lapidary.
Much more reason is there to suppose it the result of the incalculably
better and more copious supply flowing in from a variety of sources now
closed to us, such as Arabia, continually referred to by Pliny as
producing the choicest gems, and the interior of Asia. Their Roman
appellations inform us that this was the case with many of the ancient
fine-coloured marbles, only known at present as existing in the remains
of Caesarian magnificence ; such as the Rosso, the Nero, and the Giallo
Antico, all from Numidia; the Paonazzo or Synnadic, from Phrygia; the
Thebaic, fi'om Egypt, &c. Numidia and Ethiopia, perpetually quoted
by Pliny as exporting marbles and gems of all kinds, are now completely
lost to the trade, as also are the equally productive mines anciently
skirting the Red Sea. In fact, these were the regions supplying the
Greek gem-dealers before India was opened out to them; as Theophrastus
distinctly states (34) : " First-class (precious) stones are rare, and
come from only a few places ; such as Carthage and the country around
Massilia (for amber and coral, doubtless), and out of Egypt, from Syene
near the city of Elephantina, and from the district called Psephö, . .
. and the stones used for inlaying-work, out of Bactria."
To
return to the artificial colouring of gems, it is ascertained by
experiment that those belonging to any species of translucent quartz,
which have been rendered white and opaque by the action of fire, will
in a great degree recover their original colours upon immersion in hot
water. This fact is strikingly exemplified in a tricoloured Agate
belonging to myself, of which the two darker bands are completely
calcined and chalk-like, yet these, after a short soaking, again become
of two shades of brown, and as translucent as ever. Winckelmann had
noticed the same transformation in a stone ('Pierres Gravées,' No.
1123), engraved with an Apollo, which from white and opaque