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Ch. 1: Early History of Diamonds

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THE BOOK OF DIAMONDS
out doubt the most ancient. With higher development in culture such as is found among the Egyptian jewelry of about 2000 b.c, the gem stone beads were better rounded and polished. From the necklace composed of strung beads it is but a step to one in which the roughly shaped stones were encased in a metal setting.
It would be interesting if we could trace the history of every diamond. Some of them may have been named only last year, but others may be centuries old. Rarely if ever is a diamond that has once been cut destroyed. It never wears out. If not buried with its owner or lost in some way, it must pass on to decorate milady of the next generation. Gold and silver objects may ultimately be melted up and shaped into something else, but a diamond never loses its distinct character. The diamonds that graced ancient queens are probably in existence somewhere in the world today.
The Hindus believe to this day that lightning transforms rock crystal 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 cerĀ­tain conditions it could crystallize carbon as it can separate the component of gases of water. Some have thought that diamonds grow. There are men today, not ignorant or imaginative, who think it possible that diamonds grow by the slow precipitation of infinitesimal particles to a nucleus.
It is recorded in Sprat's History of the Royal Society (1667) that among the questions sent out by order of the Society to Sir Philiberto Vernatti, Resident in Batavia, was
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Ch. 1: Early History of Diamonds Page of 153 Ch. 1: Early History of Diamonds
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