|
www.virgomoon.com |
|
Heliotrope Earrings |
![]() |
![]() |
The Heliotrope Earrings include:
Length: 1 1/8" (3 cm) high
|
|||
| Item
#473
Sold |
Although this gorgeous heliotrope is unusually colorful, normally it is dark green with a few "drops" of red so it's easy to understand why is also called "bloodstone." Having established why heliotrope is called bloodstone, inquiring minds also need to know why bloodstone would be called heliotrope. The Book of Stones says the reason is not known. Apparently the authors have not read Pliny the Elder, or perhaps they have and had the same trouble following his logic that I did. Let's start at the beginning with the etymology: the word heliotrope means "sun turning." Botanically, it refers to any plant that turns toward the sun as does the purple-flowered Heliotropium arborescens. This plant gave "heliotrope" the meaning of "purple." Gary Trudeau once described Zonker as "heliotropic" (no, he isn't purple, he's a cartoon character who used to work on his suntan a lot). Perhaps you've seen or heard of tulips "bowing" before a sadhu but that is likely a bit of stage magic rather than heliotropism Shah says, accomplished with chloroform. At a more elevated level of discussion, Aurelio Porcelaga uses the heliotrope's relation to the sun as an example of how we should relate to God. The name heliotrope was also applied to a surveying instrument invented by Gauss which used focused sunlight. All very interesting, but how can bloodstone be thought of as "sun turning"? After combing Wicca texts, the Catalogue of the Engraved Gems and Rings in the Collection of Joseph Mayer, 1879, an old Grolier's Academic American Encyclopedia and a whole lot of other stuff, I finally found the original reference to heliotrope in Pliny's Natural History, book 37, chapter 60:
There's a little leap in his logic I can't seem to follow. Is he suggesting that heliotrope plants turn toward the sun; the heliotrope stone, when turned toward the sun, behaves oddly? Or perhaps: the rays of the sun cause the plant to bend, and the stone "bends" the rays of the sun into a different color? That's a stretch but I was working on the "bending" idea because I'm not so quick to dismiss the invisibility option that Pliny seems so testy about. In fact, the current work on invisibility depends upon bending light around the object. Check out the article "Closer to Vanishing: Bending light as a step toward invisibility cloaks" in Science News here. BTW, this text in Pliny was well known to Boccaccio and the ideas are used in the Decameron. Won't you order these pretty earrings and perhaps wear them with some flowers in your hair? Who knows what might happen? |
| Home | Add me to mailing list! | Contact Us | About Virgo Moon | Privacy Policy | Site Map |
All designs © Mary Hicklin 2001-2008