Quantcast

Ch. 1: Magic Stones Electric Gems

Ch. 1: Magic Stones Electric Gems Page of 485 Ch. 1: Magic Stones Electric Gems Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
52          THE MAGIC OP JEWELS AND CHARMS
is laid against her cheek, her feverish restlessness gradu­ally disappears and gives place to tranquil sleep. More than this, she is aware of a species of subconscious sympathy with the tourmaline. So intense is this sympathy that although the child consented to part with her crystal that it might be offered as a unique specimen to a foreign museum, and was heart-broken to learn that through some carelessness it had been lost while being taken thither, she recognized its presence long years after, when, travelling in Europe as a young bride, she entered the cabinet of an enthusiastic collector to view his specimens, and was in no wise surprised when she really found her "Stonie" there among his prized tourmalines.
In connection with this pretty recital it is interesting to note that the first chance observation of the attractive qualities of tourmalines is said to have been made in Am­sterdam by a group of Dutch children whose attention had been attracted by a number of tourmaline crystals brought from the Orient, and who were puzzled to see bits of ash and straw attracted to the stones. This came to the knowl­edge of some Dutch lapidaries, who for a time called the stone Aschentrekker, or "Ash-Attractor."89 Our name tourmaline is derived from turmoil, the name given the stone by the natives of Ceylon.
There seems some little likelihood that certain examples of the gem called lychnis and noted by Pliny may have been varieties of the tourmaline. As the first tourmalines brought to modern Europe came to Holland from Ceylon, we might conjecture that those kinds of lychnis said by Pliny to have been brought from India had a like origin. Of these Indian specimens, the finest examples of this gem, one kind resem­bled the carbuncle or ruby, while another bore the desig­nation Ionia because its color was like that of the violet
• The Germans called it Aschenzieher.
Ch. 1: Magic Stones Electric Gems Page of 485 Ch. 1: Magic Stones Electric Gems
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page