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CHAPTER TWO
SUPERSTITIONS AND
RELIGIOUS USES OF THE
PRECIOUS STONES
From the earliest times in the history of man gems and precious stones have been held in great esteem. They have been found in the monuments of prehistoric peoples —the Pharaohs, the Incas and the Montezumas put into these brilliant things from Nature's jewel casket a signifi­cance beyond mere suggestion of their intrinsic properties.
The people of East India called the rock-crystal an un­ripe diamond, and the real jewel a ripe diamond. Their notion evidently was that it was a vegetable. In parts of Europe, during the Middle Ages, it was classed as an animal.
Early sages were firm believers in the immunizing influ­ence of gems; they thought that the evil in the world could be kept from contaminating a child if he were properly pro­tected by wearing the appropriate gems. Indeed, folklorists are wont to wonder whether the custom of wearing gems in jewelry did not originate in the talismanic idea instead of in the idea of mere additional adornment.
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