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| Charles Lepec Ring, with Psyche ca. 1870 enameled gold and diamonds Victoria & Albert Museum, London |
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| Carlo Giuliano Brooch - Lovers in a Boat ca. 1880 emeralds, sapphires, rubies, diamonds, pearls, enamel, gold Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum |
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| Marcus & Co. (New York) Brooch ca. 1900 emeralds, diamonds, pearl, gold National Museum of American History, Washington DC |
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| Dagobert Peche Brooch for Wiener Werkstätte ca. 1922 gold and mother-of-pearl Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum |
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| Cartier, Inc. (Paris) The Post Emerald Necklace ca. 1928-29 baroque-cut emerald-drops, diamonds, platinum National Museum of Natural History, Washington DC |
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| Schreiner Jewelry Co. (New York) Brooch ca. 1950-60 base metal and paste gems Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto |
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| Claire Falkenstein Pendant 1960 painted copper Dallas Museum of Art |
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| South Africa The Oppenheimer Diamond mined in 1964 uncut diamond of 254 carats National Museum of Natural History, Washington DC |
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| Marie-Claude Lalique Melusine Brooch ca. 1965 diamonds, emeralds, gold Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum |
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| Colombia The Gachala Emerald mined in 1967 uncut stone of 858 carats National Museum of Natural History, Washington DC |
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| Albert Paley Pendant 1973 labradorite, moonstone, jade, ivory, glass, copper, silver, gold Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC |
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| Fridl Blumenthal Kinetic Brooch ca. 1990 chrysoprase, pearl, gold Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC |
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| Myra Mimlitsch-Gray Bel Canto Brooch 1997 gold and pearls Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC |
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| Jim Kelso Ginkgo Brooch 2002 carved horn, moonstones, gold Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC |
from The Second Olympique Ode of Pindar
Greatness of Mind and Fortune too
The' Olympique Trophees shew.
Both their several parts must doe
In the noble Chase of Fame,
This without that is Blind, that without this is Lame.
Nor is fair Virtues Picture seen aright
But in Fortunes golden light.
Riches alone are of uncertain date,
And on short-Man long cannot wait.
The Vertuous make of them the best,
And put them out to Fame for Interest.
With a frail good they wisely buy
The solid Purchase of Eternity.
They whilst Lifes air they breath, consider well and know
Th' account they must hereafter give below.
Whereas th' unjust and Covetous above,
In deep unlovely vaults,
By the just decrees of Jove
Unrelenting torments prove,
The heavy Necessary effects of Voluntary Faults.
– Pindar (518-446 BC), translated by Abraham Cowley (1656)


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