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I Sell Diamonds
197
China, an anti-luxury campaign in Japan with its incident legislation, and a tin and rubber slump in Malaya were decisive factors in determining me to beat a retreat before the crisis, which had already taken toll in many good names in the diamond trade at home should claim mine, too.
My friend and associate in Antwerp called me "faint heart", but this time I was right and he was wrong. We had not gone our several ways above eighteen months when his fortune, which at one time may have reached the seven-figure mark in sterling, was swept away. But I consider that Fate did not, after all, deal unkindly with him. No one was the worse by a penny for his misad­venture, and he himself was taken off suddenly, before he really felt poverty. His faults, and he had some, were such as the advantages of education might have eliminated, and his good qualities many. An untruth was an abomina­tion to him. He dealt fairly, gave generously, and of him it might be said with justice that "loyalty" was his middle name.
Such was my large-scale dealing in diamonds, playing credits against thousands of pounds' worth of goods over two continents. There are other sides to the game, how­ever, and I have known most of them. One memory I have of a certain Malayan adventure, which I would not have missed for worlds. It has a fine, delicate, leisurely flavour, full of the adventure of Eastern trading. I will see if I can impart it to you.
There are still some parts of an ever-narrowing world