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UNFORTUNATE WINNING.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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UNFORTUNATE WINNING.

M. G — me was a most estimable man, combining in himself the best qualities of both heart and head. He was good-humoured, witty, and benevolent. With these qualifications, and one other which seldom operates to a man's disadvantage — a clear income of three thousand a year — the best society in Paris was open to him. He had been a visitor in that capital about a month, when he received an invitation to one of the splendid dinners given weekly at the salon. As he never played, he hesitated about the propriety of accepting it, but on the assurance that it would not be expected of him to play; and, moreover, as he might not again have so good an opportunity of visiting an establishment of the kind, he resolved to go — merely for the satisfaction of his curiosity. He had a few stray napoleons in his purse, to throw them — `just for the good of the house,' as he considered it — could hardly be called play, so he threw them. Poor fellow! He left off a winner of fourteen hundred napoleons, or about as many


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pounds sterling — and so easily won! He went again, again, and again; but he was not always a winner; and within fifteen months of the moment when his hand first grasped the dice-box he was lying dead in a jail!