The marbles are too well known to make it necessary for me to enumerate their several colours and varieties; and, indeed, so numerous are they, that it would be no easy task to do so. For what place is there, in fact, that has not a marble of its own? In addition to which, in our description of the earth and its various peoples,[1] we have already made it our care to mention the more celebrated kinds of marble. Still, however, they are not all of them produced from quarries, but in many instances lie scattered just beneath the surface of the earth; some of them the most precious even, the green Lace-dæmonian marble, for example, more brilliant in colour than any other; the Augustan also; and, more recently, the Tiberian; which were first discovered, in the reigns respectively of Augustus and Tiberius, in Egypt. These two marbles differ from ophites[2] in the circumstance that the latter is marked with streaks which resemble serpents[3] in appearance, whence its name. There is also this difference between the two marbles themselves, in the arrangement of their spots: the Augustan marble has them undulated and curling to a point; whereas in the Tiberian the streaks are white,[4] not involved, but lying wide asunder.
Of ophites, there are only some very small pillars known to
have been made. There are two varieties of it, one white
and soft, the other inclining to black, and hard. Both kinds,
it is said, worn as an amulet, are a cure for head-ache, and for
Porphyrites,[8] which is another production of Egypt, is of a
red colour: the kind that is mottled with white blotches is
known as "leptospsephos."[9] The quarries there are able to
furnish blocks[10] of any dimensions, however large. Vitrasius
Pollio, who was steward[11] in Egypt for the Emperor Claudius,
brought to Rome from Egypt some statues made of this stone;
a novelty which was not very highly approved of, as no one
has since followed his example. The Egyptians, too, have
discovered in Æthiopia the stone known as "basanites;"[12]
which in colour and hardness resembles iron, whence the
name[13] that has been given to it. A larger block of it has
never been known than the one forming the group which has
been dedicated by the Emperor Vespasianus Augustus in the
Temple of Peace. It represents the river Nilus with sixteen
children sporting around it,[14] symbolical of the sixteen cubits,
the extreme height[15] to which, in the most favourable seasons,
that river should rise. It is stated, too, that in the Temple
of Serapis at Thebes, there is a block not unlike it, which
forms the statue of Memnon[16] there; remarkable, it is said, for
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6. modern Tephroite is a
silicate of manganese.
7.
8. Red antique, of a deep uniform
red, and of a very fine grain; which also was a production of Egypt.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16. Mei Amun, "beloved of
Ammon."