Quantcast

Ch. 9: Smaragdus, Emerald

Ch. 9: Smaragdus, Emerald Page of 377 Ch. 9: Smaragdus, Emerald Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
SMARAGDUS.
279
during his residence in Rome (from 1524 to 1527), in which line he boasts of having carried on a very lucrative* com­merce with the Cardinals and other wealthy patrons of art, mentions the having thus obtained an Emerald as large as a bean, exquisitely engraved with a dolphin's head. This stone was of such fine quality that, when re-cut, " it was sold again for as many hundreds of scudi as it had cost me tens." It must be borne in mind that Cellini was by profession a connoisseur in precious stones, and, above all, that a performance so excellent as he describes it, must have been antique, the art of gem-engraving having only been revived in Italy a few years before his own birth in 1500.·)· And to wind up this list with a moral proof derived from Pliny's description of his best Smarag-dus : " After the Diamond and the Pearl, the first place is given to the Smaragdus for many reasons. No other colour is so pleasing to the sight : for grass and green foliage we view indeed with pleasure, but Emeralds with so much the greater delight, inasmuch as nothing in creation compared with them equals the intensity of their green. Besides, they are the only gems that fill the eye with their view, yet do not fatigue it ; nay, more, when the sight is wearied by any over-exertion, it is relieved by looking upon an Emerald. Indeed gem-engravers find no other means of resting the eye so agreeable ; so effectually by its soft green lustre doth it refresh the wearied sight." After reading this just panegyric, or the poetical comparison in Heliodorus : " gems green as a meadow in the spring, but
Ch. 9: Smaragdus, Emerald Page of 377 Ch. 9: Smaragdus, Emerald
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page