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Ch. 1: The Famous Regent Diamond

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THE REGENT.
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were most stringent regulations for the detec­tion of theft. No person who was not above suspicion — and who indeed was ever above the suspicion of an absolute Asiatic prince ? — might leave the mines without being thoroughly examined, inside and out, by means of purga­tives, emetics and the like. Notwithstanding all these precautions however, the Regent was concealed in a wound made in the calf of the leg of a slave. The inspectors, I suppose, did not probe the wound deeply enough, for the slave got away safely with his prize and reached Madras. Alas! poor wretch, it was an evil day for him when he found the great rough diamond. On seeking out a purchaser he met with an English skipper who offered him a considerable sum for it; but on going to the ship, perhaps to get his money, he was slain and thrown over­board. The skipper then sold the stone to Jamchund for one thousand pounds ($5000), took to drink and speedily succumbing to the combined effects of an evil conscience and de-
Ch. 1: The Famous Regent Diamond Page of 278 Ch. 1: The Famous Regent Diamond
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