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Ch. 9: Amulets of Primitive Peoples

Ch. 9: Amulets of Primitive Peoples Page of 485 Ch. 9: Amulets of Primitive Peoples Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
372         THE MAGIC OF JEWELS AND CHARMS
speculators, and indeed all who hope for a favorable turn of Fortune's wheel, should look with favor on this stone. As medicinal gems', the ruby and the moon-stone are espe­cially recommended; the former for chronic headaches and the latter for the manifold forms of nervousness. Lastly, the diamond, if worn on the left side, wards off evil influences and attracts good fortune. The unjustly maligned opal is asserted to be robbed of all power to harm if it be associated with diamonds and rubies.
Many of the members of the French nobility are the owners and wearers of talismanic ornaments of one kind or another. A powerful combination of such ' ' life-preservers ' ' is credited to the Duc de Guiche. On his right hand he wears three curiously chased rings, one on the first finger, the sec­ond on the middle finger, and the third on the "ring-finger." One of the rings is set with a sardonyx engraved with the figure of an eagle, the second ring bears a topaz on which has been graven a falcon, and the third ring shows a beauti­ful coral bearing the design of a man holding a drawn sword in his right hand. Both the stones and the special designs engraved on each one are in accord with the oldest tra­ditional lore in regard to talismans, and the stones them­selves are those indicated by the date of the duke's birth and by his baptismal name. While such an array of finger-rings would hardly appeal to the taste of an American man, the fashion of wearing an appropriate series of rings has met with considerable favor among our American mondaines, and certainly has the merit of lending an individual signifi. canee to the rings selected for wear.43
The magnificent star-sapphire set in the hilt of the richly chased and ornamented sword given by the Greeks of America to King Constantine of Greece, on Easter Day, 1913, just before the recipient succeeded to the royal dignity,
* St. Louis Democrat, 1905.                                                                     ~"
Ch. 9: Amulets of Primitive Peoples Page of 485 Ch. 9: Amulets of Primitive Peoples
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