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BOORT.                                         47
do not think it unlikely that Nero's emerald was an aqnamarina cut for the purpose of a magnifying glass. In corroboration of the above, we bring to the notice of the reader the fact that Nicola de Cusa, Bishop of Brixen, who died in 1454, gave the name of Beryllus to one of his works for this reason, that " by means of its assistance, people could understand things other­wise incomprehensible ;" and in the second chapter he expressly says : " The beryl is a bright, transparent, colourless stone, to which a concave or convex form is given by art, and by means of which whoever looks through it sees things otherwise invisible to the naked eye."
XVI.
BOORT (KNOTTY DIAMOND).
This particular species of adamantine carbon, which seems placed by nature between crystallized carbon and the pure diamond, bears a name of unknown etymology, but certainly of Dutch origin.
Most frequently it is of spherical form, and its crys­tallization is so irregular that it resembles the most complicated knots in certain woods.
It is a mixture of molecules without order or con­tinuity, and these, adhering solely by the force of cohesion, are the cause of its wonderful hardness. It has not any regular cleavage.
The boort is externally more rough than some