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Turquoise

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222
GEMS.
the day, and insisted that an attentive observer might use it as a sundial. In Germany even now it is be­lieved that, when offered as a love gift, it remains unchanged while love lasts, but loses its colour when affection declines. But if the colour of the Western and that of the fossil Oriental turquoise change, it is not so with the aluminous turquoise, which always remains the same.
Fossil turquoises change colour only on the surface, so that they can regain it by means of the wheel.
Not so with the Western turquoises, which, changing altogether, can only for some days be made to regain their lost colour by dipping them in a solution of oxide of copper. They are then called bathed turquoise, and are of very little value.
Some people think that the turquoise is the stone which the ancients called callaie, and is thus described by Pliny : " The callaie grows in the islands of Mount Caucasus, but is spongy and full of spots : that from Caramania is clearer and bettet,' In both places it is found in inaccessible and cold banks protruding in the form of an eye, which does not appear to have been pro­duced in the stone, but fastened on it. It can be cut and worked, but is fragile. When set in gold, no jewel looks so well. The handsomest .lose their colour in oil, grease, or wine ; the worst preserve theirs best. No stone can be better imitated in glass than this."*
Theophrastus is more explicit on this subject, when * ' Nat. Hist.' xxxvn. viii. 33.
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