The Gemstone Readings of Edgar Cayce
Willard L. Johnson
Willard L. Johnson is professor of religious studies at San Diego State University, and has a Ph.D. in Sanskrit and Indian languages and literatures. He is the author of Poetry and Speculation of the Rg Veda and Riding the Ox Home, and regularly edits his professor's work, The Buddhist Religion. Professor Johnson has studied Cayce since 1973, after a visit to the ARE Clinic in Arizona.
Edgar Cayce, assisted by his loyal stenographer, Gladys Davis,recorded over 14,000
psychic readings. In all these readings, he recommended gemstones more than a hundred
times to his clients. Even though seldom mentioned, they hold some interest to many,
and even occasioned the publication by the Association for Research and Enlightenment,
Inc., of Gems and Stones (Virginia Beach: A.R.E. Press, 1960, Revised Edition,
1979), subtitled Scientific Properties and Occult Aspects of Twenty-Two Gems,
Stones, and Metals, a booklet which has gone through many printings. A new age
of interpretation of all of Cayce's readings opened when the same ARE published on
CD-ROM disc the entire set of readings and other ancillary materials, opening up
to one and all these records. This essay examines the meanings of the gemstones readings
available in this source.
Human beings have a long and ancient fascination for gemstones so it is not surprising
to find Cayce speaking of them, although precious and semi-precious gemstones do
not figure in other recent revelatory traditions, such as those of the Mesmerists
and Spiritualists of nineteenth century America. It can be assumed that Cayce's comments
on the esoteric qualities and uses of gemstones predicted the present-day interest
in them. Furthermore, gemstones have a long history of interpretation around the
world. The best recent book to present a succinct account of gemstones in the western
tradition is Barbara G. Walker, The Book of Sacred Stones: Fact and Fallacy in
the Crystal World (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1989). However, the title
attribution of "sacred stones" is inappropriate since the author is skeptical
about the esoteric significance of gemstones, but at least she accurately reports
the traditions held about them in the past, and she recites what she considers the
mistakes of the present day New Age interpreters of these stones. Her descriptions
of the stones are scientifically based, and she often remarks about the beauty of
the stones but does not in the least believe in their esoteric and sacred meanings
or possible powers, contrary to Cayce's interpretations. For anyone looking for a
single reference on the stones mentioned in Cayce's readings, her book is a primary
resource.
The first stirrings of the now well known "New Age" brought the Cayce booklet
on gemstones out into print followed closely by another published a year later by
Doris M. Hodges, Healing Stones (Perry, Iowa: Hiawatha Publishing Co., 1961).
Hodges holds no claim to having psychically received the substance of her work, but
her treatment of the healing influence of stones signaled the growing flood which
was to follow as New Age writers discovered channeling and esoteric doctrines. One
of the earliest booklets to present a revealed interpretation of gemstones appeared
was published in 1976, by Julia Lorusso and Joel Glick with the punning title, Healing
Stoned: The Therapeutic Use of Gems & Minerals (Albuquerque, NM: Brotherhood
of Life, 1976, second edition, 1985), which openly claims that the interpretations
of the stones come from "channeling" during sessions in 1975-76. Since
then a host of other volumes have appeared, such as Katrina Raphaell's Crystal
Enlightenment: The Transforming Properties of Crystals and Healing Stones (Santa
Fe, NM: Aurora Press, 1985). From healing to enlightenment, the modern age of esoteric
interpretation of stones was well under way.
It is my objective in these pages to explore the nature and content of Cayce's gemstone
readings. Immediately I must make one telling conclusion about these readings: the
most prominent feature defining Cayce's recommendations of gemstones is that they
almost all occur in Life Readings, and thus pertain solely to a single individual.
Life Readings generally follow a certain set pattern. First, Cayce started the reading
by identifying the person's records and characterizing the person's fundamental characteristics,
followed by specific recommendations as to appropriate stones, colors, and other
matters specifically for that person. Then followed a reading of the "astrological
forces" and then descriptions of "the appearances in the earth" (i.e.
past lives, starting with the latest first). He sometimes made recommendations about
the past lives and summarized essential ideas, and ending with questions from the
client.
One conclusion about Cayce's reading strategy needs emphasis: the stones readings
given were made for that person alone and were not necessarily applicable to others.
There is no reason to conclude that when Cayce recommended a stone for a particular
person it would have the same effect when others adopted it. Contrary to this obvious
fact, both editions of the ARE booklet offer lists of stones giving "Recommended
Uses of Stones" (p. 44, Second Edition), generalizing the effects of various
stones. In one category, ie. "attunements," various stones are listed,
for healing forces, infinity, creative vibrations, developing psychic powers, meditation,
and for receptiveness. A second list makes a case for specific physical or mental
conditions and the stones which will give various results, such as "general
protection, prevention of personal anger, influencing the mental choices, increasing
abilities during exertion, strenghtening the body, and gaining self-assurance."
As I read these Life Readings, the stones Cayce recommended were specifically chosen
as approp0riate to the past life experiences of the person being advised since each
past life reading has information specific to the individual. As far as I know, Cayce
did not recommend any particular stone for its application to individuals other than
those to whom he gave life readings.
A review of some of the features of these very specialized readings demonstrates
clearly how the stones are being recommended. In a life reading (1616-001) for a
woman born in Havana, Cuba, Cayce recommended bloodstone once in a context which
was tied in with a past life. In her reading, Cayce counsels the woman to attune
to the creative forces to achieve contentment and calls her a sensitive "to
many varying influences," which lead her to become confused by going against
her intuition. He continues that she has been influenced in various ways, and immediately
recommends red stones--the bloodstone and the ruby. Later in the reading he explains
further. He says that during the time when Christianity came into the Yucatan, she
was a priestess and she had been exposed to blood "spilled in sacrifice,"
which was still tormenting her. He concludes: "Hence we find in the present
experience those things that require the spilling of blood, as of sacrifices that
take hold upon the destruction of others, become as torments as it were to the entity."
Wearing the bloodstone would assist her to such remembering thus leading her to transcend
the negative influences from the past.
By contrast, in another Life Reading for a woman (1770-002), Cayce prefaces his recommendation
for a bloodstone or a ruby with a theory of influences which affect the subject in
her "sojourns in this material plane." Cayce notes that even the way she
sounds or writes her name "the vibration, the harmonious effect of same becomes
almost as a shield in the entity's experience" and thus "through the use
or application of any influence then does it become so much a part of a soul...."
So these influences become signs or omens, and he recommends either the bloodstone
or the ruby "so that the very vibratory forces of same give...creative environs
or vibrations for the entity in its use or application." Unfortunately, in the
reports at the end of this reading, we find out that this woman could not afford
a ruby and while she did wear the bloodstone "she noticed no particular effect.
Was not aware of any vibrations." In this and other reports from Cayce's clients,
we find that the person does not benefit from Cayce's recommendations.
In two other readings, Cayce recommended bloodstones, one, a physical reading, without
explanation (275-031) and the other (3407-001) in a Life Reading, when he said: "As
to stones--the blood stone, to be sure, but in all it is the mental in self that
must bring harmony...." This theme is important--that it is less the stone and
more the person's intention and application which creates harmony in living.
In the reading for 707-001 (a male), Cayce recommended two stones, an agate and a
beryl, but prefaced his choice with the following caveat: "The astronomical,
the numerological, the environs of the creations in the vibrations from metals, from
stones, from those of every form, have--through the experience of the entity at times
had their influence; and thus bear for the entity something that must be used as
an omen, or as an experience that may aid the entity in making the proper interpretations
of those things that to many an one are not lawful to be spoken in materiality--hence
come only to those who have eyes to see, through the spiritual realms...." Cayce's
conclusion goes: "Hence we find the agate, the beryl, should be STONES with
the vibrations and under the influence that the entity may find carrying an incense
to the finer self that makes for an awakening, an opening of the inner self for the
RECEPTIVENESS." This sounds irreconcilably individual as a recommendation, a
tailored application for this particular person. In a second reading the same man
(707-002) asked Cayce how he can use "vibrations from metal, from stones, which
influence me" and received this answer: "As these are but lights, but signs
in thine experience, they are as but a candle that one stumbles not in the dark.
But worship NOT the light of the candle." When he asked whether he should carry
the recommended stones, Cayce responded, "If necessary. And how may ye know?
These do not give the messages! They only attune self that the Christ Consciousness
may give the message!"
Cayce gave a set of readings to a male, aged 40, and in the third the man asked:
"Is there a stone or ring somewhere waiting for me, that I should wear? What
causes the feeling that there is, and what power has such a stone in reference to
one's life?" (531-3) Cayce recommended a ruby saying that it "would make
for the body that not as something which would be other than the power that self
attributes to same, through its actual experience." Thus, Cayce says that the
power a stone for this person comes from himself, further explaining: "But the
light or reflection from same, worn on hand or body, will enable the body to concentrate
in its mental application the greater--through the influences such a stone brings
to material expression." He goes on to explain that each stone has "its
own atomic movement" but further explains that such a stone particularly matches
his personhood (previously, in 531-1 Cayce had analyzed the man's past lives): "In
this particular one (the ruby) there is that fitness with that which has been the
experience of THIS soul, this entity, through material expression." This should
clinch the matter as to whether or not Cayce's recommendations can be generalized
to any one or another person. His statement clearly correlates his recommendation
to what Cayce knows of this particular person. Cayce concluded: "Hence it is
an aid, a crutch to lean upon. But, as has always been given, let it be a stepping
stone; NOT that which thou standest only upon." A second warning! And by way
of a footnote, this man wrote many letters to Cayce and, after Cayce's death, to
Hugh Lynn Cayce, in which he said that he once had a garnet, which he considered
to be like a ruby, and was contented when he had it but had lost it and that he missed
the stone.
A review of some other stones will acquaint the reader with the use Cayce made of
his recommendations for gemstones, somehow based on the "records" of the
"entity" which Cayce "read" from the "keeper of the records."
Often no rationale is given, as when he said to a woman in a life reading: "Then,
in choosing the interpretatations of the records of those things that have their
influence...--keep the topaz as a stone about thee always" (2281-1). He rapidly
concluded the recommendation saying, "Its beauty, its purity, its clarity, may
bring to thee strength. For this ye have found, and will find oft needed in thy dealings
with thy problems, and with thy fellow men." Unfortunately, Cayce did not specify
which color of topaz--which can go from colorless to transparent white, light blue,
pink, golden and yellow--to select. To a young male in a life reading (1528-1), after
commenting on astrological matters, Cayce recommended a sardonyx, in the form of
"statuettes, pins, buttons, or a piece of same carried." The reason for
this? "Not as a protection but rather for the vibratory forces that influence
the choices made by the mental forces of the entity itself."
Cayce mentioned several times fire opal, presumably not the varied color of precious
opal but the monochromatic bright orange stone of lesser value. To a young woman
of 15 in a life reading (1193-1) Cayce told her of the opaline lights that she had
around her due to a past life. He concluded: "And these [opaline lights], as
we find, would be those stones that to others may bring as mystery yet the fire opal
would be of the stones that should be about the entity," and he added a moral,
"for the holding of that fire, that vigor, that UNDERSTANDING that makes for
purification, even though the fires of the flesh must be BURNED OUT that the glory
of self may be made manifest in being a channel for the glory of the living truths
to be known and experienced among others."
Cayce recommended fire opal for another young woman in her life reading (1406-1).
He started off, as usual in a life reading, considering the "astrological urges"
and the "material sojourns," and he finds "conflicting conditions
that must be coordinated and correlated if the greater development--as may be possible
in the experience of the entity in the present--will be carried through." He
immediately says: "Colors--these become as means in which the entity may, for
itself, determine much. But know as to what colors mean." He then advises her
on various colors--some are "dangers," others "not always good."
Finally, he identifies "lighter red, and those that turn to shades of green
with the influences that make for shadings into white, then these trust, these hold
to; for such individuals, such associations, may bring in the experience of the entity
that which will make for spiritual enlightenment, a mental understanding, and the
influences that would bring helpful influences in every experience." The stones
which suit her best? He recommends that the opal and the moonstone "should be
stones about the body oft." The opal should be in a neck locket but not on the
hands or wrists. For rings, amulets, or anklets, he tells her to wear "the pearl
with moonstone or the like...but never those upon the neck or in the ears--rather
upon the extremities. The reason for such precision? Because "in the experiences
of those the entity meets--of those very colors and vibrations that have been indicated
to which the entity is so sensitive." My conclusion: these are very specific
instructions, specific to this person at this time, but not a recommendation for
one and all.
Reviewing some other readings, and Cayce's comments on them, he called amethyst or
agate "the omen the body should ever wear on the person--for their vibrations
are the better" (female, Life Reading 500-1), which sounds like a strong recommendation
that the stones could at least make a difference in her life. However, he immediately
issued this warning: "But, as the body should comprehend in regard to all such
influences, it is as to what the body does about same; not that it relies upon such,
but knowledge that such influences aid in increasing the ability or efficiency in
the periods of exertion or activity, use them rather as stepping-stones and not those
things upon which the activities in a mental and spiritual plane would be builded.
They are step-stones rather than foundations, then, in the experience." To my
reading of this passage, it is not the stone but the person's own intention and action
which attune her to her higher powers (mental and spiritual plane).
In another life reading for an eighteen year old young woman (1035-1), Cayce recommended
amethysts worn about the body, saying, "These in their very vibration will make
for an influence that has to do with the entity in its innate and manifested expressions
in its associations." However, in the reports to this reading, Gladys Davis
notes that this young woman "dislikes amethysts; has given away several such
stones which have been gifts to her," something possible because the reading
was done in New York City. I find it noble that the Cayce records report such information
rather than whitewashing what does not fit. Perhaps Cayce himself was having trouble
with amethysts, because in another life reading for a young woman of fourteen (3806-1),
he again recommended amethyst, saying: "In the choice of stones, do wear the
amethyst as a pendant about the neck, as a part of the jewelry. This will also work
with the colors to control temperament." This time the reports record that her
mother wrote a letter two and a half years later stating that "...My daughter
has been wearing a large amethyst ring constantly for the past month and there was
been absolutely no change in her disposition...." Patience here may be advised.
Cayce recommended rubies and pearls several times more, once in a female's life reading
(1222-1) in his describing of her seal, but said nothing of it. In another's (1144-2),
a female of 46, he recommended two stones, characterizing them as to their effect
from a past life's flag or emblem of the king of the time, saying "the ruby
and the pearl. For these have their influences; the purity of the pearl, though under
stress it may come into being; the valor and the strength that is imparted in the
inner influence of the ruby about the body." These seem fairly commonsensical,
but Cayce did spell out why he recommended pearls. In the case of a woman's life
reading (951-4) he explained, "The pearl should be worn upon the body, or against
the flesh of the body; for its vibrations are healing, as well as creative--because
of the very irritation as produced same, as a defence [sic] in the mollusk that produced
same." The reasoning here is analogical--the pearl has "vibrations"
similar to those in the forming of the pearl. In a follow-up reading (951-6) she
asked a question about a pearl necklace she was wearing, whether it was working or
hindering. He answered: "When its vibrations have taken the body-forces, it
will be well. Or if the body would demagnetize the necklace as it is, it would be
more helpful for the body." He concluded that the pearls needed to be demagnetized.
Another female's life reading (3374-1) resulted in Cayce answering her question about
what stones to wear. He answered: "The stone--the pearl should be worn close
to the body; not as an ornament, but rather as that which gives strength to the body."
Continuing with Cayce's pearl recommendations, a male's life reading (2533-1), Cayce
commented: "Thus the entity should ever keep a pearl about the self or upon
the person, not only for the material vibration but for the ideal expression. For,
it will be an omen--not only because of the vibrations that it may give to self but
because of keeping the even temperament, yea the temper itself." Later in the
reading, in a past life, he found that the person owned a large collection of pearls
from the Persian Gulf, and thus again recommends pearls because "in its formation,
in its beauty, the hardships overcome by the very source that made the beauty of
the stone itself." Finally, in the question section of the reading, to a question
about what hobbies he should take up, Cayce recommended "the study of stones"
and recommending that he would "gain by keeping a pearl close about thy body."
In a reading for an older woman (1847-1) Cayce recommended pearls and diamonds as
"the stones that bring the vibratory reactions and the experiences in the environs
of the entity." As recorded in the reports to this reading, we find that Mary
Ann Woodward, on behalf of the ARE, wrote this woman to find out whether her reading
about the stones had any beneficial effect. She wrote back: "I am sorry you
wrote me your letter of August 19th, for if I answer it truthfully, as I must, you
are going to get hurt. I have considerable curiosity as to the workings of the human
mind, and when I found that my friends were interested in Mr. Edgar Cayce, I sent
to him for a 'life reading', and it seemed to me an inextricable confusion of the
intuitional and the delusional...As far as I am concerned, what you write about vibrations
is merely gibberish. It happens that I like white stones, but I definitely prefer
opals to pearls."
Expanding into pearl and moonstone, we find a life reading for a forty-nine year
old woman (1037-1), where characteristically Cayce considered the"influences"
about the person from prior past life experiences, and thus, "From those experiences
we find that omens arise. Not that they influence but create by their VIBRATION an
element through which the MENTAL and the spiritual forcees of the entity may vibrate
for constructive experience in their activity." He immediately recommends "The
pearl and the moonstone, these in combination or in their setting alone, are well
to have about the body." He recommended moonstones alone for several people,
including a forty-four year old woman in a life reading, saying, "In the material
things--wear as an ornament, preferably a ring, the moonstone." He also recommended
"the activities of all the influences of metals, especially about thee"
and concluded, "Their vibrations are in accord with that to keep thy animation
in accord with the best though mayest accomplish." For another life reading
for a woman of thirty (5125-1), he elaborated more fully on his theory of stones.
In the part of the reading pertaining to past lives, he found that she had lived
in Arkansas and had panned for gold and she had found diamonds. He continues that
she not wear "a great deal of jewelry" but urged her to "wear the
moonstone close to your body, or on your body." In this instance, he recommends
the moonstone because it harmonizes with her former lifetime: "It will give
strength and it will keep that which is nearest to you closer to you." But then
he elaborates on the underlying mechanism of its effects: "Not as an omen but
as a part of your mental and spiritual consciousness. Have same as a chain, or upon
a chain, about your neck; not as an ornament, but rather as a helpmeet, as an urge,
as a vibration that will be most helpful--as it was in the experience in that land
as Margaret Fitzhugh."
Sometimes it is rewarding to have positive feedback in the voluminous records the
Cayce people kept of their patrons. In 1942 Cayce made a life reading for an eleven
year old young woman, and made a short answer to a question about a special stone
for her. He said, "Stones,--those of the yellow tint or nature would be better."
He reveals that the stones of yellow tint "bring the vibrations for more harmonious
influence in one who is especially influenced in Mercery, Venus, and Mars."
In this instance, the woman responded to Mary Ann Woodward's request for feedback
on her use of such a stone by writing in 1946: "I have been wearing one since
June, and I can feel a definite effect the moment I put it on and I feel much happier
and everything seems to work better for me all the time I am wearing it. I am just
sorry I did not get it sooner, and I hope I never have to be without one."
Cayce recommended stones related to past lives, as we have already noticed. For a
ten year old male in a life reading (1719-1), he found that in an Egyptian past life,
the boy was a person of power and position, relating "to the various manners
of expression of praise in music, in art, and ESPECIALLY in that of placing of stones.
The records indicate, in an letter in 1976, that the person did not agree with the
Cayce reading, saying "The reading also implies that I am drawn toward precious
stones. I am not aware of this. I own no jewelry nor do I have any desire to own
any." This is strange since Cayce emphasized the ESPECIALLY in his reading,
and concluded in his reading: "In the present, the innate desire to feel precious
stones, to compare same, to watch the change in the color in same, is seen from THIS
experience." The two could not be farther apart! Cayce continued, "These
will make for much JUDGMENT to the entity, and the beryl and scarab should be a portion
of the entity's dress, EVER; either worn as the amulet, the ring, or such, will make
for a safety in the entity's present experience." Perhaps he was too young for
such recommendations.
Cayce occasionally made a single reference to a stone, such as in a life reading
for a woman of sixty-one (688-2). In this instance, he recommended that the person
"have the stones or minerals about self when in periods of meditation...the
chrysolite or the amethyst." Chrysolite is the older term for peridot, a yellowish
green stone. One wonders where Cayce acquired such terms for stones, a matter which
will arise later in the discussion of the lapis family readings. But he did not justify
the peridot and said of the amethyst only that the person should have purple always
close to her body. Interestingly, he rarely recommended quartz crystal, linking it
to "any white stone" in a life reading for a sixteen year young man (2285-1),
while New Agers adore quartz of all kinds. Cayce found that "As to the elemental
influences having to do with the entity's experience,--we find that the crystal as
a stone, or any white stone, has a helpful influence--if carried about the body."
There is also a letter from this man six years later. He reported that he did carry
a clear crystal, and it gave him pleasure, but he continued: "I must assert
that I have never been able to detect any particular influence, beneficial or detrimental,
that can be traced to the presence of that stone on my being." Pure pleasure
over a stone apparently in this instance contrasts with some esoteric effects that
this person may have anticipated.
Cayce did recommend other substances, metals, coal, ivory, coral, radium and uranium,
even a stone made of soya bean. However, I would be remiss not to comment on the
most mysterious stones he recommended many times, those he called "of the family
of lapis lazuli." There has been more confusion about this family than any of
the other stones Cayce recommended, even to the point that several commentators consider
their identities deliberately obscured to the public; for instance, Fay Clark (in
Healing Stones, pp. 62-72) claims that Cayce himself "positively suggests
that the properties of Azurite were a closely guarded secret since the times of antiquity...perhaps...destined
to remain so, since those finding and recognizing them are reluctant to reveal them..."
(p. 72). And Ken Carley, in his revision of the original Cayce publication on stones,
has added an eight page article on "lapis lazuli" (pp. 66-73), in which
he asserts: "If I allow any special knowledge of stones to remain hidden and
do not attempt to 'lift the veil,' I feel that I would be missing the mark. I believe
the time is at hand to make known, as best we can, what is disguised..." (p.
67).
The question to be answered concerning Cayce's many readings mentioning this mysterious
lapis family is whether he was trying to hide its identity, which I doubt, or whether
he was himself unsure of its nature. We must remember that Cayce did not, as far
as I know, have specialized training in gemstones or extensive knowledge of them
from other sources. I assume that he received information in his deep mind state.
He was in a revelatory mode of knowledge acquisition, and he himself was sometimes
surprised at what he said. Several times in the stones readings neither Cayce nor
the person for whom he was reading knew the meaning of the stone he recommended,
especially in this lapis series. For the rest of this paper, I will try to untangle
the many references Cayce made to the lapis lazuli family.
In the life reading for a woman of forty-nine (813-1), he said, "And not as
an omen, but for its greater vibration, the entity should have upon its body at all
periods the blue-green chalcedony." This woman wrote to Cayce several months
later, saying, "In my Life Reading which you gave me in February I was instructed
to wear a blue-green chalcedony stone for greater vibration. Well, there doesn't
seem to [be] such a stone! The Zodiac Jewelry Company of New York who specialize
in birth stones, charms, etc. advise me that chalcedony means blue and is a blue
stone, that there is no such thing as a blue-green chalcedony. So now what do I do?"
Again I must say that keeping such records as the Cayce foundation did can be of
great help in interpreting these matters, as is demonstrated in this letter and Cayce's
response. He wrote back to her several days later, saying, "Now, about the stone
you should wear, I don't know what to say. The Reading must have meant something
definite when it said blue-green chalcedony. At the next opportunity, where we have
a reading in which it would be permissable, we will ask just what this is and where
it may be obtained, and under what name." As far as I know this did not happen
as there is no other occurrance of that term in the entire CD- Rom record (which
one can search endlessly and completely with the SONAR for Cayce on the disk). The
proper identification for this blue-green chalcedony is chrysocolla, a basic copper
silicate "used as a gemstone when mixed with chalcedony ...color: green, bluish-green,
and blue" according to Barry Krause's Mineral Collector's Handbook (New
York: Sterling Publishing Co, 1996, p. 159).June Culp Zeitner, in her Gem and
Lapidary Materials for Cutters, Collectors, and Jewelers (Tucson: Geoscience
Press, 1996) states: "One of the most sensational of all the chalcedonies is
that which is colored a vibrant electric blue, greenish blue, or blue-green by the
copper mineral chrysocolla. It is also a gem material so little known that sometimes
even experienced lapidaries think it is an opaque mixture of blue and green copper
minerals..." (p. 117). In the reading where Cayce recommended blue-green chalcedony
he must have been in a state of deepened revelatory transcendence to identify a stone
without a source document to prepare himself, an identification even experienced
lapidaries could not make.
In the same letter Cayce continued to comment on the dilemmas he experienced when
the "Reading" left him with technical terms unknown to him: "Your
experience with this reminds me of that of a young man [440--a young college student
who had many readings from Cayce as we will see below] one of whose readings told
him to wear about his person a lapis linguis [I suspect this to be a neologistic
archaicism]. We had never heard of such a stone, and neither had the jeweler; but
I was with him several months later when we found one [unspecified reference as to
what stone this was] in a mine several hundred feet under the ground (which was being
operated for other purposes) [for copper extraction] out in Arizona. It was of the
family of lapis lazuli. So I hope we will be able to help you find YOUR stone--and
not with such great trouble either."
This revealing letter tells us that Cayce did not know before hand terms like blue-green
chalcedony and "lapis linguis" which appeared in his readings. Furthermore,
he refers to this stone as belonging to "the family of lapis lazuli," which
means that in this set of terms "lapis lazuli" can be at once the name
of a family of stones and/or the designation of a single stone; and perhaps sometimes
the terms overlap or Cayce's readings did not sufficiently distinguish them. As often
was true in his readings, he used archaicisms, a characteristic of revelatory language
in general. Remember too he knew the Judeo-Christian Bible very well, and at least
in one case used a term for a mysterious member of this lapis family, "lapis
ligurius," perhaps taken from Exodus 28:19, designating a stone (jacinth or
hyacinth) on the third row of the high priest's breastplate. Confusion begins, and
abounds from here on, in part because in his readings, Cayce did not differentiate
terms relating to the "lapis family" as clearly or as systematically as
could be.
Given that Cayce called this "a family," we need to take the terms he used
and identify them. The candidates for inclusion in this family and their possible
identities in ordinary gemstone language are: lazurite (often called lapis lazuli),
azurite, chrysocolla, malachite, and for the last three, these can be mixed in one
formation or another. Lazurite is entirely different in composition from the other
three and as "lapis lazuli," the popular designation of lazurite, would
not be found in Arizona. On the other hand, azurite, chrysocolla, and malachite often
mix, coming from the same source, copper ore. Azurite and malachite are carbonates,
and chrysocolla is a silicate, and thus they form in different areas of copper deposits.
In addition, chrysocolla occurs in a soft form not useful for gemstone use, but mixed
with chalcedony quartz it comes to a hardness near seven and is useful as a gemstone.
Azurite, (deep blue) malachite (light green) and chrysocolla (blue-green) can mix
together in one stone (fairly rare), and additionally mixed with cuprite, shattukite,
tenorite, and a high copper content. Given this, it may not be too difficult to see
that Cayce and those for whom he read may not have immediately understood his esoteric
designations of these mixes of copper ore, particularly in the 1930's and 1940's.
Lapis lazuli (literally "the blue stone") is Cayce's name for the family
of these blue (to blue-green and green) stones, including perhaps lazurite. The term
lapis lazuli is today the popular designation of lazurite, a silicate of sodium,
calcium, aluminum, with sulfur, not a mineral but a rock formation consisting of
lazurite, and calcite, as well as with pyrite, not actually a metal but having a
high iron content. It comes from Badakhshan, Afghanistan, California, Colorado, and
Chile; Russian lazurite also can come occasionally with platinum.
I doubt that Cayce ever recommended lazurite. This is not unusual, although the ARE
publication's second edition still considers that Cayce recommended lazurite ten
times. Another popular stone, turquoise, similar in color to Cayce's "family"
was only mentioned once in any of his readings, for an eight year old girl (608-7,
in 1926.) In respect to both of these stones, Cayce's almost complete disregard for
both lazurite and turquoise leads me to believe that all of Cayce's references to
the lapis lazuli family pertained to azurite, malachite, and chrysocolla. For one,
pyrite has a high iron content, quite unlike Cayce's many recommendations for copper
content stones--his true lapis lazuli family. The content of pyrite in true lazurite
is about equivalent to the copper in this lapis family. I conclude, then, that Cayce
was recommending the lapis family to consist in azurite, malachite, and chrysocolla
only. It makes sense because they all three derive from the same source, something
that Cayce even journeyed to find, as we will soon see.
Because Cayce referred to the stones of this family, it is essential to identify
by the names he gave them the distinctions among the three. As far as I can figure,
Cayce overwhelmingly recommended azurite, leaving chrysocolla and malachite a distinct
minority in very few recommendations (at least as clues from within the readings
will allow us to identify). This will come clear as we work through the many references
in his readings on these stones.
We have already found that Cayce recommended blue-green chalcedony or chrysocolla
once. Basing my opinion on the fact that Cayce clearly specified that he referred
to a green stone, neither blue-green (chrysocolla) nor blue (azurite,) I consider
that he recommended malachite twice. If this case can be made, and no other differentiating
characteristics are contained in the readings, I will conclude that all the rest
of the recommendations in the lapis lazuli family are azurite. From the number of
times this stone comes up and because of its "psychic" nature, this stone
must be preeminent in the family readings, under various names, including lapis lazuli,
lapis linguis, and the lapis.
But the case must be made that what Cayce called lapis ligurius was technically malachite.
The first mention of lapis ligurius came in the reading for a young man of nineteen
(1931-1), on June 23, 1939, in which Cayce said, "As to the material inclinations,--we
find things that become what might be termed as omens. Not that these should be merely
considered as good luck stones that the entity should wear about self often, or most
always,--but the lapis ligurius [?] (sic) would bring much that will act in that
manner as would be termed a PROTECTIVE influence, if kept about the entity. This
is the green stone, you see,-- the crystallization of copper and those influences
that are creative within themselves." Of note in this reading is the identification
of the stone as lapis ligurius (even though the stenographer wonders what this is
or how to spell it), and it identifies the color of the stone to be green which leads
me to consider it to be malachite (or predominately so, as malachite is often mixed
with azurite and only rarely with chrysocolla). For this person Cayce recommends
malachite for protection. He picks up the theme several paragraphs later, saying,
"For, as indicated from the influence of the lapis ligurius, there is the need
for not only the copper ore, that is a part of man's OWN development in many fields,
but the need for the very combination of its elements as PROTECTION to not only the
material benefits but the bodily forces necessary for the transmission of benefits
through its own physical being. For, the very elements of body--through which spirit
and mind manifest--are atomic in the nature. Hence so are the elements of this stone
indicates, that partakes of most of the elements that are to man of great influence
or power, because of their representations in the body."
This reading is also of interest because this person sought out the help of a Mr.
Green of the Gem Exchange in Lake Bluff, Illinois, writing to say that he "is
still trying to locate lapis ligurius but has yet had no luck. The names given in
the Readings are in the language of a century ago, says Mr. Green, and it is difficult
to find them in modern books. However, he is still trying. The stone I am looking
for is GREEN instead of the blue lapis according to the readings." Later, in
1931, he wrote back to Mary Ann Woodward, when she requested feedback, to the effect
that he had mailed to Green "many kinds of copper ore, all lapis, for which
I am grateful. I feel sure that lapis ligurius must be among the many specimens that
I know (now) possess...I carry a small piece of each ore on my person at all times..."
Obviously the recipient of these stones did not know which of Cayce's terms to apply
to the copper ores sent to him.
In a follow-up reading (1931-2) this man asked the question, "Is the stone which
I found in Alaska last summer the lapis linguis?" The answer Cayce gave has
several variants of this term, making it all the more difficult to identify the stone.
The answer goes, "(A) Lapis linguis [GD's note: My sp. EC spelled l-i-n-g-u-a,
in re stones, so linguis [?] must be the singular.], lapis lazuli. This as we find
might be said to be a part of that same composition referred to; for it carries that
vibration which will give strength to the body. Well that this be preserved between
thin layers of glass or such compositions, else its radiation is too great."
In this reading, three candidates present themselves: (1) lapis linguis; (2) Gladys
Davis' emandation to lingua, based on Cayce's trance spelling; and (3) lapis lazuli!
A hermeneutical dilemma we must deal with anon is Cayce's occasional pairing of lapis
linguis and lapis lazuli. One hint might be Cayce's recommendation that the stone
"be preserved between thin layers of glass or such compositions, else its radiation
is too great." This occurs many times in Cayce's descriptions of how to prepare
azurite. One might also question the source of azurite or malachite in Alaska here,
unless it was bought in a shop. In his next reading (1931-3), nothing much was clarified,
in this question and answer: "(Q) Where may I find the stone lapis lazuli or
lapis linguis? (A) This is an exuding of copper. Either in the copper mines of the
southwest, or about Superior, or in Montana." Geographically, this is indeed
more likely, especially the southwest regions like Bisbee, Arizona. And apparently
too, the questioner does not distinguish lapis lazuli from lapis linguis.
A second mention of green lapis lazuli (= malachite) came in answer to a person's
question (woman, thirty-nine, 3416-1, November 23, 1943) when she asked about her
colors, stone, odors and musical notes. Cayce answered: "The lapis lazuli, worn
close to the body would be well for the general health of the body--and this you
will have to be careful of very soon. The lapis lazuli, of course, [!--my astonishment]
is an erosion of copper; but this encased in a glass and worn about the body would
be well. The color is green. Hence the entity should ever be as a healing influence
to others when it comers about them." This recommendation has two important
features. First, it calls lapis lazuli green again, so it cannot be azurite, and
secondly, Cayce calls the virtue of this malachite to have "a healing influence
to others" while he identified azurite with psychic or spiritual matters. This
I accept two identifications in the lapis family as malachite.
The rest is simple. Unless we can find compelling reasons in the readings, all the
remaining designated references--lapis, lapis lazuli, lapis linguis--all mean azurite.
What remains is an avalanche of recommendations for azurite, primarily for psychic
and spiritual matters.
Unfortunately, this is the most difficult part of the stones readings because Cayce
did not settle on one singular name for azurite, the preeminent member of his family
of lapis lazuli stones. We need to invoke some sort of hermeneutical procedure to
dispell the confusions generated by Cayce's own readings, by Gladys Davis, by his
clients, and various other individuals, lapidaries, correspondents and Mary Ann Woodward,
who tried to respond to confused advisees.
The person who had more experience with Cayce and the lapis family is the recipient
of the 440 series of readings. A young man of twenty-three, student, electrical engineer,
with a Christian background and parents also interested in things psychic, he first
obtained a life reading (440-1 on the fourteenth of November, 1933) which said nothing
about stones. However, during the question session at the end of the reading, he
first asked how to keep in touch with his highest psychic powers, and the second
question concerned electrical forces and vibrations. This series continues until
the twenty-fifth day of September, 1936 (a reading about business matters). What
is of greatest interest to this essay is the many mentions of lapis and activities
which took Cayce and his young questioner even to Arizona to seek out the elusive
identity of the "lapis lazuli family." Now we can use this series as a
means of identifing as completely as possible the stone or stones which they both
sought.
It all started when, in his second reading on his physical nature (440-2, December
13, 1933), the following interchange opened up the matter at hand in a series of
questions and answers at the end of the reading. Question 43: "Do you advise
a trip to Arizona this winter? (A) Be very good, and especially if you'll seek some
of these stones that may be found in some of these portions; for this country is
full of those things in which the body is interested in these directions. Lapis lingua
[?]." This weighty question mark must be Gladys Davis's incredulity at the introduction
of another stone designation in the lapis family, a term never clarified sufficiently
in any reading. So we begin on thin ice.
In the next question, Cayce recommends he go to Arizona in February and March, and
the client asks the question we all want answered: Question 45: "(Q) To what
stones do you refer? (A) The Lapis Lingua [?] It's blue!" The only blue stone
of this stripe, available in Arizona (also Utah, Namibia, Mexico, often mixed with
cuprite, shattuckite, etc, and Chile) is azurite. Then the young man asked, "Of
what value is it?" Cayce's answer identifies the azurite's attunement value:
"Of particular value to those who are interested in things psychic!" And
then vaguely, he continued, "Read what was in the first effort that was made,
as to all those that used the stones as settings to induce the influences from without
that would aid an individual in its contact with the higher sources of activity!
[Ex. 28:15-30 Urim & Thummim]" Gladys Davis related this little bit of elusive
suggestion to the Exodus passages of the mysteries, so we must continue unabated.
In any case, this started 440's search for the lapis lingua.
In the next reading, 440 received new instructions from Cayce about the lapis. During
the question period, he first asked: "Having recommended a stay in Arizona this
winter, suggest the most suitable place for the periods mentioned." Cayce answered,
in part: "Either Phoenix or Prescott, particularly if there is to be the seeking
for the indicated conditions in the country. Phoenix, and north and west from there,
at not great distances, may be found two or three deposits of the lapis that may
be found to be most beneficial in many of the experimentations in which the body
is particularly interested." This is a pretty good rundown, since north of Phoenix,
at Jerome, is a large copper mine, and not west, but east, at Globe, is an azurite
location. But Cayce did not say Bisbee, which he must have found out about later,
as we will see.Cayce continued, after recommending that 440 not go searching for
gold or more precious gems, saying, "For, lapis is not considered a high quality
of gem; rather a very low form, but for that indicated in the character of the stone
itself, it would be most helpful in creating that vibration which will make for developments
of certain characters of demonstrations with any psychic forces or psychic individuals."
Immediately following this, Cayce directed 440 to go to the New York Museum of Natural
History to listen to a stone (presumably azurite, as we see below): "This may
be--will be--a very interesting experiment for the body. Go to the New York Museum
of Natural History. Sit by a large quantity of this type of stone and listen at it
sing! Do it in the open! Don't let others make a fool of you, or their remarks overcome
you--but sit by it and listen at it sing; for it does! It's from Arizona." Later,
we will take up this episode bringing it to conclusion.
Then 440 asked Cayce to describe these stones (notice plural), but Cayce curtly replied,
"Go and look at them in the museum!" Then, Cayce recommended how to set
the cut stones, "As pendant, either on wrist and worn on body or around the
waist." Finally, 440 asked, "What results may we expect from such setting
and cutting?" Cayce answered, rather curtly, "Now we are going backwards
from what we have given! These, as indicated, are not the channels to be relied upon
except in creating the atmosphere. The same thing may be done with an oak tree, or
with a persimmon tree--but the activities that come about are because of the emanations
thrown off from the stones themselves to the active forces in the body itself!"
Cayce chides 440 leading him to see the subtlety of "emanations" rather
than to promise something only 440 could do.
On the third day of January, 1934, Cayce gave a reading for 440 about his attempt
to find the museum stone. His efforts were thwarted, perhaps because he used the
misnomer lapis lingua. Cayce said, "In the seeking, as was given in the information,
the lapis--not lapis lingua, because that is different but of the same formation,
or comes from the same formation--..." This clearly shows that Cayce, in a psychic
state, denied that lapis lingua is not the azurite he was seeking, but "is different
but of the same formation" thus preferring the simple term lapis to designate
azurite, and considers lapis lingua to be some associated form, probably malachite.
In Gems & Crystals from the American Museum of Natural History (New York:
Simon and Schuster, 1990), by Anna Sofianides and George Harlow, there is a picture
on page 197 of this stone, described as "A 4 1/2 ton block of azurite-malachite
5 feet tall from the Copper Queen Mine in Bisbee, Arizona." This probably is
the piece to which Cayce directed 440. He called it a "large blue stone. It
weighs nearly a ton and has many facets, in the manner in which it was removed from
the mines; is from Arizona, and the color necessary for use as instructed--may be
seen by stooping below or getting the light through a portion of the upper part,
though--to be sure--it's very much thicker than would be necessary for use. It's
there! Not lapis linguis, but LAPIS." In this passage Cayce allows both lapis
for azurite, lapis lingua for malachite, and lapis linguis must be in this instance
crysocolla, not present in this stone. In another question, 440 asked, "From
what place in Arizona is it listed as having come from?" Cayce's answer was
"nearer Tucson"--indeed as Bisbee is.
On the ninth of January, 1934, Cayce gave another reading with 440 present, and he
asked Cayce whether the stone he found--"a 9000 lbs. stone enclosed in a glass
case, etc. Is this the one referred to?" This question sent Cayce into a long
disquisition, to wit:
As there is in the mind of the body, [440] confusions respecting lapis and lapis linguis--it has been given the lapis linguis is that name which was implied [applied?] to touchstones, or those used by initiates in their various ceremonial activities, and hence gained for themselves through those forces that are seen, as indicated, that they adhere to the activities of those bodies or associations in such a way and manner (the stones, see?) that those that are of a psychic turn may hear the emanations as retained or thrown off by influences about such stones. They are of semi-gem or semi-value to those for other than decorative or for those that have not as yet comprehended, or there has not been admitted by certain fields of activity the value of such stones in relationships to such conditions for those that are not gifted or those that are not so sensitive as to be able to hear those vibrations giving off, or the singing or talking stones--as they have called in places. Yet, as has been indicated for this body, there should be--there is--the ability within this body, [440], we are speaking of, to hear the singing or the movements, much as in the same way and manner as was given or is given to any if they will listen for days at a growing tree, or as was accredited to and as heard by many of those who have so developed in certain portions of this world as to be able to gain much from especially the growing oak, or certain other trees peculiar to those vacinities. So, in [?is] this stone lapis. Lapis linguis is that one that has been in use or in touch with those whose vibrations or emanations or auras are of such natures as to have given those vibrations in the nature that any portion of such a stone may give off that which may be heard, see?
Apart from the esoteric nature of this discourse, of interest in itself, more importantly,
Cayce attempts to straighten out the "confusions respecting lapis and lapis
linguis." He concludes, after finishing his discussion on talking stones and
even the "growing oak" "So, in [is?] this stone lapis" perhaps
a reference to the entire lapis family (minus lazurite), following up with lapis
linguis as the stone, most probably azurite, from which sensitives like 440 can receive
vibrations or emanations or auras.
Further questioning Cayce in the reading, 440 asks about the museum stone: "This
stone contains malekite [sic] and azurite. Is the lapis linguis either of these?"
Cayce answered azurite, an additional confirmation that he usually designated azurite
in the terms the lapis and lapis linguis. Then, 440 asked, "Where will I find
this stone in Arizona?" The answer? "As indicated, about the place as given--in
a ranch--a hundred to a hundred and twenty-five miles north to northwest of the place."
But more importantly for our quest, he continued: "Many various characters of
this lapis may be found in Arizona, as may be of other stones in the same vacinity
of a semi-precious value or nature, but those that are of a greater value as the
touchstones or those that may receive (we are putting it in another form or manner)
a blessing and transmit same to another, or a curse and transmit same to another,
will be found in the nature where the greater portion of the azurite is evidenced
in the immediate vicinity." By mentioning the "many various characters
of this lapis" he recognizes the varieties of the lapis/azurite family--azurite,
malachite, and chrysocolla.
But 440's next question creates another problem. The question: "How will I know
when I have found this stone that is most useful for my purposes?" Answer: "When
there is found that which is sufficiently clear for the transmission of light and
that which may be held in the hand for five to ten minutes and then set aside and
listening to hear the movements or the vibrations given off from the emanations from
self." Then, 440 asked, "Should it be translucent to light?" "Should
be transparent, or sufficient for the light to pass through." Unfortunately,
it is fairly rare to find azurite that is translucent or transparent. One would only
rarely find crystals of azurite that would allow light to pass through.
Finally, by the sixteeenth day of Feburary, 1934, Cayce gave a reading for 440 and
himself, since they had decided to drive to Arizona to search for this lodestone.
They left on the twenty-seventh day of February, 1934, with Gladys Davis driving
to Selma, Alabama, to visit her family, and Cayce returned by train (stopping several
times to visit) to Virginia Beach on the thirty-first of March, 1934. This indicates
that Cayce and his young advisee considered the search for this lodestone considerably
important. He even had advised 440 to make an instrument with which to prospect for
the precious lapis. In a letter dated the twenty-sixth of March, 1934, 440 wrote
to Cayce from the Seventy Six Ranch Bonita, Arizona), saying, "I have washed
the stone carefully and put it into a handkerchief washed with equal care. Last night,
I think for the first time I began to hear it." In a subsequent letter, though,
he wrote, "The vibrations in the stone are becoming stronger every day but as
yet I am unable to hear them."
Of greater interest, however, is Cayce's letter, written on the third of April, 1934,
wherein he writes to 440 about his train trip back to Virginia Beach. In a felicitious
meeting on the train, he learns more of azurite:
When I left you at Douglas there was a young lady sitting in the seat just opposite me, not more than nineteen or twenty years old--and, of course, I felt she was most too young for me to flirt with (though she cast many glances in my direction, I'll have to admit, and I'm not bragging about that, of course.) Just before we got to El Paso she asked me if she had not seen me in Bisbee the day before; said she thought she saw me with two other men and the mining engineer of the copper mine there. So I told her she was correct. Then she told me she was the daughter of the operating engineer in the mine. I asked her about the azurite and she told me if we really wanted other samples she was very sure that if there was such a thing to be had at all, she would be very glad to get it for us...should you decide you want other samples I would advise the NEXT time you go to Bisbee that you get in touch with the operating engineer (from what she said about the abilities to get the samples or anything that may be had in that mine.) What do you think of that for coincidence? And I might have had a whole afternoon conversation about it, had I not been trying to not appear too forward or what shall I call it. She apparently knows considerable of the history of azurite that we haven't ever had suggested to us.
Clearly this letter confirms that Cayce was most interested in azurite despite all
the variant terms he used for the other members of the lapis family. The last time
440 asked about stones (twentieth of June, 1934, 440-18), he asked Cayce how these
stones work, which resulted in a long explanation about sensitiveness and vibrations.
Then 440, being present in the session, presented Cayce (in his deep mind trance)
three stones, presumably azurite but not identified explicitly. His question: "Which
of the three stones, then, is better suited to my vibrations." Answer: "The
one in the center." 440 asked again, "This one? Cayce answered, "This
one." This tells us little. Concluding the inquiry, 440 asked, "Why were
these stones mentioned to me in the beginning?" It is the big question, one
which has led us far and wide. Cayce responded, "They are as those things of
old, which if followed (and the body was seeking at the time for those things) may
be used as stepping-stones for the understanding of vibrations as related to the
mineral forces and as to man." The final question 440 posed asked about the
availablility of these stones so precious to his quest, though probably not so much
to Cayce. He asked, "Are these as fine specimens of 'lapis lingua' that can
be obtained?" Cayce responded, "As fine as may be obtained in the present
for the demonstrating of, or for the use in relation to, these very things as given."
Cayce, in this reading, says that the fine specimens 440 provided to him were the
best to be obtained at that time. He made many other readings on azurite, an accounting
of which is still to come, but the age when fine azurite has come to be available
is only recent. Most of the time, the powerful machines which mine for copper ore
in Arizona simply grind up the special deposits of these stones Cayce favored, so
that fine rough is still rare. Also, their hardness is fairly low, and can easily
be tarnished, and are difficult to cut and handle (chrysocolla chalcedony being harder,
and thus the exception). Also, some time back some very fine hard azurite came from
a Chilean mine, which now is exhausted. Perhaps today, should Cayce had survived
some decades longer, he might have found better examples and more adherents to seek
out this special stone in his universe of semi-precious gemstones.
Strangely, in his last stone reading (there were only two more, dealing with business,
ending the series in September of 1936), 440 used the term lapis lingua, still something
of an unknown in the Cayce records. Long before that he had made his first attempt
to find the giant piece of azurite/malachite in the museum which Cayce had told him
to find. According to the reports of reading 440-3 he wrote to Hugh Lynn Cayce: "I
went to the Natural History Museum but could find no trace of a lapis lingua although
there were a number of stones enclosed in Case No. 25 of the Morgan Wing with the
lapis lazuli." Unfortunately, lapis lingua remains a hapax legomenon in the
Cayce readings so it is fairly useless to this hermeneutic.
As for the rest of the lapis readings, it appears that Cayce used the lapis term
fairly indiscriminately. In 691-1, a woman of thirty-four, for instance, he finds
"those things that are more as omens, the various accredited vibrations as in
stones, etc., we find having an influence upon the entity. For the entity should
ever wear about the body the lapis lazuli or the lapis linguis." This seems
to be a disjunctive, naming two stones, but nowhere does Cayce specify any stone
other than azurite, except in the specific identifications earlier in this discussion.
So we are left without an identification, without a physical identification of the
either/or which Cayce intimates. One woman, 1058-1, on the fifteenth of November,
1935, was told, "Hence, as we would find, the wearing of the stone lapis linguis
would be as an aid in its meditative periods, and would become as a helpful influence.
Not as that of 'lucky,' but rather that as of a helpful influence towards making
for the ability to make decisions in dealing with mental attributes." Unfortunately,
she wrote in frustration, "I cannot locate the stone 'Lapis Linguis" which
I am anxious to possess.there is an expression 'Lapsis Linguis' which means a slip
of the tongue (Latin). Somebody said it must be 'Lapis Lazuli' which was used in
the Persian and other ancient periods. The vice-president of the leading--a leading
jewelry concern has sought this stone for me and a mining student was put to work
doing research but could reveal nothing. Can you give me an inkling as to where such
a stone may be purchased?" Obviously, there are two languages working here,
Cayce's revelatory vocabulary, and the lapidary language current at that time, which
is woefully inadequate for Cayce's lapis family.
Another reading for a girl of six years, in which 440 was involved, came up with
the following on May twenty-fifth, 1934: "[T]he lapis linguis also would bring
to the entity much, if it were worn about the body, keeping low the fires of passion--from
materiality that there may be greater mental and spiritual development of this entity
in the experience."
Sometimes Cayce simply used the term lapis, and in others, lapis lazuli, but with
identifiers which clearly indicate azurite, and not lazurite, precisely because he
specifies their association with copper. These include, "as a pendant of the
lapis lazuli or the corrosion of copper" (5294-1), and to a question, what is
my stone? he answered: "[I]t is mineral rather than stone [that eliminates lazurite
right off] that this entity would find vibrations,--the lapis lazuli, or the rays
from copper" (1861-16). And then with just lapis, we have "the lapis or
copper in its ELEMENTAL form, bring great passion, intenseness, the abilities to
loose emotions through the very centers of the body for the closer association of
the spiritual with the activative influences of the mental self" (1580-1). And
in a reading on both bloodstone and lapis, he said, "Hence the bloodstone or
the lapis, or both, should be as a stone that would be about the body of the entity;
not as an omen, not as a symbol; rather that the vibrations of the higher forces
from these proper expressions of activities throughout the universal forces in materiality
may be an aid or as a strengthening. From one there are the emanations of high electrical
forces from its copper base. From the other there are the high electrical vibrations
that emanate from its PURENESS of the higher vibration" (816-3).
With this last excursion through the most obscure parts of the Cayce stone readings,
I must remind my readers that I do not understand everything about these obscure
matters in the lapis family. But, even though many find them the most mysterious
of the semi-precious gemstones Cayce recommended, it remains that most of them are
quite well known and enjoyed widely today, even though in Cayce's readings, he really
recommended any stone only for specific persons and for specific attunements with
their very own person. The joy of reading such a corpus, howsoever small compared
to his other revelations, can bring many of us to a greater appreciation perhaps
of our own favorite stones.