fered
to pledge a great diamond, worth twenty thousand crowns, which he had
bought from the Portuguese Pretender, Dom Antonio, who on flying from
Lisbon had carried off the crown jewels. The King gratefully accepted
the offer and the diamond was sent for. A trusty valet was the person
deputed to carry the precious freight, but the valet was waylaid and
murdered.
Dismayed
at the probable consequences of this disaster, the King roundly abused
de Sanci for having trusted his diamond to a servant, but the latter
persistently declared his belief that the diamond was not irretrievably
lost. After much difficulty and a considerable lapse of time the body
of the murdered valet was found, upon which de Sanci ordered it to be
dissected, when the missing diamond was discovered in the body. This
must have been one of those happy expedients which de Sanci's ready
wit enabled him to hit upon. Few " phlegmatic " people would have
thought of looking for a diamond in such