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Ch. 1: Magic Stones Electric Gems

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MAGIC STONES AND ELECTEIC GEMS 45
1887, the taimé of the Kiowa has not been viewed by mortal eye since that time, not even the custodian of the treasure having the privilege of opening the box, except on the occasion of the ceremonial dance above mentioned.73 Whether this stone has been rudely fashioned into its present shape, or whether its natural form suggested its use as a simulacrum of some deity, has not been determined; it is evidently not of meteoric origin as were many of the curiously shaped stones venerated as images of the gods in ancient times, in both Europe and Asia.
In the rock of St. Gowan's chapel in Wales was a natural cavity upon which the name of the Expanding Stone was bestowed by popular tradition, because the strange fancy prevailed that this stone automatically adapted itself to the size of anyone who entered the cavity. The legend ran that once, during the Pagan persecutions, when a fugitive Christian, hotly pursued, reached this rock it opened up of its own accord so that he could slip into it, and then closed about him so as to hide him effectually from his enemies. This Expanding Stone was believed to manifest its magic power by bringing to pass the wish expressed by anyone who entered it, provided he did not change his wish while he turned around within it.74
The natives of the French colony of New Caledonia in the southern Pacific, attach special importance to the for­tuitous shape of stones in using them for talismans or amulets. According to their form such stones are consid­ered to procure favorable effects against famine, madness, or death ; to induce sunshine or rain, or else to bring good luck in fishing or in sailing, each special use being sug-
™ Dr. Walter Hough in " Handbook of American Indians north of Mexico," ed. by Frederick Webb Hodge, Smithsonian Inst. ; Bur. of Am. Ethn., Bull. 30 ; Washington, 1910, Pt. 2, p. 194.
"Wirt Sikes, "British Goblins: Welsh Folk-Lore, Fairy Myths, Legends and Traditions," London, 1880, p. 365.
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