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Ch. 3: Diamond

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DIAMONDS.                                    65
indyed hym with greatter vertues than many other stones."
The material basis of the Diamond (carbon) is to be found almost everywhere : in the bread we eat, in our sugar, in the wood, and the coal which we burn ; but then in an uncrystallised state, being opaque, and easily frangible. When crystallised as a diamond it is the hardest substance known (though the amorphous variety of diamond, a carbonate, whilst of precisely the same chemical composition, and of a nearly equal specific gravity, is black, lustreless, and degraded to the mere purpose of cutting, and polishing other gems).
The designation " Adamant," now transferred to the Blood Stone, was certainly bestowed on the Diamond in former times. Juvenal, without doubt, told thus of the Diamond as adorning the finger of Berenice :—
" Adamas notissimus, et Berenices In digito factus pretiosior."
Whilst reputed to be an antidote to all poisons when worn as a finger-jewel, yet the Diamond, if swallowed, was considered, during the Middle Ages, to be the most deadly of substances. It was among the poisons ad­ministered to Sir Thomas Overbury when a prisoner in the Tower of London. Yet such is by no means the real fact. Garcius tells of slaves in the mines swallowing large diamonds for the purpose of stealing them, but without the least bodily injury being sus­tained by their so doing. He also writes of a woman known to him who administered doses of diamond-dust for many days together to her husband (troubled by dysentery), but without producing the least effect. The natives of India, says Harry Emanuel, " imagine
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