The Duchess and The Jeweller - Plot Summary

Plot Summary

Oliver Bacon is this story's protagonist. Once a poor boy in the streets of London, he has become the richest jeweller in England. As a young man, he sold stolen dogs to wealthy women and marketed cheap watches at a higher price. On a wall in his private room hangs a picture of his late mother. He frequently talks to her and reminisces, once chuckling at his past endeavors.

One day, Oliver enters into his private shop room, barely acknowledging his underlings, and awaits the arrival of the Duchess. When she arrives, he has her wait. In his room, under yellow gloves, he opens barred windows to get some air. Later, Oliver opens six steel safes, each containing endless riches of jewels.

The Duchess and the Jeweller are described as "... friends, yet enemies; he was master, she was mistress; each cheated the other, each needed the other, each feared the other..." On this particular day, the Duchess comes to Oliver to sell ten pearls, as she has lost substantial money to gambling. Mr. Bacon is skeptical of the pearl's authenticity, but the Duchess manipulates him into buying them for twenty thousand pounds. When the Duchess invites him to an event that includes a cast of royalty and her daughter Diana, Oliver is persuaded to write a check.

In the end, the pearls are found to be fakes, and Oliver looks at his mother's portrait, questioning his actions. However, what Oliver truly bought was not actually the pearls: it was Diana.

Works by Virginia Woolf
Novels
  • The Voyage Out
  • Night and Day
  • Jacob's Room
  • Mrs Dalloway
  • To the Lighthouse
  • Orlando: A Biography
  • The Waves
  • The Years
  • Between the Acts
Short stories
  • A Haunted House
  • A Society
  • Monday or Tuesday
  • An Unwritten Novel
  • The String Quartet
  • Blue & Green
  • Kew Gardens
  • The Mark on the Wall
  • The New Dress
  • The Duchess and the Jeweller
Biographies
  • Flush: A Biography
  • Roger Fry: A Biography
Non-fiction
  • Modern Fiction
  • The Common Reader
  • A Room of One's Own
  • On Being Ill
  • The London Scene
  • The Second Common Reader
  • Three Guineas
  • The Death of the Moth and Other Essays
  • The Moment and Other Essays
  • Women and Writing
  • Bibliography of Virginia Woolf


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