[The Great Stone of Sardis by Frank R. Stockton]@TWC D-Link book
The Great Stone of Sardis

CHAPTER XXII
12/13

Its surface was irregular; it had many faces; the subdued light from the window gave it the appearance of animated water.

He felt it necessary to speak.
"Even these little pieces," he said, "are most valuable jewels." She still sat silent, looking at the glowing object she held.
"You see, these are not like the stones which are found in our diamond-fields," he said.

"Those, most likely, were little, unconsumed bits of the original mass, afterwards gradually forced up from the interior in the same way that many metals and minerals are forced up, and then rounded and dulled by countless ages of grinding and abrasion, due to the action of rocks or water." "Roland," she cried, excitedly, "this is riches beyond imagination! What is common wealth to what you have discovered?
Every living being on earth could--" "Ah, Margaret," he interrupted, "do not let your thoughts run that way.
If my discovery should be put to the use of which you are thinking, it would bring poverty, not wealth, to the world, and not a diamond on earth would be worth more than a common pebble.

Everywhere, in civilized countries and in barbaric palaces, people would see their riches vanish before them as if it had been blighted by the touch of an evil magician." She trembled.

"And these--are they to be valued as common pebbles ?" "Oh no," said he; "so long as that great shaft is mine, these broken fragments are to us riches far ahead of our wildest imaginations." "Roland," she cried, "are you going down into that shaft for more of them ?" "Never, never, never again," he said.


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