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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
234         THE MAGIC OP JEWELS AND CHARMS
water to boil when immersed, it actually has the property of strongly adhering to the tongue, and when put into water emits rapid streams of minute bubbles of air. It has a strong siliceous odor, but after absorbing an equal bulk of water becomes transparent like a Colorado hydrophane de­scribed by the writer several years ago before the New York Academy of Sciences.
Although tabasheer is mentioned in nearly all the text­books, very little of it has reached the United States. It is highly interesting, since we have here an organic product scarcely to be distinguished from a similar opal-like body found by Mr. Arnold Hague in the geysers of the Yellow­stone Park. Both tabasheer and the hydrophane were prob­ably what was called "Oculus Beli," "Oculus Mundi," and "Lapis mutabilis" by Thomas Nicol, Robert Boyle, and other writers of the seventeenth century, and "Weltauge" by the Germans.
The great capacity of this substance for absorbing a fluid would undoubtedly render it as efficacious for the purpose of absorbing poison as any other known stone, providing the wound were open enough ; and its internal use to-day as a medicine is possibly also due to this property.
Tabasheer, as known among mineralogists, is a corrup­tion of the word tabixir, a name which was used even in the time of Avicenna, the Grand Vizier and body surgeon of the Sultan of Persia in the tenth century. It played a very important part in medicine during the Middle Ages. As to its origin, Sir David Brewster59 says that tabasheer is only formed in diseased or injured bamboo joints or stalks.
Guibourt60 differs from Brewster, inasmuch as he attrib­utes the different rates of growth to the fact that when
* Edinburgh Philos. Journal, No. 1, p. 147 ; Philos. Trans., cix, p. 283 ; and " The Natural History and Properties of Tabersheer," 1828 ; Edinburgh Journal, viii, p. 288.
"Jour, de Pharmacies, xxvii, pp. 81, 161, 252; and Phil. Mag., x, p. 220.
Ch. 5: Snake Stones and Bezoars Page of 485 Ch. 5: Snake Stones and Bezoars
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