to be deceived by others. When Scot writes of him putting on a "mans idol" he means simply the shape of a human being. Collin de Plancy has combined the two separate forms of this demon into a single monster that has the head and hindquarters of a horse, but the torso and arms of a man.