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198         THE MAGIC OP JEWELS AND CHARMS
be equivalent to casting away every prospect of good-fortune. However, only one who belongs to the three highest castes is entitled to become an owner of the sacred stone, in which the very spirit of Vishnu is supposed to dwell; neither a Sudra nor a Pariah enjoys this privilege, which is also denied to women.
The salagrâma is carefully wrapped in linen cloths, and must be often washed and perfumed. The water with which it has been washed becomes a consecrated drink. The mas­ter of the house must adore the stone once each day, either in the morning or in the evening. As the salagrâma not only brings happiness in this world but also insures felicity in the future world, it is held over the dying Hindu while water is allowed to trickle through the orifice. This cere­mony appears to have a certain analogy to thé rite of ex­treme unction administered in the Catholic Church.
It is stated by Finn Magnusen that in Iceland, toward the beginning of the last century, he saw superstitious peas­ants carefully guard small stones of peculiar appearance in pretty bags filled with fine flour. They treated these stones with great reverence and either wore them on their persons or placed them in their beds or other furniture.81
The fossils known as brontiœ, ombria and chelonites were all believed to be antidotes for poison and also to make the wearer victorious over his enemies. Hence they were sometimes set in the pommels of swords. That these objects were equally potent in peace, is shown by the fact that Danish peasant women placed them in their milk pails to ward off the effects of any spell that might have been cast over the cow's milk by a malevolent witch.82
a Magnusen, " Om en Steenring med Runenindskrift," Annaler for Nordisk Oldkyndighed, Copenhagen, 1838-1839, p. 133.
** Valentini, " Museum museorum, oder die vollständige Schau-Bühne," Frankfurt am Main, 1714, vol. ii, p. 12.