In the city of
Edinburgh, eleven years after the restoration of the Stuarts, a son
was born to an opulent goldsmith and banker, named John Law, to
inherit his name and wealth. This well-to-do citizen came of an old
Fifeshire family, which justified him, when he had amassed
sufficient means, in purchasing an estate, and taking his place
among the territorial gentry as Law of Lauriston— Lauriston lying on
the shore of the Forth, on the borders of West and Mid Lothian. But
he did not abandon his trade, nor did he wish his son to grow above
it; and John Law the younger, at the age of fourteen, entered his
father’s counting-house, where, being gifted with an extraordinary
aptitude for figures, he quickly mastered the principles of the
current monetary system. For three years he was all that a Scotch
father, in Law of Lauriston’s place, could have wished him to be;
but at the age of seventeen he began to display tendencies of quite
another sort. Tall and well-made, he loved to attire himself in
becoming clothes. He sought the gaieties of society, and the ladies
smiling upon the dashing youth, who was heir, be it remembered, to a
good property, he became quite a personage in Edinburgh society, his
admirers styling him “Beau Law,” and his detractors sneering at him
as “Jessamy Law.” The death of his father, which happened at this
time (1688), left him at liberty to follow his own devices, and
abandoning the counting-house, he started off for London, bent upon
“seeing life” and widening his knowledge of the world.
Money, youth, health, good looks, and a large stock of
self-confidence—with such an equipment Law soon made his way in
certain circles. In London, as in Edinburgh, ladies of rank looked
graciously upon the handsome young Scot ; and in the most select
drawing-rooms of Mayfair he was a welcome visitor. Unfortunately he
contracted a love of play. At first his ventures at the gamingtable
were crowned with success. He pursued a definite system which he had
founded upon an ingenious calculation of chances, and his
fellow-players, astonished by his luck, imitated his play and staked
their money on the same chances. But the gamester’s fate in due time
overtook him. His system broke down. He met with heavy losses, and,
endeavouring to retrieve them by bolder ventures, met with losses
heavier still. Finally, after a nine years’ headlong career, he
found himself burdened with debt to an extent which compelled him to
mortgage his paternal estate. This was not all. An affair of
gallantry with Miss Villiers (afterwards Countess of Orkney)
involved him in a quarrel with a Mr. Wilson. In those days the usual
result of a quarrel was a duel; and Law had the misfortune to shoot
his antagonist dead on the spot. He was arrested, tried on a charge
of murder, and sentenced to death, but the sentence was commuted to
a fine on the ground that the offence was only manslaughter. An
appeal being lodged by the dead man’s brother, Law was detained in
the King’s Bench, but by some effort of dexterity effected his
escape, got down to Dover, and crossed the Channel.
He was now twenty-six. For three years he travelled the Continent,
and, his early taste for figures reviving, examined with much
curiosity the financial and banking systems of the countries through
which he passed. About 1700 he seems to have returned to Edinburgh,
where he published a small pamphlet entitled Proposals and Reasons
for Constituting a Council of Trade. It did not attract the
attention it deserved; but, nothing daunted, the ingenious
speculator launched a project for establishing a Land Bank (or, as
the small wits of the day called it, a Sand Bank), the notes issued
by which were to exceed the entire landed property of the State, at
ordinary interest, or were to equal the value of the land, with the
right to take possession at a certain time. This project excited a
good deal of discussion, even within the walls of the Parliament
House; but, in spite of the strenuous efforts of its supporters, it
was rejected by the majority, who passed a resolution hostile to all
kinds of paper credit.
Finding his own country disinclined to honour him as a prophet, and
disappointed in his efforts to procure a pardon for the homicide of
Mr. Wilson, Law returned to the Continent, and to his old habits of
gambling. For fourteen years he passed from one gaming-house to
another in the chief Continental countries, making huge sums of
money by his skilful combinations and wonderful insight into the
doctrine of chances. He acquired such a reputation in this way that
the magistrates of Vienna, and afterwards those of Genoa, expelled
him from their cities as too dangerous an example for young men. In
Paris he contrived to make the acquaintance and secure the
friendship of the Duke of Orleans, the Duke of Vendome, and the
Prince de Conti, who were fascinated by his address, his daring, his
knowledge of men and manners, his vivacity, and the shrewdness that
underlay it; but having offended D’Argenson, the lieutenant-general
of the police, he was compelled to absent himself for a time from
the capital. It was probably before this event that the restless
adventurer had submitted a scheme of finance to the Comptroller,
Desmarets. When it was laid before Louis XIV., who was then in the
fanaticism of his dotage, he inquired whether the author of it was a
Romanist, and being answered in the negative, refused to look at
calculations which must therefore be heretical.
The untiring speculator then proposed his favourite panacea of a
Land Bank to Victor Amadeus, Duke of Savoy, who sagasiously replied
that his territories were all too narrow for so vast a project, and
that he himself was too poor to enjoy the luxury of being ruined. He
recommended him, however, to make another appeal to the King of
France, sarcastically observing that, from what he knew of the
character of the French, they would be delighted with a plan so full
of glitter and promise.
On the death of Louis XIV. in 1715, Law’s opportunity came at last.
The Duke of Orleans became Regent, and the Duke was Law’s friend.
The tenacious Scot returned to Paris, and pressed his schemes with
unflagging persistency. The Regent listened with no reluctant ear.
France was reduced almost to bankruptcy by years of extravagant
misgovernment, and he was really anxious to accomplish something for
her relief, if it could be done without entailing upon himself any
sacrifice of his ease or his pleasures. Well, here was this
Scotchman at his elbow—a Deus ex machina! And there was a gallant
assurance about him—an airy self-confidence—a conviction of success
which captivated everybody, supplemented as it was by his fluency of
speech, his address, his command of figures, his buoyant
plausibility. To tell the truth, there was nothing very dangerous
about the financial principles he laid down—England and Holland had
long acted upon them. That no country could carry on extensive
commercial transactions unless its metallic currency was assisted by
a paper currency was an obvious truth. That the national credit
should be maintained at all costs was a truth no less obvious. What
was original in Law’s exposition was his project of a public bank,
which should control the administration of the royal revenues; and
upon these, and upon landed security, should issue notes. He
proposed that this bank should be managed, in the King’s name, by a
certain number of commissioners, to be named by the States-General.
Meanwhile, Monsieur Lass—as the French, to avoid the wy called
him—had risen into great popularity, and was accepted by all classes
as a possible financial saviour. It was with something like a burst
of enthusiasm, therefore, that the nation welcomed the royal edict
of May 5, 1716, which authorized Law (and his brother) to establish
a bank under the name of Law and Company, the notes of which should
be received in payment of the taxes. The capital was fixed at six
millions of livres, in 12,000 shares of five hundred livres each,
purchasable one-fourth in specie, and the remainder in billets
d’etat, or State notes. Thus, Law’s perseverance was at last crowned
with success, and the idea realized which had haunted his mind
through years of adventure and wandering. It was only right that
Fortune should do as much as this for a man who had wooed her with
such infinite courage and unfailing energy; but the capricious
goddess was prepared to do more, and more, before she again turned
her wheel downward.
In the administration of his bank Law displayed unquestionable
financial ability. He made all his notes payable at sight, and in
the coin current at the time they were issued—a provision which gave
them even a higher value than the precious metals, since these were
being continually tampered with by the Government, whereas Law’s
notes underwent no abatement. The public confidence was increased by
his frank declaration that a banker deserved death if he did not
retain sufficient securities to meet every demand. In less than a
year his notes reached a premium of 15 per cent. The effect upon the
trade and commerce of the country was extraordinary. Every branch of
industrial enterprise received a new stimulus through the recovery
of the national credit and the increased supply of capital. Greater
confidence was felt by all classes; and France enjoyed a prosperity
to which she had long been a stranger.
Unfortunately this rushing tide of success proved too much for the
prudence both of Law and his royal patron. The Regent, astonished at
the immense beneficial effects of a paper currency when used to
supplement a metallic currency, was led to suppose that the latter
might entirely be superseded by the former; while Law conceived the
project by which he is so disadvantageously remembered— though it
was not so entirely a chimaera as is sometimes represented—the great
Mississippi Scheme.
Law obtained from the Regent permission to establish a Company with
the exclusive right of trading to the Mississippi and the province
of Louisiana, which is on its western bank. The knowledge which then
prevailed of that part of North America was exceedingly vague and
imperfect; it was supposed to be a Tom Tiddlers
Ground of gold and silver, which would pour without stint into the
coffers of the Company; and thus enriched, the new corporation was
to farm the taxes and supply all the coinage of the country. Letters
patent incorporating the Company were issued in August 1717. The
capital was divided into two hundred thousand shares of 500 livres
each, the whole of which might be paid in billets d'etat at their
nominal value, though this was a great deal more than they realized
in the market.
From this time Law, the Regent, and the nation seem to have been
seized with a fever of speculation. Fresh privileges were heaped
upon Law’s bank, which was finally erected into the Royal Bank of
France. Departing from Law’s maxim as to the guilt of issuing notes
for which no funds were provided, the Regent caused notes to the
amount of one thousand millions of livres to be thrown upon the
country. To this disastrous course Law seems to have assented; or if
he protested at first, he offered no opposition to later issues of
the same chimerical character. For awhile his brain was dizzied by
his success, and he failed to see the certain ruin he was bringing
upon himself by this violation of every sound principle of finance.
Meantime the Regent, and his Chancellor d’Argenson, proceeded at
headlong speed in a course which meant national bankruptcy as its
goal. The Parliament protested, but the Regent overruled its
protests, passed statutes which the Regent cancelled by his
authority; and at last in its despair smiled grimly when some of its
members, who traced every evil to Law’s example and influence,
suggested that he ought to be gibbeted at the gates of the Palais de
Justice. Law, alarmed at the violent menace, sought the protection
of the Regent, who silenced his refractory Parliament by imprisoning
the President and two of the most prominent councillors.
Our Scottish adventurer then turned to his favourite Mississippi
scheme. Early in 1719 he obtained a fresh concession—the exclusive
privilege of trading to the East Indies, China, the South Seas, and
all the possssions of the French East India Company, founded by
Colbert, and then re-christened his Company with the proud title of
La Compagnie des Indes, besides creating fifty thousand new shares.
That fervent imagination, which is ordinarily held in check by the
reserve of the Scotch character, was now kindled in Law by the wide
sweep of territory included within his scope of action; and
prospects of boundless wealth rising upon his heated brain, he
promised to every shareholder a profit of not less than one hundred
and twenty per cent, upon his investment.
A delirium of speculation now seized upon France. This prospect of
almost boundless wealth—of wealth beyond the dreams of avarice—had a
charm for all classes and both sexes. There were at least three
hundred thousand applicants for the fifty thousand shares; while the
old shares were not less in demand, and were sold and re-sold at
ever-increasing premiums. Some of the more eager petitioners took
lodgings close to Law’s house in the Rue de Quincampoix, that they
might pick up any grains of gold which fell from his fingers. The
street was too narrow to hold the crowds that daily flocked towards
it. A cobbler who rented there a small stall made two hundred livres
a day by letting it out to speculators. To obtain greater
accommodation, Law purchased the magnificent Hotel de Soissons of
the Prince de Carignan, and removed thither. The Prince reserved to
himself the gardens; and an edict being published which forbade the
sale or purchase of stock anywhere but in these gardens, they
yielded him an enormous return. For the convenience of the brokers
and their clients, five hundred small tents and pavilions were
planted among the groves and parterres, and these were let at the
rate of five hundred livres a month.
Few were the sane brains which escaped a touch of the prevalent
madness. Two sober men of letters, M. de la Motte and the Abbe
Terasson, congratulated each other on their immunity. A few days
afterwards, La Motte ascended the grand staircase of the Hotel de
Soissons to purchase some Mississippi shares, and met the Abbe
coming down from Law’s rooms. “Ha!” said the Abbe, “is that you, La
Motte?” “And can that be you, Abbe?” It was some weeks before they
could look in each other’s face and breathe the word “Mississippi.”
To obtain admission to Law’s presence was the object of more
stratagems than an introduction at Court. What was a smile or a word
from the Regent compared with the scrip of Mississippi stock? The
crowd of applicants was so great that Law, with all the good-will in
the world, could see only a portion of them, and dukes and duchesses
and marquises and marchionesses waited for hours in his antechamber
on the chance of seeing him, or bribed his servants heavily to
announce their names. A lady of rank, who had failed several days
running in her efforts to see the fortune-making Scot, ordered her
coachman to keep a strict watch when she was out driving, and if he
saw Mr. Law coming to contrive to upset her. For three consecutive
days, the lady and her coachman wandered about Paris watching for an
opportunity. On the fourth it came. “Upset us now,” she cried out to
her coachman; “for Heaven’s sake, upset us now!” With commendable
dexterity he drove against a post, and turned his lady out on the
pave just as Law was passing. Of course Law hastened to offer his
assistance, placed the lady in his own carriage, and drove to the
Hotel de Soissons, when she confessed her manoeuvre, and was
rewarded for her ingenuity and boldness with a quantity of the
coveted shares.
The Regent, one day, was mentioning in the presence of his courtiers
that he desired to nominate some lady of the rank of a duchess to
attend upon his daughter at Modena, but added, that he hardly knew
where to find one. “No!” said the Abb6 Dubois; “well, then, I can
tell your Highness where to find every duchess in France—in Mr.
Law’s antechamber.”
M. de Chirac, a celebrated physician, having purchased stock under
unfavourable conditions, was anxious to sell out; and as it
continued to fall for two or three days, his anxiety greatly
increased, so that his mind was completely absorbed with the
subject. Being called upon to attend a nervous lady patient, he
murmured to himself, as he felt her pulse—“It falls! it falls! good
Heavens, it does nothing but fall!” “Oh, Monsieur de Chirac!” said
the lady, starting to her feet. “I am dying! I am dying! it falls!
it falls! it falls!” “What falls?” exclaimed the amazed doctor. “My
pulse! my pulse! said the lady. “Do you not say so? Oh, I must be
dying!” “Calm your fears, my dear madame,” said M. de Chirac. “I was
alluding to the stocks. The truth is, I am likely to be a great
loser, and my mind is so disturbed that I hardly know what I am
saying.”
In the prosperity that prevailed while the inflation lasted, Law
naturally shared. The highest nobility paid him the most respectful
attentions; his daughter’s hand was sought by the heirs of princely
and ducal families. He purchased fine estates in different parts of
France ; and entered into a negotiation with the family of the Duke
of Sully to purchase the marquisate of Rosny. As his religion was a
bar to his advancement, the Regent promised to appoint him
Comptroller-General of the finances, if he would make open
profession of Romanism. Law on this point was less scrupulous than
most Scotchmen are, and was confirmed by the Abbe de Tencin, in the
cathedral of Melun, in the presence of an immense multitude. On the
following day he was elected honorary church’ warden of the parish
of St. Roeh, and signalized the occasion by bestowing on the parish
a gift of five hundred thousand livres. Such were the sums at the
command of the soi-disant Edinburgh goldsmith!
Notwithstanding Law’s rapid elevation, and the sense of power which,
as the dispenser of wealth and influence, he must necessarily have
felt, and the implicit confidence placed in his advice by the
Regent, he preserved all his coolness of judgment and simplicity of
manner. Towards ladies his behaviour was marked by a charming
courtesy; his equals or his inferiors he met in a spirit of the
frankest affability. It was only towards the “cringing nobles,” who
thought to win his favour by their lavish adulation, that he showed
himself proud and forbidding. His own countrymen he treated with the
greatest cordiality, and they could always rely upon his services.
That he expected them to remember that he was one of the most
powerful men in Europe, was not, perhaps, a very serious fault.
There certainly was as much pride as politeness in his reception of
Archibald Campbell, Earl of Islay, and afterwards Duke of Argyll,
who, when he called upon him, was ushered through a crowded
antechamber, where the best blood of France was waiting the
financier’s pleasure, to find Law sitting quietly in his library,
writing a letter to his gardener at Lauriston about the planting of
some cabbages! He entertained the Earl for a considerable time,
played a game of piquet with him, and deeply impressed him by his
fine breeding and sagacity.
Law was at this time engaged in his scheme for building up a French
empire in the valley of the Mississippi, whither he proposed to
draft the surplus population of the country. On the morning of
September 19, 1719, the bells of St. Martin rang forth a wedding
peal; to the music of which a procession of one hundred and eighty
women, dressed in white and garlanded with flowers, each attended by
a bridegroom suitably attired, wound its way through the crowded
streets. These couples were not only linked together by matrimonial
bonds, but by iron fetters; for they had been drafted from the Paris
prisons, and mated on some French principle of order, previous to
being shipped off to find an Arcadia in the far West This was the
characteristic way in which the Regent’s government developed Law’s
plan of colonization. It went further, and seized upon any part of
the population which it conceived to be “damaged” or unsound—
establishing a kind of press-gang, which seized upon this person and
upon that, loaded them with chains, and marched them upon shipboard.
With the usual French logic, it was argued that to promote the
growth of a new empire, it was desirable to infuse French blood into
the native royal races of North America. “Accordingly, the Queen of
Missouri was induced to come to Paris to select a husband. The
fortunate object of her choice was a stalwart sergeant in the
Guards, named Dubois. A disagreeable condition attached to the new
dignity probably impeded more distinguished candidates. The Queen of
Missouri, being a Daughter of the Sun, was entitled to cut off her
husband*s head if he displeased her; and rumour went that Dubois the
First actually suffered the penalty of this rigid discipline. But
all distinct record of his fate was lost in the tangled mixture of
wild adventures encountered by the thousands who were unshipped on
the desert shore—shovelled, as it were, into a strange land swarming
with savages, and left there to struggle for life and food.”
But early in 1720, the wonder-working “system” which had sprung from
Law’s fertile brain, began to show signs of collapse. The alarm was
first raised by the high price of commodities, which had kept pace
in their upward progress with the constantly increasing inflation of
“the shares.” A hint of the danger they were incurring was conveyed
to Law and the Regent, by the action of the Prince de Conti.
Offended that Law had refused to sell him some shares in India stock
at his own price, he sent to the Bank to demand payment in specie of
so enormous a number of notes, that three waggons were required for
its transport. Law did not fail to impress on the Regent the
alarming consequences that would ensue if his example found
imitators; and the Regent, who fully appreciated them, compelled the
Prince to refund two-thirds of the money. Happily the Prince was
unpopular, and a run on the Bank was for a time averted. But, by and
by, others took the same action, through prudence, that he had taken
through revenge. A want of specie was gradually felt by all classes
; and as it was traced to the conduct of those discreet speculators,
who smuggled into England or Holland the coin they received for
their scrip, the Regent, at Law’s instigation, issued edicts
depreciating the value of specie five, and afterwards ten, per cent,
below that of paper, and at the same time limiting the payments of
the Bank in gold and silver. Such artificial restrictions, instead
of restoring public confidence, weakened it; and Law, or the
Government, ventured on a still bolder coup, but with a more ruinous
effect. An edict was published which forbade any person whatever to
hold more than five hundred livres (£20) in specie, whether in
coined money or in plate or jewellery! It is unnecessary to dwell on
the loss which this absurd and iniquitous statute inflicted on the
better classes. It was carried out in the most rigorous manner. The
police were instructed to make domiciliary visits, and as every
informer received one-half of the forfeited treasure, the espionage
was widespread and most harassing. There is a good story told,
however, of the President Lambert de Vannon, who informed the chief
of the police that he was prepared to denounce a criminal possessed
of five thousand livres’ worth of bullion. The chief was astonished
that such a man should stoop to the role of informer, but said,
“Name the offender.” “C'est moi, le President Lambert de Vannon!” It
was the only way he could think of for saving a moiety of his
property. Lord Stair, wittiest of ambassadors, said it was
impossible now to mistake the sincerity of Law’s Catholicism ; after
having shown his faith in transubstantiation by turning so much gold
into paper, he had ended by establishing the Inquisition.
Alas for our brilliant Scotchman ! It was all of no avail. The
structure he had reared upon paper came down with a crash, like a
child’s house of cards, before the first breath of suspicion. The
reported wealth of the Mississippi Valley was discredited ; the
stock of the Company sank lower and lower; and though the Regent and
his Council issued more notes, these failed to restore the public
confidence, since they could not be exchanged for specie. Early in
May, it was computed that the total number of notes in circulation
reached two thousand six hundred millions of livres, while all the
specie in the country did not exceed fifty millions of pounds, or
about half that amount. The Regent’s Council then perceived that
something must be done in the way of equalization, and the measure
finally decided on wras the depreciation of the notes by one-half.
An edict to this effect was issued on May 21, but the Parliament
refused its concurrence, and such an outburst of indignation shook
the country, that the Council recalled its edict.
This was on the 27th—a black day for France. On that day the Bank
stopped payment in specie, and Law’s dream of power was at an end.
His name, wherever mentioned, was loaded with curses ; he was
denounced as the author of the national bankruptcy. The mob stoned
his carriage as he returned from the theatre, and assumed so
menacing an attitude that the Regent stationed a company of Swiss
Guards before his hotel night and day. But even this precaution
proved insufficient, and Law found it necessary to take shelter in
the Regent’s apartments in the Palais Royal. The ruin that had
overtaken so many thousands of persons, and shattered the public
credit, was not able, however, to check the flow or blunt the edge
of French wit. When the trouble was at its worst, epigram succeeded
epigram, and pasquinade was piled upon pasquinade. Here is a
specimen—
“Lundi, j’achetai des actions,
Mardi, je gagnai des millions,
Mercredi, j'arrangeai mon menage,
Jeudi, je pris un equipage,
Vendredi, je m’en fus au bal,
Et Samedi k l’hopital.”
[On Monday, I bought
shares; on Tuesday, I made millions; Wednesday, I furnished my
house; Thursday, I set up a carriage; Friday, I went to the ball;
and on Saturday to the poor-house.]
Through all this stormy time Law did credit to his nationality by
his imperturbable courage. He remained unmoved in the midst of the
chaos, maintaining unshaken his confidence in his system, and
in—paper. Only on one occasion does his temper seem to have yielded,
when a mob pursuing him with yells and execrations, he stepped from
his carriage, faced them calmly, and saying disdainfully, “Vous etes
canailles" and walked on. Whether his words were lost in the tumult,
or whether his “ majestic sang-froid” imposed on the multitude, the
brave Scotchman was allowed to reach the Palais Royal without
accident. His coachman was less fortunate. Imitating his master’s
disdain, he repeated the contemptuous epithet; whereupon the
canaille fell upon him, tore him from his seat and stamped him to
death, afterwards breaking the carriage into fragments. The outrage
was witnessed by the President of the Parliament, who gained much
applause by relating it to the members in an improvised couplet—
“Messieurs! Messieurs! bonne nouvelle,
La carosse de Lass est reduit en cannelle ”
—to which the reply was a general shout of hilarity, and a solitary
voice which asked, “And Law himself, is he not torn to pieces?”
Wounded by the ingratitude—for such it seemed to him—of the people
whom he had desired to benefit, and conscious of the integrity of
his motives, Law, who preserved in his fall the dignity of a
Coriolanus, obtained the Regent’s permission to leave France. As he
drove towards the frontier, his carriage was followed by another in
swift pursuit, which carried, not an officer of justice, but the
agent of the Russian Emperor, charged to invite him to take charge
of the finances of Russia. Though a poor man— out of the wreck of
his fortune he had saved little more than a diamond worth four or
five thousand pounds—he declined the brilliant proposal. At Venice
he was met by Cardinal Alberoni, the great Spanish minister; and
elsewhere his renown drew the principal personages in Europe to his
levees. To defray his expenses he seems to have resumed his
attendances at the gaming-table; though his was not the paltry
dependence on luck of the ordinary gambler, but a system of
combinations based upon elaborate calculations. For some time he
cherished the hope of being recalled to France, but with the death
of the Regent, in 1723, this hope expired also; and after a visit to
Copenhagen, he obtained permission from the British Government to
return to his native country. It is a curious fact that he was
offered and accepted a passage on board the flag-ship of Sir John
Norris, the Admiral of the British fleet: he who had fled from the
country a discredited fugitive, returning in state like some high
and privileged personage.
For about four years Law remained in England, and then proceeded to
Venice, where, in 1729, the man who had controlled the disposal of
millions of pounds, died in indigent circumstances. An epigrammatist
of the time devoted a quatrain to his memory—
“Ci-git cet Ecossais cdlebre,
Ce calculateur sans egal,
Qui, par les regies de I’Algebre,
A mis la France a Phopital.”
[Here lies that
famous Scotchman, That calculator unequalled, Who, by the rules of
Algebra, Has sent France to the poor-house.]
It may be said of Law that his work lived after him, though the
shrewdest political vision could not have foreseen the far-reaching
consequences that flowed from it. His Mississippi scheme was the
immediate cause of the South Sea Bubble in England, and of a similar
delusion in Holland. It left on the hands of France the colony of
Louisiana, which Napoleon sold to the United States in 1803 for
fifteen millions of dollars. This purchase gave to the slave-holding
States a preponderating influence which eventually led to the
secession of the Southern States and the war between North and
South—the greatest civil war in history. Law’s scheme also left
France, as Mr. Hill Burton remarks, in possession of an East India
Company which rivalled our own, and but for the genius of Clive and
Hastings might have established a Franco-Indian empire, and deprived
us of that great dependency to which we owe so much in profit and
prestige. These were the notable results of Law’s billets d action!
A sanguinary civil war in the West—an Anglo-Indian empire in the
East —both may be directly traced to the scheme evolved from the
fertile and unresting brain of a Scottish adventurer—the son of John
Law of Lauriston, banker and goldsmith of Edinburgh. |