Quantcast

Ch. 47: The Great Sancy Diamond, The Sphinx of Diamonds

Ch. 46: The Pear and Savoy Diamonds, Set in Pearl Page of 312 Ch. 47: The Great Sancy Diamond, The Sphinx of Diamonds Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
XLVII.
THE GREAT SANCY.
The Sphinx of Diamonds — Looking Back over Three Hundred Years—In the Days of the " Holy League" A Royal Debauchee—A Faithful Valet—Important Revelations—Under a Cloud—A " Cause C61ebre "— Once More on its Travels—An Incident of the Prince of Wales's Indian Tour.
HIS is the very sphinx of diamonds. The history of many other gems is no doubt sufficiently obscure, and often involved in great confusion. There is generally, however, some key to the solution of the most difficult problems, and the writers of this work are complacent enough to hope that the reader will find more than one such problem satisfactorily solved in the accompanying pages. But the " Sancy " seems to be wrapped in a dense cloud of mystery, defying the most subtle analysis, and impenetrable to the attacks of the keenest processes of reasoning. Nevertheless, there are even here, one or two breaks of light, by means of which it may be possible to dissipate the darkness in which this famous jewel has hitherto been involved.
Much of this darkness is due to the commonly accepted statement, that the " Sancy " was one of the large diamonds lost by Charles of Burgundy, either at Nancy or Granson. Its history thus became
Ch. 46: The Pear and Savoy Diamonds, Set in Pearl Page of 312 Ch. 47: The Great Sancy Diamond, The Sphinx of Diamonds
Table Of Contents bullet Annotate/ Highlight
Streeter: Great (Famous) Diamonds
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page