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172                       Cat's-eye.
of a yellowish-green, yellowish-brown, blackish, and hyacinth-red colour. It derives its name from possessing a peculiar opalescent lustre, between resinous and vi­treous, which shows most strongly when cut en calochon. When held towards the light, it resembles the contracted pupil of the eye of a cat; this singular effect being caused by fibres of amianthoid asbestos running parallel across the stone. It is usually translucent, sometimes quite transparent, very easily broken, and the fracture imperfectly conchoidal. Before the blowpipe it loses its lustre and transparency, and in powder is fusible, although with difficulty. It occurs in a massive form in Bavaria, the Hartz Mountains, and in Bohemia; but the good quality only comes from Ceylon and the Malabar coast, where it is found in small rounded pebbles. The cutting is usually performed in Ceylon, and when exhibiting the cat's-eye peculiarity in perfection, is much esteemed.
This gem is frequently confounded by jewellers and lapidaries with the true or chrysoberyl cat's-eye, which they also persist in calling "chrysolite cat's-eye." The chrysoberyl (termed " cymophane " when opalescent) is a much more beautiful gem, and may easily be distin­guished by its superior hardness and greater specific gravity.
The cat's-eye is much used in jewellery for rings and pins, and its value has tripled in the last ten years. It is impossible to fix any value which would guide a pur­chaser, the price being a fancy one, dependent on the size and beauty of the gem.