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212         THE MAGIC OF JEWELS AND CHARMS
upon the wound; even those at the point of death were revived by it.18
An amulet set with a bezoar stone is said to have pos­sessed such a power to prevent bleeding that when a Malacca prince was killed in a battle with his rebellious subjects, no blood was flowing from any of his numerous wounds. On stripping the body a golden armlet set with a bezoar came to view, and the moment this was removed blood began to flow freely from the wounds.18*
Mercato writes of a marvellous Occidental bezoar, sent from Peru to Borne in 1534, as a gift to Pope Gregory XIII. It weighed no less than fifty-six ounces, although it was defective, since a large portion of the exterior crust was missing, the second layer was partly broken away, and even the third layer was damaged in some places. This wonder­ful concretion had been dedicated to one of the Peruvian gods, as a rare and precious object, and it was taken away by the Spaniards when they spoiled the temple. Mercato says that this bezoar was "of a truly monstrous size, un­heard of in all previous centuries, and it is still the largest in the whole realm of nature." 19
The bezoars of the New World seem to have differed considerably from those of India. They had a rough sur­face, were usually of a gray color, of various sizes and forms, and composed of a number of superimposed, coalescing layers, much thicker than those of the Oriental, or Indian, bezoar. They were usually of considerable size, either hol­low within or containing seeds, needles and similar sub­stances. They came from the "West Indies, especially from Peru, and were brought thence by the Spaniards and Portu-
" F. Nix, in Tijdschrift voor Ind. Taal, Land en Volk, vol. v, p. 151. »»Julii Reichelti, "De Amuletis," Argentorati, 1676, p. 75. "Mercati, "Metallotheca Vaticana," Romse, 1719, p. 175.