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A Piquant Anecdote

Don Louis Eguilar, the Madrid correspondent of a Havana paper, relates in one of his late letters the following curious episode. A Spanish lady of high rank, being recently invited to dine with an Austrian princess in Paris, was found in her dressing-room, busily engaged in putting on the proper vestments for the occasion. When she came to the point of adorning herself with a certain set of pearls and emeralds that she prized very highly, there was found wanting the breast-pin. Suspecting a robbery, she examined closely her jewel-box, and was fully confirmed in her suspicions. As it happens that a lady of good breeding, though fretted and annoyed, knows how to conceal, more or less, her vexation, she said nothing of her loss, but the princess and guests perceived, by the working of the lady’s face and the uneasy air which she maintained, that something extraordinary was passing through her mind. To ask her what had happened, and to receive a reply, couched in injured tones, and accusing all the French of being thieves and robbers, was but the work of a moment; and the ladies, because of her saying so many and such hard things, were induced to report her conduct to the emperor, their master. The question seemed to be one of national honor. A few minutes thereafter, the shrewdest detectives in Paris were at work, examining all the jewelry stores, with the hope of finding the lost pin. They did find it. A celebrated dealer in diamonds, a Spaniard, by the by, had bought it for the sum of $32,000, and had already sold it to an English lord for $35,000, in whose possession the piece of jewelry was found.

“How did you happen to buy this piece of jewelry that you ought to have known was stolen?” asked the agent of the police… Read More