Quantcast

Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems

Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems Page of 485 Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
92          THE MAGIC OF JEWELS AND CHARMS
cloud came from the north, and shot forth sparks like rockets, smoke rising from it like a furnace; at the same time a series of explosions was heard, not so much resem­bling the sound of thunder as that produced by the firing of cannon or the discharge of many muskets. The cloud re­mained suspended in the air for some time, during which many stones fell to the earth, some of which were found. One of them is described as being of irregular form, with a point like a diamond ; it weighed about five pounds and gave out a "vitriolic smell." Another weighed three and a half pounds, was very hard, of the color of iron, and "smelled like brimstone." 39
The following passage written in the fourteenth, or per­haps in the thirteenth century, shows considerable accuracy of observation:40
There are some who fancy that the thunder is a stone, for the reason that a stone often falls when it thunders in stormy weather. This is not true, for if the thunder were a stone, it would wound the people and animals it strikes, just as any other falling stone does. However, this is not the ease, for we see that the people who have been struck by thunder (sic) show no wounds, but they are black from the stroke, and this is because the hot vapor burns the blood in their hearts. Therefore, they perish without wounds.
The fall of a siderite twenty miles east of Lahore in India, on April 17, 1621, is reported in contemporary rec­ords. From this iron, which weighed about 3^ pounds, the Mogul Emperor Jehangir ordered two sabres to be made, as well as a knife and a dagger, and commanded that the fact should be properly registered. Here, as in other similar cases, the weapons were believed to possess a quasi-
** King, " Remarks Concerning Stones said to have Fallen from the Clouds," London, 1796, p. 4.
40 Megenberg, " Buch der Natur," ed. Pfeiffer, Stuttgart, 1861, p. 92. (This is based on Thomas de Cantimpré's "Liber de natura rerum," written about 1240.)
Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems Page of 485 Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page