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Ch. 5: Snake Stones and Bezoars

Ch. 5: Snake Stones and Bezoars Page of 485 Ch. 5: Snake Stones and Bezoars Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
216         THE MAGIC OF JEWELS AND CHARMS
regarded as having therapeutic virtues, such, for instance, asa" stone ' ' from the body of a doe ; this had been found by a certain Helmhardt Jörger and by him presented to the em­peror; another of these treasured concretions came from the stomach of a stag. A specimen of the famed "eagle-stone" is also listed ; this had a double gold setting, and on it were inscribed the words "Piedra Geodas," showing that the real character of this stone as a geode was then well understood.26
Some of the gold-mounted bezoars of Eudolph II are still to be seen in the Hofmuseum, at Vienna. One is sur­rounded by a gold band with a scroll pattern ; another has a capping of gold and stands upon a golden base, and still another, capped and belted with gold, is attached by a chain to a golden bowl. This was probably to be used as a test of the freedom from poison of any beverage in the vessel. A bezoar of the eighteenth century is mounted upon a tree of gold, against the trunk of which a wild boar is leaning. This may be only a decorative adjunct, or it might be an indica­tion of the particular animal source of this special bezoar.27
The bezoars of Borneo are taken either from monkeys or porcupines. For medicinal use, the gratings are dis­solved in water and the solution is administered as required. Skeats relates that he was once asked $200 by a native for a small stone, erroneously asserted to be a bezoar. This stone was carefully wrapped up in cotton and preserved in a tin box with some grains of rice, the owner firmly believing that the stone fed on the rice. A red monkey (semnopithecus) furnishes many of these bezoars, but those from the porcu­pine are supposed to be so much the more efficacious that the Sultan of Saik claims all bezoars of this kind found in
"Jahrbuch der kunsthistorischen Sammlungen des allerhöchsten Kaiser­hauses, vol. xx, Pt. II, pp. lxv, xcvii, Wien, 1899.
"Figured in Jeweler's Circular Weekly, Dec. 17, 1913, p. 53; Charles A. Brassier, " Gold Mounted Specimens of Bezoar."
Ch. 5: Snake Stones and Bezoars Page of 485 Ch. 5: Snake Stones and Bezoars
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