A Persian Pearl, and Other Essays
Transcriber's Note:
The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.
CLARENCE S. DARROW
CHICAGO
C. L. RICKETTS
MDCCCCII
Copyright
1899
Clarence S. Darrow
A · PERSIAN · PEARL
The reader and observer is constantly reminded that “there is nothing new under the sun.” We no sooner find some rare gem of thought or expression than we discover that it is only an old diamond, polished anew, perhaps, and offered as an original stone. Neither the reader nor the writer is always aware that the gem is antique and the setting alone is new.
The rich mine where the treasure was first found was exhausted in a few brief years, and then became like all the dust of all the worlds; but the gem polished and worn by time and use, ever sparkles and shines, regardless of the fact that the miner’s name is forgotten and his work alone remains. Thus Nature, the great communist, provides that the treasures of genius, like her own bountiful gifts of sunlight, rain and air, shall remain the common property of all her children while any dwell upon the earth.