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Ch. 16: Loadstone

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326                         PRECIOUS STONES.
residue. At 287° Fahr. Amber fuses, and becomes decomposed, yielding water, an empyreumatic oil, and succinic acid. Amber is soluble in alcohol. By chemical analysis it is shown to be rich in carbon ; being therefore specially suitable for remedial wear against those ailments which are told about here as amenable to charcoal (carbon).
Yellow amber beads were formerly in fashion for necklaces, and other use as personal ornaments in this country. " Succinum is a bituminous juyce, or rosin," tells Dr. W. Rowland, 1669, "of the Earth, well digested ; thence brought into the sea, and there chiefly concreted. Bound to the neck behind, it cures defluxions of the eyes, and hung about the neck keeps destinations from the throat. It is proper chiefly for the head, and womb."
" There are several sorts of Succinum, so-called officinally, as the white, yellow, and black ; but the shops have only two sorts, the white, and the yellow. The yellow is best which is clear, and is sweetest when powdered, the black spotted is worst."
For a delicate person, liable to attacks of relaxed sore throat, to wear pretty constantly a necklace of somewhat large beads made from the transparent yellow Amber is found to be an admirably preventive measure. In playful allusion to which troublesome ailment Hood's title for a dummy book (amongst others, equally humorous, and clever, as supplied at Chatsworth to the Duke of Devonshire, in February, 1831) ran thus : On Sore Throat; or The Migration of the Swallow.
Hood's assistance had been asked for by the Duke towards constructing a door of sham books for the library staircase at Chatsworth, that he would give
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