Alonzo Cano, a Spanish sculptor, being employed by a lawyer of Grenada to make a statue of St. Antonio de Padua, and having mentioned how much it would cost, the lawyer began to reckon how many pistoles per day the artist had earned. "You have," said he, "been five-and-twenty days carving this statue, and your exorbitant demand makes you charge the rate of four pistoles per day, while I, who am your superior in a profession, do not make half your profits by my talents." "Wretch!" exclaimed the artist; "do you talk to me of your talents? I have been five-and-twenty years learning to make this statue in five-and-twenty days." So saying, he dashed it on the pavement.--James Croake, "Curiosities of Law and Lawyers."