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360                        THE DIAMOND
It is difficult and sometimes bitter, for a people or an individual, in age, to discard the imaginations of youth.
But after four or five thousand years, the growing light of knowledge acquired about other things, fell from a thousand lamps kindled about it, upon the diamond, and as the glamour which had enveloped it was dissi­pated, the need came to fill the place of the going fable with facts, for they only could bear the light. The prominence and preciousness of the stone attracted atten­tion, but its value hindered experiments, so that there was little definite knowledge of the composition of it even, prior to the seventeenth century.
During the last two or three centuries, scientists have sought by careful research and costly experiments, to learn how Nature succeeds in isolating one of her ele­ments in such a beautiful and enduring form. But while men have learned to measure the stars, and have con­ceived an idea of infinity; to harness electricity to wheels and engines and transmit thought on its ethereal waves; while they have filled their archives with a myriad dis­coveries of light, heat, force, and the whole kaleidoscope of Nature; established the natural rights of man and placed the compass of his mental horizon in the heavens among the gods; while this and more has been accom­plished, all they have learned of the crystallization of carbon is, that it can be done by heat and pressure, and in a very small way to do it.
The Hindus believe to this day that rock crystal is transformed by lightning to diamond. This is a poet­ical fancy, but it may have some foundation in fact, for the power of electricity over the elements is great, and it is possible that under certain conditions, it could crys-