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Ch. 3: Diamond

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DIAMONDS.
75
of the English it has been cut as a brilliant, being thus enhanced in value, and beauty, though diminished in weight. The old " Iron " Duke of Wellington was the first to place it in the mill; and it took thirty-eight days to be cut by a lapidary working twelve hours a days, without intermission.
The carat grain used in weighing diamonds is different from the Troy grain, five diamond grains being equal to four Troy grains. Four carat grains make one carat ; and six carats, or twenty-four grains, one penny­weight.
Respecting the " Koh-i-noor " we have already given some particulars. When Sir John Lawrence—the hero of Lahore, in the Indian Mutiny days,—was Lieutenant Governor of the Punjab, he had in his keeping no less a treasure than this famous Koh-i-noor ; and no one could have taken better care of so precious a charge. Nevertheless there came a day when the great Jewel was missing. The house was searched throughout ; the police were consulted ; the servants were closely examined ; and native fakirs pressed into the investi­gation ; but all to no purpose ! When Sir John was absolutely in despair, the Diamond reappeared ; and of all places, from an old cigar-box, which was beside the Lieutenant-Governor's bed.
Tradition carries back the existence of this precious Stone in the memory of India to the year 57 B.C. The Hindoos profess to trace curses, and ultimate ruin brought inevitably upon its successive possessors ever since it was first wrested from the line of Vikramalitya.
During 1850, in the name of the East India Company (since, in its turn, defunct), Lord Dalhousie presented the Koh-i-noor to Queen Victoria. The Brahmins will
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