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Ch. 4: Sapphire

Ch. 4:  Sapphire Page of 501 Ch. 4:  Sapphire Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
96                           PRECIOUS STONES.
and devout, confirming the soul in good works " ; which refuses to shine for the beautifying of the unchaste, or the impure ; and which, by the mere force of its own pure rays, kills all noxious and venomous creatures.
The Sapphire in its true colour is blue ; blue as an Italian sky, blue as the deep blue sea. But it may also be red, and yellow, and violet, and green, and hair-brown, such a brown as the Venetian painters loved, with a golden light striking through it.
Sometimes the stone is bluish-grey, and blackish ; the Sapphire also sometimes changes colour by artificial light. Sapphires of the finest blue come from Ceylon. The composition thereof is pure Alumina, for the most part.
Next to the diamond the Sapphire is the hardest known mineral. Its splendid colour of deep translucent blue is probably due to the presence of oxide of cobalt; which chemical salt is invariably used when making imitations of the gem. The Sapphire of the ancients is our " Lapis Lazuli."
Epiphanius said, " It is medicinal; for, being powdered it heals the sores following pustules, and boils, if smeared over them, being thus applied mixed with milk to the ulcerations."—" It is written also in the Law that the vision seen by Moses in the. Mount, and the Law given there unto him were made out of the Stone, Sapphire." The chemical constituents of the Sapphire are (being virtually pure alumina, coloured through admixture with oxide of iron, cobalt). " Alumina, 98-5; lime, OS ; silica, O'O ; oxide of iron, l'O." The gem is highly electric.
Dr. John Schroder wrote (in Latin, 1669) concerning the Sapphire, " It is of a sky-blue colour ; clear, and
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