Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowdsby Charles Mackay, LL.D.
MONEY MANIA -- THE
MISSISSIPPI SCHEME
Some in clandestine companies combine;
Erect new stocks to trade beyond the line;
With air and empty names beguile the town,
And raise new credits first, then cry 'em down;
Divide the empty nothing into shares,
And set the crowd together by the ears. -- Defoe.
T he
personal character and career of one man are so intimately connected with the great scheme
of the years 1719 and 1720, that a history of the Mississippi madness can have no fitter
introduction than a sketch of the life of its great author John Law. Historians are
divided in opinion as to whether they should designate him a knave or a madman. Both
epithets were unsparingly applied to him in his lifetime, and while the unhappy
consequences of his projects were still deeply felt. Posterity, however, has found reason
to doubt the justice of the accusation, and to confess that John Law was neither knave nor
madman, but one more deceived than deceiving, more sinned against than sinning. He was
thoroughly acquainted with the philosophy and true principles of credit. He understood the
monetary question better than any man of his day; and if his system fell with a crash so
tremendous, it was not so much his fault as that of the people amongst whom he had erected
it. He did not calculate upon the avaricious frenzy of a whole nation; he did not see that
confidence, like mistrust, could be increased almost ad infinitum, and that hope
was as extravagant as fear. How was he to foretell that the French people, like the man in
the fable, would kill, in their frantic eagerness, the fine goose he had brought to lay
them so many golden eggs? His fate was like that which may be supposed to have overtaken
the first adventurous boatman who rowed from Erie to Ontario. Broad and smooth was the
river on which he embarked; rapid and pleasant was his progress; and who was to stay him
in his career? Alas for him! the cataract was nigh. He saw, when it was too late, that the
tide which wafted him so joyously along was a tide of destruction; and when he endeavoured
to retrace his way, he found that the current was too strong for his weak efforts to stem,
and that he drew nearer every instant to the tremendous falls. Down he went over the sharp
rocks, and the waters with him. He was dashed to pieces with his bark; but the
waters, maddened and turned to foam by the rough descent, only boiled and bubbled for a
time, and then flowed on again as smoothly as ever. Just so it was with Law and the French
people. He was the boatman, and they were the waters.
John Law was born at Edinburgh in the year 1671. His father was the younger son of an
ancient family in Fife, and carried on the business of a goldsmith and banker. He amassed
considerable wealth in his trade, sufficient to enable him to gratify the wish, so common
among his countrymen, of adding a territorial designation to his name. He purchased with
this view the estates of Lauriston and Randleston, on the Firth of Forth, on the borders
of West and Mid Lothian, and was thenceforth known as Law of Lauriston. The subject of our
memoir, being the eldest son, was received into his father's counting-house at the age of
fourteen, and for three years laboured hard to acquire an insight into the principles of
banking as then carried on in Scotland. He had always manifested great love for the study
of numbers, and his proficiency in the mathematics was considered extraordinary in one of
his tender years. At the age of seventeen he was tall, strong, and well made; and his
face, although deeply scarred with the smallpox, was agreeable in its expression, and full
of intelligence. At this time he began to neglect his business, and becoming vain of his
person, indulged in considerable extravagance of attire. He was a great favourite with the
ladies, by whom he was called Beau Law; while the other sex, despising his foppery,
nicknamed him Jessamy John. At the death of his father, which happened in 1688, he
withdrew entirely from the desk, which had become so irksome, and being possessed of the
revenues of the paternal estate of Lauriston, he proceeded to London, to see the world.
He was now very young, very vain, good-looking, tolerably rich, and quite uncontrolled.
It is no wonder that, on his arrival in the capital, he should launch out into
extravagance. He soon became a regular frequenter of the gaming-houses, and by pursuing a
certain plan, based upon some abstruse calculation of chances, he contrived to gain
considerable sums. All the gamblers envied him his luck, and many made it a point to watch
his play, and stake their money on the same chances. In affairs of gallantry he was
equally fortunate; ladies of the first rank smiled graciously upon the handsome Scotchman
-- the young, the rich, the witty, and the obliging. But all these successes only paved
the way for reverses. After he had been for nine years exposed to the dangerous
attractions of the gay life he was leading, he became an irrecoverable gambler. As his
love of play increased in violence, it diminished in prudence. Great losses were only to
be repaired by still greater ventures, and one unhappy day he lost more than he could
repay without mortgaging his family estate. To that step he was driven at last. At the
same time his gallantry brought him into trouble. A love affair, or slight flirtation,
with a lady of the name of Villiers -- Miss Elizabeth Villiers, afterwards Countess of
Orkney -- exposed him to the resentment of a Mr. Wilson, by whom he was challenged to
fight a duel. Law accepted, and had the ill fortune to shoot his antagonist dead upon the
spot. He was arrested the same day, and brought to trial for murder by the relatives of
Mr. Wilson. He was afterwards found guilty, and sentenced to death. The sentence was
commuted to a fine, upon the ground that the offence only amounted to manslaughter. An
appeal being lodged by a brother of the deceased, Law was detained in the King's Bench,
whence, by some means or other, which he never explained, he contrived to escape; and an
action being instituted against the sheriffs, he was advertised in the Gazette, and a
reward offered for his apprehension. He was described as "Captain John Law, a
Scotchman, aged twenty-six; a very tall, black, lean man; well shaped, above six feet
high, with large pock-holes in his face; big nosed, and speaking broad and loud." As
this was rather a caricature than a description of him, it has been supposed that it was
drawn up with a view to favour his escape. He succeeded in reaching thc Continent, where
he travelled for three years, and devoted much of his attention to the monetary and
banking affairs of the countries through which he passed. He stayed a few months in
Amsterdam, and speculated to some extent in the funds. His mornings were devoted to the
study of finance and the principles of trade, and his evenings to the gaming-house. It is
generally believed that he returned to Edinburgh in the year 1700. It is certain that he
published in that city his Proposals and Reasons for constituting a Council of Trade. This
pamphlet did not excite much attention.
In a short time afterwards he published a project for establishing what he called a
Land-Bank, the notes issued by which were never to exceed the value of the entire lands
of the state, upon ordinary interest, or were to be equal in value to the land, with the
right to enter into possession at a certain time. (The wits of the day called it a sand-bank,
which would wreck the vessel of the state.) The project excited a good deal of
discussion in the Scottish Parliament, and a motion for the establishment of such a bank
was brought forward by a neutral party, called the Squadrone, whom Law had interested in
his favour. The Parliament ultimately passed a resolution to the effect, that, to
establish any kind of paper credit, so as to force it to pass, was an improper expedient
for the nation.
Upon the failure of this project, and of his efforts to procure a pardon for the murder
of Mr. Wilson, Law withdrew to the Continent, and resumed his old habits of gaming. For
fourteen years he continued to roam about, in Flanders, Holland, Germany, Hungary, Italy,
and France. He soon became intimately acquainted with the extent of the trade and
resources of each, and daily more confirmed in his opinion that no country could prosper
without a paper currency. During the whole of this time he appears to have chiefly
supported himself by successful play. At every gambling-house of note in the capitals of
Europe he was known and appreciated -- one better skilled in the intricacies of chance
than any other man of the day. It is stated in the Biographie Universelle that he
was expelled, first from Venice, and afterwards from Genoa, by the magistrates, who
thought him a visitor too dangerous for the youth of those cities. During his residence in
Paris he rendered himself obnoxious to D'Argenson, the lieutenant-general of the police,
by whom he was ordered to quit the capital. This did not take place, however, before he
had made the acquaintance, in the saloons, of the Duke de Vendome, the Prince de Conti,
and of the gay Duke of Orleans, the latter of whom was destined afterwards to exercise so
much influence over his fate. The Duke of Orleans was pleased with the vivacity and good
sense of the Scottish adventurer, while the latter was no less pleased with the wit and
amiability of a prince who promised to become his patron. They were often thrown into each
other's society, and Law seized every opportunity to instil his financial doctrines into
the mind of one whose proximity to the throne pointed him out as destined, at no very
distant date, to play an important part in the government.
Shortly before the death of Louis XIV., or, as some say, in 1780, Law proposed a scheme
of finance to Desmarets, the comptroller. Louis is reported to have inquired whether the
projector were a Catholic, and on being answered in the negative, to have declined having
anything to do with him. (This anecdote, which is related in the correspondence of Madame
de Baviere, Duchess of Orleans and mother of the Regent, is discredited by Lord John
Rusell in his History of the principal States of Europe from the Peace of Utrecht; for
what reason he does not inform us. There is no doubt that Law proposed his scheme to
Desmarets, and that Louis refused to hear it. The reason given for the refusal is quite
consistent with the character of that bigoted and tyrannical monarch.)
It was after this repulse that he visited Italy. His mind being still occupied with
schemes of finance, he proposed to Victor Amadeus, Duke of Savoy, to establish his
land-bank in that country. The duke replied that his dominions were too circumscribed for
the execution of so great a project, and that he was by far too poor a potentate to be
ruined. He advised him, however, to try the king of France once more; for he was sure, if
he knew any thing of the French character, that the people would be delighted with a plan,
not only so new, but so plausible.
Louis XIV. died in 1715, and the heir to the throne being an infant only seven years of
age, the Duke of Orleans assumed the reins of government, as regent, during his minority.
Law now found himself in a more favourable position. The tide in his affairs had come,
which, taken at the flood, was to waft him on to fortune. The regent was his friend,
already acquainted with his theory and pretensions, and inclined, moreover, to aid him in
any efforts to restore the wounded credit of France, bowed down to the earth by the
extravagance of the long reign of Louis XIV.
Hardly was that monarch laid in his grave ere the popular hatred, suppressed so long,
burst forth against his memory. He who, during his life, had been flattered with an excess
of adulation, to which history scarcely offers a parallel, was now cursed as a tyrant, a
bigot, and a plunderer. His statues were pelted and disfigured; his effigies torn down,
amid the execrations of the populace, and his name rendered synonymous with selfishness
and oppression. The glory of his arms was forgotten, and nothing was remembered but his
reverses, his extravagance, and his cruelty.
The finances of the country were in a state of the utmost disorder. A profuse and
corrupt monarch, whose profuseness and corruption were imitated by almost every
functionary, from the highest to the lowest grade, had brought France to the verge of
ruin. The national debt amounted to 3000 millions of livres, the revenue to 145 millions,
and the expenses of government to 142 millions per annum; leaving only three millions to
pay the interest upon 3000 millions. The first care of the regent was to discover a remedy
for an evil of such magnitude, and a council was early summoned to take the matter into
consideration. The Duke de St. Simon was of opinion that nothing could save the country
from revolution but a remedy at once bold and dangerous. He advised the regent to convoke
the states-general, and declare a national bankruptcy. The Duke de Noailles, a man of
accommodating principles, an accomplished courtier, and totally averse from giving himself
any trouble or annoyance that ingenuity could escape from, opposed the project of St.
Simon with all his influence. He represented the expedient as alike dishonest and ruinous.
The regent was of the same opinion, and this desperate remedy fell to the ground.
The measures ultimately adopted, though they promised fair, only aggravated the evil.
The first and most dishonest measure was of no advantage to the state. A recoinage was
ordered, by which the currency was depreciated one-fifth; those who took a thousand pieces
of gold or silver to the mint received back an amount of coin of the same nominal value,
but only four-fifths of the weight of metal. By this contrivance the treasury gained
seventy-two millions of livres, and all the commercial operations of the country were
disordered. A trifling diminution of the taxes silenced the clamours of the people, and
for the slight present advantage the great prospective evil was forgotten.
A Chamber of Justice was next instituted to inquire into the malversations of the
loan-contractors and the farmers of the revenues. Tax-collectors are never very popular in
any country, but those of France at this period deserved all the odium with which they
were loaded. As soon as these farmers-general, with all their hosts of subordinate agents,
called Maltotiers, (from maltote, an oppressive tax.) were called to account
for their misdeeds, the most extravagant joy took possession of the nation. The Chamber of
Justice, instituted chiefly for this purpose, was endowed with very extensive powers. It
was composed of the presidents and councils of the parliament, the judges of the
Courts of Aid and of Requests, and the officers of the Chamber of Account, under the
general presidence of the minister of finance. Informers were encouraged to give evidence
against the offenders by the promise of one-fifth part of the fines and confiscations. A
tenth of all concealed effects belonging to the guilty was promised to such as should
furnish the means of discovering them.
The promulgation of the edict constituting this court caused a degree of
consternation among those principally concerned, which can only be accounted for on the
supposition that their peculation had been enormous. But they met with no sympathy. The
proceedings against them justified their terror. The Bastille was soon unable to contain
the prisoners that were sent to it, and the gaols all over the country teemed with guilty
or suspected persons. An order was issued to all innkeepers and postmasters to refuse
horses to such as endeavoured to seek safety in flight; and all persons were forbidden,
under heavy fines, to harbour them or favour their evasion. Some were condemned to the
pillory, others to the galleys, and the least guilty to fine and imprisonment. One only,
Samuel Bernard, a rich banker and farmer-general of a province remote from the capital,
was sentenced to death. So great had been the illegal profits of this man, -- looked upon
as the tyrant and oppressor of his district, that he offered six millions of livres, or
250,000£ sterling, to be allowed to escape.
His bribe was refused, and he suffered the penalty of death. Others, perhaps more
guilty, were more fortunate. Confiscation, owing to the concealment of their treasures by
the delinquents, often produced less money than a fine. The severity of the government
relaxed, and fines, under the denomination of taxes, were indiscriminately levied upon all
offenders; but so corrupt was every department of the administration, that the country
benefited but little by the sums which thus flowed into the treasury. Courtiers and
courtiers' wives and mistresses came in for the chief share of the spoils. One contractor
had been taxed, in proportion to his wealth and guilt, at the sum of twelve millions of
livres. The Count * * *, a man of some weight in the government, called upon him, and
offered to procure a remission of the fine if he would give him a hundred thousand crowns.
"Vous etes trop tard, mon ami;" replied the financier; "I have
already made a bargain with your wife for fifty thousand." (This anecdote is
related by M. de la Hode, in his Life of Philippe of Orleans.
It would have looked more authentic if he had given the names of the dishonest contractor
and the still more dishonest minister. But M. de la Hode's book is liable to the same
objection as most of the French memoirs of that and of subsequent periods. It is
sufficient with most of them that an anecdote be ben trovato; the vero is
but matter of secondary consideration.)
About a hundred and eighty millions of livres were levied in this manner, of which
eighty were applied in payment of the debts contracted by the government. The remainder
found its way into the pockets of the courtiers. Madame de Maintenon, writing on this
subject, says -- "We hear every day of some new grant of the regent. The people
murmur very much at this mode of employing the money taken from the peculators." The
people, who, after the first burst of their resentment is over, generally express a
sympathy for the weak, were indignant that so much severity should be used to so little
purpose. They did not see the justice of robbing one set of rogues to fatten another. In a
few months all the more guilty had been brought to punishment, and the Chamber of Justice
looked for victims in humbler walks of life. Charges of fraud and extortion were brought
against tradesmen of good character in consequence of the great inducements held out to
common informers. They were compelled to lay open their affairs before this tribunal in
order to establish their innocence. The voice of complaint resounded from every side; and
at the expiration of a year the government found it advisable to discontinue further
proceedings. The Chamber of Justice was suppressed, and a general amnesty granted to all
against whom no charges had yet been preferred.
In the midst of this financial confusion Law appeared upon the scene. No man felt more
deeply than the regent the deplorable state of the country, but no man could be more
averse from putting his shoulders manfully to the wheel. He disliked business; he signed
official documents without proper examination, and trusted to others what he should have
undertaken himself. The cares inseparable from his high office were burdensome to him. He
saw that something was necessary to be done; but he lacked the energy to do it, and had
not virtue enough to sacrifice his ease and his pleasures in the attempt. No wonder that,
with this character, he listened favourably to the mighty projects, so easy of execution,
of the clever adventurer whom he had formerly known, and whose talents he appreciated.
When Law presented himself at court he was most cordially received. He offered two
memorials to the regent, in which he set forth the evils that had befallen France, owing
to an insufficient currency, at different times depreciated. He asserted that a metallic
currency, unaided by a paper money, was wholly inadequate to the wants of a commercial
country, and particularly cited the examples of Great Britain and Holland to shew the
advantages of paper. He used many sound arguments on the subject of credit, and proposed
as a means of restoring that of France, then at so low an ebb among the nations, that he
should be allowed to set up a bank, which should have the management of the royal
revenues, and issue notes both on that and on landed security. He further proposed that
this bank should be administered in the king's name, but subject to the control of
commissioners to be named by the States-General.
While these memorials were under consideration, Law translated into French his essay on
money and trade, and used every means to extend through the nation his renown as a
financier. He soon became talked of. The confidants of the regent spread abroad his
praise, and every one expected great things of Monsieur Lass. (The French pronounced his
name in this manner to avoid the ungallic sound, aw. After the failure of his
scheme, the wags said the nation was lasse de lui, and proposed that he should in
future be known by the name of Monsieur Helas!)
On the 5th of May, 1716, a royal edict was published, by which Law was authorised, in
conjunction with 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 twelve thousand shares of five hundred livres each, purchasable one
fourth in specie, and the remainder in billets d'etat. It was not thought expedient
to grant him the whole of the privileges prayed for in his memorials until experience
should have shewn their safety and advantage.
Law was now on the high road to fortune. The study of thirty years was brought to guide
him in the management of his bank. He made all his notes payable at sight, and in the coin
current at the time they were issued. This last was a master-stroke of policy, and
immediately rendered his notes more valuable than the precious metals. The latter were
constantly liable to depreciation by the unwise tampering of the government. A thousand
livres of silver might be worth their nominal value one day, and be reduced one-sixth the
next, but a note of Law's bank retained its original value. He publicly declared at the
same time, that a banker deserved death if he made issues without having sufficient
security to answer all demands. The consequence was, that his notes advanced rapidly in
public estimation, and were received at one per cent more than specie. It was not long
before the trade of the country felt the benefit. Languishing commerce began to lift up
her head; the taxes were paid with greater regularity and less murmuring; and a degree of
confidence was established that could not fail, if it continued, to become still more
advantageous. In the course of a year, Law's notes rose to fifteen per cent premium, while
the billets d'etat, or notes issued by the government as security for the debts
contracted by the extravagant Louis XIV., were at a discount of no less than seventy-eight
and a half per cent. The comparison was too great in favour of Law not to attract the
attention of the whole kingdom, and his credit extended itself day by day. Branches of his
bank were almost simultaneously established at Lyons, Rochelle, Tours, Amiens, and
Orleans.
The regent appears to have been utterly astonished at his success, and gradually to
have conceived the idea that paper, which could so aid a metallic currency, could entirely
supersede it. Upon this fundamental error he afterwards acted. In the mean time, Law
commenced the famous project which has handed his name down to posterity. He proposed to
the regent (who could refuse him nothing) to establish a company that should have the
exclusive privilege of trading to the great river Mississippi and the province of
Louisiana, on its western bank. The country was supposed to abound in the precious metals;
and the company, supported by the profits of their exclusive commerce, were to be the sole
farmers of the taxes and sole coiners of money. Letters patent were issued, incorporating
the company, in August 1717. The capital was divided into two hundred thousand shares of
five hundred livres each, the whole of which might be paid in billets d'etat, at
their nominal value, although worth no more than a hundred and sixty livres in the market.
It was now that the frenzy of speculating began to seize upon the nation. Law's bank
had effected so much good, that any promises for the future which he thought proper to
make were readily believed. The regent every day conferred new privileges upon the
fortunate projector. The bank obtained the monopoly of the sale of tobacco, the sole right
of refinage of gold and silver, and was finally erected into the Royal Bank of France.
Amid the intoxication of success, both Law and the regent forgot the maxim so loudly
proclaimed by the former, that a banker deserved death who made issues of paper without
the necessary funds to provide for them. As soon as the bank, from a private, became a
public institution, the regent caused a fabrication of notes to the amount of one thousand
millions of livres. This was the first departure from sound principles, and one for which
Law is not justly blameable. While the affairs of the bank were under his control, the
issues had never exceeded sixty millions. Whether Law opposed the inordinate increase is
not known; but as it took place as soon as the bank was made a royal establishment, it is
but fair to lay the blame on the change of system upon the regent.
Law found that he lived under a despotic government; but he was not yet aware of the
pernicious influence which such a government could exercise upon so delicate a framework
as that of credit. He discovered it afterwards to his cost, but in the meantime suffered
himself to be impelled by the regent into courses which his own reason must have
disapproved. With a weakness most culpable, he lent his aid in inundating the country with
paper money, which, based upon no solid foundation, was sure to fall, sooner or later. The
extraordinary present fortune dazzled his eyes, and prevented him from seeing the evil day
that would burst over his head, when once, from any cause or other, the alarm was sounded.
The parliament were from the first jealous of his influence as a foreigner, and had,
besides, their misgivings as to the safety of his projects. As his influence extended,
their animosity increased. D'Aguesseau, the chancellor, was unceremoniously dismissed by
the regent for his opposition to the vast increase of paper money, and the constant
depreciation of the gold and silver coin of the realm. This only served to augment the
enmity of the parliament, and when D'Argenson, a man devoted to the interests of the
regent, was appointed to the vacant chancellorship, and made at the same time minister of
finance, they became more violent than ever. The first measure of the new minister caused
a further depreciation of the coin. In order to extinguish the billets d'etat, it
was ordered that persons bringing to the mint four thousand livres in specie and one
thousand livres in billets d'etat, should receive back coin to the amount of five
thousand livres. D'Argenson plumed himself mightily upon thus creating five thousand new
and smaller livres out of the four thousand old and larger ones, being too ignorant of the
true principles of trade and credit to be aware of the immense injury he was inflicting
upon both.
The parliament saw at once the impolicy and danger of such a system, and made repeated
remonstrances to the regent. The latter refused to entertain their petitions, when the
parliament, by a bold and very unusual stretch of authority, commanded that no money
should be received in payment but that of the old standard. The regent summoned a lit
de justice, and annulled the decree. The parliament resisted, and issued another.
Again the regent exercised his privilege, and annulled it, till the parliament, stung to
fiercer opposition, passed another decree, dated August 12th, 1718, by which they forbade
the bank of Law to have any concern, either direct or indirect, in the administration of
the revenue; and prohibited all foreigners, under heavy penalties, from interfering,
either in their own names or in that of others, in the management of the finances of the
state. The parliament considered Law to be the author of all the evil, and some of the
councillors, in the virulence of their enmity, proposed that he should be brought to
trial, and, if found guilty, be hung at the gates of the Palais de Justice.
Law, in great alarm, fled to the Palais Royal, and threw himself on the protection of
the regent, praying that measures might be taken to reduce the parliament to obedience.
The regent had nothing so much at heart, both on that account and because of the disputes
that had arisen relative to the legitimation of the Duke of Maine and the Count of
Thoulouse, the sons of the late king. The parliament was ultimately overawed by the arrest
of their president and two of the councillors, who were sent to distant prisons.
Thus the first cloud upon Law's prospects blew over: freed from apprehension of
personal danger, he devoted his attention to his famous Mississippi project, the shares of
which were rapidly rising, in spite of the parliament. At the commencement of the year
1719, an edict was published, granting to the Mississippi Company the exclusive privilege
of trading to the East Indies, China, and the South Seas, and to all the possessions of
the French East India Company, established by Colbert. The Company, in consequence of this
great increase of their business, assumed, as more appropriate, the title of Company of
the Indies, and created fifty thousand new shares. The prospects now held out by Law were
most magnificent. He promised a yearly dividend of two hundred livres upon each share of
five hundred, which, as the shares were paid for in billets d'etat, at their
nominal value, but worth only 100 livres, was at the rate of about 120 per cent profit.
The public enthusiasm, which had been so long rising, could not resist a vision so
splendid. At least three hundred thousand applications were made for the fifty thousand
new shares, and Law's house in the Rue de Quincampoix was beset from morning to night by
the eager applicants. As it was impossible to satisfy them all, it was several weeks
before a list of the fortunate new stockholders could be made out, during which time the
public impatience rose to a pitch of frenzy. Dukes, marquises, counts, with their
duchesses, marchionesses, and countesses, waited in the streets for hours every day before
Mr. Law's door to know the result. At last, to avoid the jostling of the plebeian crowd,
which, to the number of thousands, filled the whole thoroughfare, they took apartments in
the adjoining houses, that they might be continually near the temple whence the new Plutus
was diffusing wealth. Every day the value of the old shares increased, and the fresh
applications, induced by the golden dreams of the whole nation, became so numerous that it
was deemed advisable to create no less than three hundred thousand new shares, at five
thousand livres each, in order that the regent might take advantage of the popular
enthusiasm to pay off the national debt. For this purpose, the sum of fifteen hundred
millions of livres was necessary. Such was the eagerness of the nation, that thrice the
sum would have been subscribed if the government had authorised it.
Law was now at the zenith of his prosperity, and the people were rapidly approaching
the zenith of their infatuation. The highest and the lowest classes were alike filled with
a vision of boundless wealth. There was not a person of note among the aristocracy, with
the exception of the Duke of St. Simon and Marshal Villars, who was not engaged in buying
or selling stock. People of every age and sex and condition in life speculated in the rise
and fall of the Mississippi bonds. The Rue de Quincampoix was the grand resort of the
jobbers, and it being a narrow, inconvenient street, accidents continually occurred in it,
from the tremendous pressure of the crowd. Houses in it, worth, in ordinary times, a
thousand livres of yearly rent, yielded as much as twelve or sixteen thousand. A cobbler,
who had a stall in it, gained about two hundred livres a day by letting it out, and
furnishing writing materials to brokers and their clients. The story goes, that a
hunchbacked man who stood in the street gained considerable sums by lending his hump as a
writing-desk to the eager speculators! The great concourse of persons who assembled to do
business brought a still greater concourse of spectators. These again drew all the thieves
and immoral characters of Paris to the spot, and constant riots and disturbances took
place. At nightfall, it was often found necessary to send a troop of soldiers to clear the
street.
Law, finding the inconvenience of his residence, removed to the Place Vendome,
whither the crowd of agioteur's followed him. That spacious square soon became as
thronged as the Rue de Quincampoix: from morning to night it presented the appearance of a
fair. Booths and tents were erected for the transaction of business and the sale of
refreshments, and gamblers with their roulette-tables stationed themselves in the very
middle of the place, and reaped a golden, or rather a paper, harvest from the throng. The
boulevards and public gardens were forsaken; parties of pleasure took their walks in
preference in the Place Vendome, which became the fashionable lounge of the idle as well
as the general rendezvous of the busy. The noise was so great all day, that the
chancellor, whose court was situated in the square, complained to the regent and the
municipality that he could not hear the advocates. Law, when applied to, expressed his
willingness to aid in the removal of the nuisance, and for this purpose entered into a
treaty with the Prince de Carignan for the Hotel de
Soissons, which had a garden of several acres in the rear. A bargain was concluded, by
which Law became the purchaser of the hotel at an enormous price, the prince reserving to
himself the magnificent gardens as a new source of profit. They contained some fine
statues and several fountains, and were altogether laid out with much taste. As soon as
Law was installed in his new abode, an edict was published, forbidding all persons to buy
or sell stock any where but in the gardens of the Hotel de Soissons. In the midst, among
the trees, about five hundred small tents and pavilions were erected, for the convenience
of the stock-jobbers. Their various colours, the gay ribands and banners which floated
from them, the busy crowds which passed continually in and out -- the incessant hum of
voices, the noise, the music, and the strange mixture of business and pleasure on the
countenances of the throng, all combined to give the place an air of enchantment that
quite enraptured the Parisians. The Prince de Carignan made enormous profits while
the delusion lasted. Each tent was let at the rate of five hundred livres a month; and, as
there were at least five hundred of them, his monthly revenue from this source alone must
have amounted to 250,000 livres, or upwards of 10,000£ sterling.
The honest old soldier, Marshal Villars, was so vexed to see the folly which had
smitten his countrymen, that he never could speak with temper on the subject. Passing one
day through the Place Vendome in his carriage, the choleric gentleman was so annoyed at
the infatuation of the people, that he abruptly ordered his coachman to stop, and, putting
his head out of the carriage-window, harangued them for full half an hour on their
"disgusting avarice." This was not a very wise proceeding on his part. Hisses
and shouts of laughter resounded from every side, and jokes without number were aimed at
him. There being at last strong symptoms that something more tangible was flying through
the air in the direction of his head, the marshal was glad to drive on. He never again
repeated the experiment.
Two sober, quiet, and philosophic men of letters, M. de la Motte and the Abbe Terrason,
congratulated each other, that they, at least, were free from this strange infatuation. A
few days afterward, as the worthy abbe was coming out of the Hotel de Soissons, whither he
had gone to buy shares in the Mississippi, whom should he see but his friend La Motte
entering for the same purpose. "Ha!" said the abbe smiling, "is that
you?" "Yes," said La Motte, pushing past him as fast as he was able;
"and can that be you?" The next time the two scholars met, they talked of
philosophy, of science, and of religion, but neither had courage for a long time to
breathe one syllable about the Mississippi. At last, when it was mentioned, they agreed
that a man ought never to swear against his doing any one thing, and that there was no
sort of extravagance of which even a wise man was not capable.
During this time, Law, the new Plums, had become all at once the most important
personage of the state. The antechambers of the regent were forsaken by the courtiers.
Peers, judges, and bishops thronged to the Hotel de Soissons; officers of the army and
navy, ladies of title and fashion, and every one to whom hereditary rank or public employ
gave a claim to precedence, were to be found waiting in his ante-chambers to beg for a
portion of his India stock. Law was so pestered that he was unable to see one-tenth part
of the applicants, and every manoeuvre that ingenuity could suggest was employed to gain
access to him. Peers, whose dignity would have been outraged if the regent had made them
wait half an hour for an interview, were content to wait six hours for the chance of
seeing Monsieur Law. Enormous fees were paid to his servants, if they would merely
announce their names. Ladies of rank employed the blandishments of their smiles for the
same object; but many of them came day after day for a fortnight before they could obtain
an audience. When Law accepted an invitation, he was sometimes so surrounded by ladies,
all asking to have their names put down in his lists as shareholders in the new stock,
that, in spite of his well-known and habitual gallantry, he was obliged to tear himself
away par force. The most ludicrous stratagems were employed to have an opportunity
of speaking to him. One lady, who had striven in vain during several days, gave up in
despair all attempts to see him at his own house, but ordered her coachman to keep a
strict watch whenever she was out in her carriage, and if he saw Mr. Law coming, to drive
against a post and upset her. The coachman promised obedience, and for three days the lady
was driven incessantly through the town, praying inwardly for the opportunity to be
overturned. At last she espied Mr. Law, and, pulling the string, called out to the
coachman, "Upset us now! for God's sake, upset us now!" The coachman drove
against a post, the lady screamed, the coach was overturned, and Law, who had seen the
accident, hastened to the spot to render assistance. The cunning dame was led into
the Hotel de Soissons, where she soon thought it advisable to recover from her fright,
and, after apologizing to Mr. Law, confessed her stratagem. Law smiled, and entered the
lady in his books as the purchaser of a quantity of India stock. Another story is told of
a Madame de Boucha, who, knowing that Mr. Law was at dinner at a certain house, proceeded
thither in her carriage, and gave the alarm of fire. The company started from table, and
Law among the rest; but seeing one lady making all haste into the house towards him, while
everybody else was scampering away, he suspected the trick, and ran off in another
direction.
Many other anecdotes are related, which even though they may be a little exaggerated,
are nevertheless worth preserving, as shewing the spirit of that singular period. The
regent was one day mentioning, in the presence of D'Argenson, the Abbe Dubois, and some
other persons, that he was desirous of deputing some lady, of the rank at least of a
duchess, to attend upon his daughter at Modena: "but," added he, "I do not
exactly know where to find one." "No!" replied one, in affected surprise;
"I can tell you where to find every duchess in France: you have only to go to Mr.
Law's; you will see them every one in his ante-chamber."
M. de Chirac, a celebrated physician, had bought stock at an unlucky period, and was
very anxious to sell out. Stock, however, continued to fall for two or three days, much to
his alarm. His mind was filled with the subject, when he was suddenly called upon to
attend a lady who imagined herself unwell. He arrived, was shewn up stairs, and felt the
lady's pulse. "It falls! it falls! good God! it falls continually!" said
he musingly, while the lady looked up in his face all anxiety for his opinion. "Oh,
M. de Chirac," said she, starting to her feet and ringing the bell for
assistance; "I am dying! I am dying! it falls! it falls! it falls!"
"What falls?" inquired the doctor in amazement. "My pulse! my
pulse!" said the lady; "I must be dying." "Calm your
apprehensions, my dear madam," said M. de Chirac; "I was speaking of the stocks.
The truth is, I have been a great loser, and my mind is so disturbed, I hardly know what I
have been saying."
The price of shares sometimes rose ten or twenty per cent in the course of a few hours,
and many persons in the humbler walks of life, who had risen poor in the morning, went to
bed in affluence. An extensive holder of stock, being taken ill, sent his servant to sell
two hundred and fifty shares, at eight thousand livres each, the price at which they were
then quoted. The servant went, and, on his arrival in the Jardin de Soissons, found that
in the interval the price had risen to ten thousand livres. The difference of two thousand
livres on the two hundred and fifty shares, amounting to 500,000 livres, or 20,000£ sterling,
he very coolly transferred to his own use, and giving the remainder to his master, set out
the same evening for another country. Law's coachman in a very short time made money
enough to set up a carriage of his own, and requested permission to leave his service.
Law, who esteemed the man, begged of him as a favour that he would endeavour, before he
went, to find a substitute as good as himself. The coachman consented, and in the evening
brought two of his former comrades, telling Mr. Law to choose between them, and he would
take the other. Cookmaids and footmen were now and then as lucky, and, in the full-blown
pride of their easily-acquired wealth, made the most ridiculous mistakes. Preserving the
language and manners of their old with the finery of their new station, they afforded
continual subjects for the pity of the sensible, the contempt of the sober, and the
laughter of everybody. But the folly and meanness of the higher ranks of society were
still more disgusting. One instance alone, related by the Duke de St. Simon, will shew the
unworthy avarice which infected the whole of society. A man of the name of Andre, without
character or education, had, by a series of well-timed speculations in Mississippi bonds,
gained enormous wealth in an incredibly short space of time. As St. Simon expresses it,
"he had amassed mountains of gold." As he became rich, he grew ashamed of the
lowness of his birth, and anxious above all things to be allied to nobility. He had a
daughter, an infant only three years of age, and he opened a negotiation with the
aristocratic and needy family of D'Oyse, that this child should, upon certain conditions,
marry a member of that house. The Marquis D'Oyse, to his shame, consented, and promised to
marry her himself on her attaining the age of twelve, if the father would pay him down the
sum of a hundred thousand crowns, and twenty thousand livres every year until the
celebration of the marriage. The Marquis was himself in his thirty-third year. This
scandalous bargain was duly signed and sealed, the stockjobber furthermore agreeing to
settle upon his daughter, on the marriage-day, a fortune of several millions. The Duke of
Brancas, the head of the family, was present throughout the negotiation, and shared in all
the profits. St. Simon, who treats the matter with the levity becoming what he thought so
good a joke, adds, "that people did not spare their animadversions on this beautiful
marriage," and further informs us "that the project fell to the ground some
months afterwards by the overthrow of Law, and the ruin of the ambitious Monsieur
Andre." It would appear, however, that the noble family never had the honesty to
return the hundred thousand crowns.
Amid events like these, which, humiliating though they be, partake largely of the
ludicrous, others occurred of a more serious nature. Robberies in the streets were of
daily occurrence, in consequence of the immense sums, in paper, which people carried about
with them. Assassinations were also frequent. One case in particular fixed the attention
of the whole of France, not only on account of the enormity of the offence, but of the
rank and high connexions of the criminal.
The Count d'Horn, a younger brother of the Prince d'Horn, and related to the noble
families of D'Aremberg, DeLigne, and DeMontmorency, was a young man of dissipated
character, extravagant to a degree, and unprincipled as he was extravagant. In connexion
with two other young men as reckless as himself, named Mille, a Piedmontese captain, and
one Destampes, or Lestang, a Fleming, he formed a design to rob a very rich broker, who
was known, unfortunately for himself, to carry great sums about his person. The count
pretended a desire to purchase of him a number of shares in the Company of the Indies, and
for that purpose appointed to meet him in a cabaret, or low public-house, in the
neighbourhood of the Place Vendome. The unsuspecting broker was punctual to his
appointment; so were the Count d'Horn and his two associates, whom he introduced as his
particular friends. After a few moments' conversation, the Count d'Horn suddenly sprang
upon his victim, and stabbed him three times in the breast with a poniard. The man fell
heavily to the ground, and, while the count was employed in riffing his portfolio of bonds
in the Mississippi and Indian schemes to the amount of one hundred thousand crowns, Mille,
the Piedmontese, stabbed the unfortunate broker again and again, to make sure of his
death. But the broker did not fall without a struggle, and his cries brought the people of
the cabaret to his assistance. Lestang, the other assassin, who had been set to
keep watch at a staircase, sprang from a window and escaped; but Mille and the Count
d'Horn were seized in the very act.
This crime, committed in open day, and in so public a place as a cabaret, filled
Paris with consternation. The trial of the assassins commenced on the following day; and
the evidence being so dear, they were both found guilty, and condemned to be broken alive
on the wheel. The noble relatives of the Count d'Horn absolutely blocked up the
ante-chambers of the regent, praying for mercy on the misguided youth, and alleging that
he was insane. The regent avoided them as long as possible, being determined that, in a
case so atrocious, justice should take its course. But the importunity of these
influential suitors was not to be overcome so silently; and they at last forced themselves
into the presence of the regent, and prayed him to save their house the shame of a public
execution. They hinted that the Princes d'Horn were allied to the illustrious family of
Orleans; and added, that the regent himself would be disgraced if a kinsman of his should
die by the hands of a common executioner. The regent, to his credit, was proof against all
their solicitations, and replied to their last argument in the words of Corneille:
"Le crime fait la honte, et non pas l'echafaud:"
adding, that whatever shame there might be in the punishment he would very willingly
share with the other relatives. Day after day they renewed their entreaties, but always
with the same result. At last they thought, that if they could interest the Duke de St.
Simon in their favour -- a man for whom the regent felt sincere esteem -- they might
succeed in their object. The duke, a thorough aristocrat, was as shocked as they were that
a noble assassin should die by the same death as a plebeian felon, and represented to the
regent the impolicy of making enemies of so numerous, wealthy, and powerful a family. He
urged, too, that in Germany, where the family of D'Aremberg had large possessions, it was
the law, that no relative of a person broken on the wheel could succeed to any public
office or employ until a whole generation had passed away. For this reason, he thought the
punishment of the guilty might be transmuted into beheading, which was considered all over
Europe as much less infamous. The regent was moved by this argument, and was about to
consent, when Law, who felt peculiarly interested in the fate of the murdered man,
confirmed him in his former resolution to let the law take its course.
The relatives of D'Horn were now reduced to the last extremity. The Prince de Robec
Montmorency, despairing of other methods, found means to penetrate into the dungeon of the
criminal, and offering him a cup of poison, implored him to save them from disgrace. The
Count d'Horn turned away his head, and refused to take it. Montmorency pressed him once
more; and losing all patience at his continued refusal, turned on his heel, and
exclaiming, "Die, then as thou wilt, mean-spirited wretch! thou art fit only to
perish by the hands of the hangman!" left him to his fate.
D'Horn himself petitioned the regent that he might be beheaded; but Law, who exercised
more influence over his mind than any other person, with the exception of the notorious
Abbe Dubois, his tutor, insisted that he could not in justice succumb to the
self-interested views of the D'Horns. The regent had from the first been of the same
opinion: and within six days after the commission of their crime, D'Horn and Mille were
broken on the wheel in the Place de Greve. The other assassin, Lestang, was never
apprehended.
This prompt and severe justice was highly pleasing to the populace of Paris. Even M. de
Quincampoix, as they called Law, came in for a share of their approbation for
having induced the regent to show no favour to a patrician. But the number of robberies
and assassinations did not diminish; no sympathy was shewn for rich jobbers when they were
plundered. The general laxity of public morals, conspicuous enough before, was rendered
still more so by its rapid pervasion of the middle classes, who had hitherto remained
comparatively pure between the open vices of the class above and the hidden crimes of the
class below them. The pernicious love of gambling diffused itself through society, and
bore all public and nearly all private virtue before it.
For a time, while confidence lasted, an impetus was given to trade which could not fail
to be beneficial. In Paris especially the good results were felt. Strangers flocked into
the capital from every part, bent not only upon making money, but on spending it. The
Duchess of Orleans, mother of the regent, computes the increase of the population during
this time, from the great influx of strangers from all parts of the world, at 308,000
souls. The housekeepers were obliged to make up beds in garrets, kitchens, and even
stables, for the accommodation of lodgers; and the town was so full of carriages and
vehicles of every description, that they were obliged, in the principal streets, to drive
at a foot-pace for fear of accidents. The looms of the country worked with unusual
activity to supply rich laces, silks, broadcloth, and velvets, which being paid for in
abundant paper, increased in price fourfold. Provisions shared the general advance. Bread,
meat, and vegetables were sold at prices greater than had ever before been known; while
the wages of labour rose in exactly the same proportion. The artisan who formerly gained
fifteen sous per diem now gained sixty. New houses were built in every direction; an
illusory prosperity shone over the land, and so dazzled the eyes of the whole nation, that
none could see the dark cloud on the horizon announcing the storm that was too rapidly
approaching.
Law himself, the magician whose wand had wrought so surprising a change, shared, of
course, in the general prosperity. His wife and daughter were courted by the
highest nobility, and their alliance sought by the heirs of ducal and princely houses. He
bought two splendid estates in different parts of France, and entered into a negotiation
with the family of the Duke de Sully for the purchase of the marquisate of Rosny. His religion
being an obstacle to his advancement, the regent promised, if he would publicly conform to
the Catholic faith, to make him comptroller-general of the finances. Law, who had no more
real religion than any other professed gambler, readily agreed, and was confirmed by the
Abbe de Tencin in the cathedral of Melun, in presence of a great crowd of spectators.On
the following day he was elected honorary churchwarden of the parish of St. Roch, upon
which occasion he made it a present of the sum of five hundred thousand livres. His
charities, always magnificent, were not always so ostentatious. He gave away great sums
privately, and no tale of real distress ever reached his ears in vain.
At this time he was by far the most influential person of the state. The Duke of
Orleans had so much confidence in his sagacity and the success of his plans, that he
always consulted him upon every matter of moment. He was by no means unduly elevated by
his prosperity, but remained the same simple, affable, sensible man that he had shewn
himself in adversity. His gallantry, which was always delightful to the fair objects of
it, was of a nature so kind, so gentlemanly, and so respectful, that not even a lover
could have taken offence at it. If upon any occasion he showed any symptoms of
haughtiness, it was to the cringing nobles who lavished their adulation upon him till it
became fulsome. He often took pleasure in seeing how long he could make them dance
attendance upon him for a single favour. To such of his own countrymen as by chance
visited Paris, and sought an interview with him, he was, on the contrary, all politeness
and attention. When Archibald Campbell, Earl of Islay, and afterwards Duke of Argyle,
called upon him in the Place Vend6me, he had to pass through an ante-chamber crowded with
persons of the first distinction, all anxious to see the great financier, and have their
names put down as first on the list of some new subscription. Law himself was quietly
sitting in his library, writing a letter to the gardener at his paternal estate of
Lauriston, about the planting of some cabbages! The earl stayed a considerable time,
played a game of piquet with his countryman, and left him charmed with his ease, good
sense, and good breeding.
Among the nobles who, by means of the public credulity at this time, gained sums
sufficient to repair their ruined fortunes, may be mentioned the names of the Dukes de
Bourbon, de Guiche, de la Force,* de Chaulnes, and d'Antin; the Marechal d'Estrees; the
Princes de Rohan, de Poix, and de Leon. The Duke de Bourbon, son of Louis XIV. by Madame
de Montespan, was peculiarly fortunate in his speculations in Mississippi paper. He
rebuilt the royal residence of Chantilly in a style of unwonted magnificence; and being
passionately fond of horses, he erected a range of stables, which were long renowned
throughout Europe, and imported a hundred and fifty of the finest racers from England to
improve the breed in France. He bought a large extent of country in Picardy, and became
possessed of nearly all the valuable lands lying between the Oise and the Somme.
When fortunes such as these were gained, it is no wonder that Law should have been
almost worshipped by the mercurial population. Never was monarch more flattered than he
was. All the small poets and litterateurs of the day poured floods of adulation
upon him. According to them, he was the saviour of the country, the tutelary divinity of
France; wit was in all his words, goodness in all his looks, and wisdom in all his
actions. So great a crowd followed his carriage whenever he went abroad, that the regent
sent him a troop of horse as his permanent escort to clear the streets before him.
It was remarked at this time that Paris had never before been so full of objects of
elegance and luxury. Statues, pictures, and tapestries were imported in great quantities
from foreign countries, and found a ready market. All those pretty trifles in the way of
furniture and ornament which the French excel in manufacturing were no longer the
exclusive playthings of the aristocracy, but were to be found in abundance in the houses
of traders and the middle classes in general. Jewellery of the most costly description was
brought to Paris as the most favourable mart; among the rest, the famous diamond bought by
the regent, and called by his name, and which long adorned the crown of France. It was
purchased for the sum of two millions of livres, under circumstances which shew that the
regent was not so great a gainer as some of his subjects by the impetus which trade had
received. When the diamond was first offered to him, he refused to buy it, although he
desired above all things to possess it, alleging as his reason, that his duty to the
country he governed would not allow him to spend so large a sum of the public money for a
mere jewel. This valid and honourable excuse threw all the ladies of the court into alarm,
and nothing was heard for some days but expressions of regret that so rare a gem should be
allowed to go out of France, no private individual being rich enough to buy it. The regent
was continually importuned about it, but all in vain, until the Duke de St. Simon, who
with all his ability, was something of a twaddler, undertook the weighty business. His
entreaties being seconded by Law, the good-natured regent gave his consent, leaving to
Law's ingenuity to find the means to pay for it. The owner took security for the payment
of the sum of two millions of livres within a stated period, receiving in the mean time
the interest of five per cent upon that amount, and being allowed, besides, all the
valuable clippings of the gem. St. Simon, in his Memoirs, relates with no little
complacency his share in this transaction. After describing the diamond to be as large as
a greengage, of a form nearly round, perfectly white, and without flaw, and weighing more
than five hundred grains, he concludes with a chuckle, by telling the world "that he
takes great credit to himself for having induced the regent to make so illustrious a
purchase." In other words, he was proud that he had induced him to sacrifice his
duty, and buy a bauble for himself at an extravagant price out of the public money.
Thus the system continued to flourish till the commencement of the year 1720. The
warnings of the Parliament, that too great a creation of paper money would, sooner or
later, bring the country to bankruptcy, were disregarded. The regent, who knew nothing
whatever of the philosophy of finance, thought that a system which had produced such good
effects could never be carried to excess. If five hundred millions of paper had been of
such advantage, five hundred millions additional would be of still greater advantage. This
was the grand error of the regent, and which Law did not attempt to dispel. The
extraordinary avidity of the people kept up the delusion; and the higher the price of
Indian and Mississippi stock, the more billets de banque were issued to keep pace
with it. The edifice thus reared might not unaptly be compared to the gorgeous palace
erected by Potemkin, that princely barbarian et Russia, to surprise and please his
imperial mistress: huge blocks of ice were piled one upon another; Ionic pillars of
chastest workmanship, in ice, formed a noble portico; and a dome of the same material,
shone in the sun, which had just strength enough to gild, but not to melt it. It glittered
afar, like a palace of crystals and diamonds; but there came one warm breeze from the
south, and the stately building dissolved away, till none were able even to gather up the
fragments. So with Law and his paper system. No sooner did the breath of popular mistrust
blow steadily upon it, than it fell to ruins, and none could raise it up again.
The first slight alarm that was occasioned was early in 1720. The Prince de Conti,
offended that Law should have denied him fresh shares in India stock, at his own price,
sent to his bank to demand payment in specie of so enormous a quantity of notes, that
three wagons were required for its transport. Law complained to the regent, and urged on
his attention the mischief that would be done, if such an example found many imitators.
The regent was but too well aware of it, and, sending for the Prince de Conti, ordered
him, under penalty of his high displeasure, to refund to the bank two-thirds of the specie
which he had withdrawn from it. The prince was forced to obey the despotic mandate.
Happily for Law's credit, De Conti was an unpopular man: everybody condemned his meanness
and cupidity, and agreed that Law had been hardly treated. It is strange, however, that so
narrow an escape should not have made both Law and the regent more anxious to restrict
their issues. Others were soon found who imitated from motives of distrust, the example
which had been set by De Conti in revenge. The more acute stockjobbers imagined justly
that prices could not continue to rise forever. Bourdon and La Richardiere, renowned for
their extensive operations in the funds, quietly and in small quantities at a time,
converted their notes into specie, and sent it away to foreign countries. They also bought
as much as they could conveniently carry of plate and expensive jewellery, and sent it
secretly away to England or to Holland. Vermalet, a jobber, who sniffed the coming storm,
procured gold and silver coin to the amount of nearly a million of livres, which he packed
in a farmer's cart, and covered over with hay and cow-dung. He then disguised himself in
the dirty smock-frock, or blouse, of a peasant, and drove his precious load in
safety into Belgium. From thence he soon found means to transport it to Amsterdam.
Hitherto no difficulty had been experienced by any class in procuring specie for their
wants. But this system could not long be carried on without causing a scarcity. The voice
of complaint was heard on every side, and inquiries being instituted, the cause was soon
discovered. The council debated long on the remedies to be taken, and Law, being called on
for his advice, was of opinion, that an edict should be published, depreciating the value
of coin five per cent below that of paper. The edict was published accordingly; but
failing of its intended effect, was followed by another, in which the depreciation was
increased to ten per cent. The payments of the bank were at the same time restricted to
one hundred livres in gold, and ten in silver. All these measures were nugatory to restore
confidence in the paper, though the restriction of cash payments within limits so
extremely narrow kept up the credit of the bank.
Notwithstanding every effort to the contrary, the precious metals continued to be
conveyed to England and Holland. The little coin that was left in the country was
carefully treasured, or hidden until the scarcity became so great, that the operations of
trade could no longer be carried on. In this emergency, Law hazarded the bold experiment
of forbidding the use of specie altogether. In February 1720 an edict was published,
which, instead of restoring the credit of the paper, as was intended, destroyed it
irrecoverably, and drove the country to the very brink of revolution. By this famous edict
it was forbidden to any person whatever to have more than five hundred livres (20£.)
of coin in his possession, under pain of a heavy fine, and confiscation of the sums found.
It was also forbidden to buy up jewellery, plate, and precious stones, and informers were
encouraged to make search for offenders, by the promise of one-half the amount they might
discover. The whole country sent up a cry of distress at this unheard-of tyranny. The most
odious persecution daily took place. The privacy of families was violated by the intrusion
of informers and their agents. The most virtuous and honest were denounced for the crime
of having been seen with a louis d'or in their possession. Servants betrayed their
masters, one citizen became a spy upon his neighbour, and arrests and confiscations so
multiplied, that the courts found a difficulty in getting through the immense increase of
business thus occasioned. It was sufficient for an informer to say that he suspected any
person of concealing money in his house, and immediately a search-warrant was granted.
Lord Stair, the English ambassador, said, that it was now impossible to doubt of the
sincerity of Law's conversion to the Catholic religion; he had established the inquisition,
after having given abundant evidence of his faith in transubstantiation, by
turning so much gold into paper.
Every epithet that popular hatred could suggest was showered upon the regent and the
unhappy Law. Coin, to any amount above five hundred livres, was an illegal tender, and
nobody would take paper if he could help it. No one knew today what his notes would be
worth tomorrow. "Never," says Duclos, in his Secret Memoirs of the Regency,
"was seen a more capricious government -- never was a more frantic tyranny exercised
by hands less firm. It is inconceivable to those who were witnesses of the horrors of
those times, and who look back upon them now as on a dream, that a sudden revolution did
not break out -- that Law and the regent did not perish by a tragical death. They were
both held in horror, but the people confined themselves to complaints; a sombre and timid
despair, a stupid consternation, had seized upon all, and men's minds were too vile even
to be capable of a courageous crime." It would appear that, at one time, a movement
of the people was organised. Seditious writings were posted up against the walls, and were
sent, in hand-bills, to the houses of the most conspicuous people. One of them, given in
the Memoires de la Regence, was to the following effect : -- "Sir and madam,
-- This is to give you notice that a St. Bartholomew's Day will be enacted again on
Saturday and Sunday, if affairs do not alter. You are desired not to stir out, nor you,
nor your servants. God preserve you from the flames! Give notice to your neighbours.
Dated, Saturday, May 25th, 1720." The immense number of spies with which the city was
infested rendered the people mistrustful of one another, and beyond some trifling
disturbances made in the evening by an insignificant group, which was soon dispersed, the
peace, of the capital was not compromised.
The value of shares in the Louisiana, or Mississippi stock, had fallen very rapidly,
and few indeed were found to believe the tales that had once been told of the immense
wealth of that region. A last effort was therefore tried to restore the public confidence
in the Mississippi project. For this purpose, a general conscription of all the poor
wretches in Paris was made by order of government. Upwards of six thousand of the very
refuse of the population were impressed, as if in time of war, and were provided with
clothes and tools to be embarked for New Orleans, to work in the gold mines alleged to
abound there. They were paraded day after day through the streets with their pikes and
shovels, and then sent off in small detachments to the out-ports to be shipped for
America. Two-thirds of them never reached their destination, but dispersed themselves over
the country, sold their tools for what they could get, and returned to their old course of
life. In less than three weeks afterwards, one-half of them were to be found again in
Paris. The manoeuvre, however, caused a trifling advance in Mississippi stock. Many
persons of superabundant gullibility believed that operations had begun in earnest in the
new Golconda, and that gold and silver ingots would again be found in France.
In a constitutional monarchy some surer means would have been found for the restoration
of public credit. In England, at a subsequent period, when a similar delusion had brought
on similar distress, how different were the measures taken to repair the evil! but in
France, unfortunately the remedy was left to the authors of the mischief. The arbitrary
will of the regent, which endeavoured to extricate the country, only plunged it deeper
into the mire. All payments were ordered to be made in paper, and between the 1st of
February and the end of May, notes were fabricated to the amount of upwards of 1500
millions of livres, or 60,000,000£ sterling. But the alarm once sounded, no art
could make the people feel the slightest confidence in paper which was not exchangeable
into metal. M. Lambert, the president of the parliament of Paris, told the regent to his
face that he would rather have a hundred thousand livres in gold or silver than five
millions in the notes of his bank. When such was the general feeling, the superabundant
issues of paper but increased the evil, by rendering still more enormous the disparity
between the amount of specie and notes in circulation. Coin, which it was the
object of the regent to depreciate, rose in value on every fresh attempt to diminish it.
In February, it was judged advisable that the Royal Bank should be incorporated with the
Company of the Indies. An edict to that effect was published and registered by the
parliament. The state remained the guarantee for the notes of the bank, and no more were
to be issued without an order in council. All the profits of the bank, since the time it
had been taken out of Lawns hands and made a national institution, were given over by the
regent to the Company of the Indies. This measure had the effect of raising for a short
time the value of the Louisiana and other shares of the company, but it failed in placing
public credit on any permanent basis.
A council of state was held in the beginning of May, at which Law, D'Argenson (his
colleague in the administration of the finances), and all the ministers were present. It
was then computed that the total amount of notes in circulation was 2600 millions of
livres, while the coin in the country was not quite equal to half that amount. It was
evident to the majority of the council that some plan must be adopted to equalize the
currency. Some proposed that the notes should be reduced to the value of the specie, while
others proposed that the nominal value of the specie should be raised till it was on an
equality with the paper. Law is said to have opposed both these projects, but failing in
suggesting any other, it was agreed that the notes should be depreciated one half. On the
gist of May, an edict was accordingly issued, by which it was decreed that the shares of
the Company of the Indies, and the notes of the bank, should gradually diminish in value,
till at the end of a year they should only pass current for one-half of their nominal
worth. The parliament refused to register the edict -- the greatest outcry was excited,
and the state of the country became so alarming, that, as the only means of preserving
tranquillity, the council of the regency was obliged to stultify its own proceedings, by
publishing within seven days another edict, storing the notes to their original value.
On the same day (the 27th of May) the bank stopped payment in specie. Law and
D'Argenson were both dismissed from the ministry. The weak, vacillating, and cowardly
regent threw the blame of all the mischief upon Law, who, upon presenting himself at the
Palais Royal, was refused admittance. At nightfall, however, he was sent for, and admitted
into the palace by a secret door, when the regent endeavoured to console him, and made all
manner of excuses for the severity with which in public he had been compelled to treat
him. So capricious was his conduct, that, two days afterwards, he took him publicly to the
opera, where he sat in the royal box alongside of the regent, who treated him with
marked consideration in face of all the people. But such was the hatred against Law that
the experiment had well nigh proved fatal to him. The mob assailed his carriage with
stones just as he was entering his own door; and if the coachman had not made a sudden
jerk into the courtyard, and the domestics closed the gate immediately, he would, in all
probability, have been dragged out and torn to pieces. On the following day, his wife and
daughter were also assailed by the mob as they were
returning in their carriage from the races. When the regent was informed of these
occurrences he sent Law a strong detachment of Swiss guards, who were stationed night and
day in the court of his residence. The public indignation at last increased so much, that
Law, finding his own house, even with this guard, insecure, took refuge in the Palais
Royal, in the apartments of the regent.
The Chancellor, D'Aguesseau, who had been dismissed in 1718 for his opposition to the
projects of Law, was now recalled to aid in the restoration of credit. The regent
acknowledged too late, that he had treated with unjustifiable harshness and mistrust one
of the ablest, and perhaps the sole honest public man of that corrupt period. He had
retired ever since his disgrace to his country house at Fresnes, where, in the midst of
severe but delightful philosophic studies, he had forgotten the intrigues of an unworthy
court. Law himself, and the Chevalier de Confians, a gentleman of the regent's household,
were despatched in a post-chaise with orders to bring the ex-chancellor to Paris along
with them. D'Aguesseau consented to render what assistance he could, contrary to the
advice of his friends, who did not approve that he should accept any recall to office of
which Law was the bearer. On his arrival in Paris, five councillors of the parliament were
admitted to confer with the Commissary of Finance; and on the 1st of June an order was
published abolishing the law which made it criminal to amass coin to the amount of more
than five hundred livres. Every one was permitted to have as much specie as he pleased. In
order that the bank-notes might be withdrawn, twenty-five millions of new notes were
created, on the security of the revenues of the city of Paris, at two and a half per cent.
The bank-notes withdrawn were publicly burned in front of the Hotel de Ville. The new
notes were principally of the value of ten livres each; and on the 10th of June the bank
was re-opened, with a sufficiency of silver coin to give in change for them.
These measures were productive of considerable advantage. All the population of Paris
hastened to the bank to get coin for their small notes; and silver becoming scarce, they
were paid in copper. Very few complained that this was too heavy, although poor fellows
might be continually seen toiling and sweating along the streets, laden with more than
they could comfortably carry, in the shape of change for fifty livres. The crowds around
the bank were so great that hardly a day passed that some one was not pressed to death. On
the 9th of July, the multitude was so dense and clamorous that the guards stationed at the
entrance of the Mazarin Gardens closed the gate and refused to admit any more. The crowd
became incensed, and flung stones through the railings upon the soldiers. The latter,
incensed in their turn, threatened to fire upon the people. At that instant one of them
was hit by a stone, and, taking up his piece, he fired into the crowd. One man fell dead
immediately, and another was severely wounded. It was every instant expected that a
general attack would have been commenced upon the bank; but the gates of the Mazarin
Gardens being opened to the crowd, who saw a whole troop of soldiers, with their bayonets
fixed ready to receive them, they contented themselves by giving vent to their indignation
in groans and hisses.
Eight days afterwards the concourse of people was so tremendous that fifteen persons
were squeezed to death at the doors of the bank. The people were so indignant that they
took three of the bodies on stretchers before them, and proceeded, to the number of seven
or eight thousand, to the gardens of the Palais Royal, that they might show the regent the
misfortunes that he and Law had brought upon the country. Law's coachman, who was sitting
on the box of his master's carriage, in the courtyard of the palace, happened to have more
zeal than discretion, and, not liking that the mob should abuse his master, he
said, loud enough to be overheard by several persons, that they were all blackguards, and
deserved to be hanged. The mob {immediately set upon him, and thinking that Law was in the
carriage, broke it to pieces. The imprudent coachman narrowly escaped with his life. No
further mischief was done; a body of troops making their appearance, the crowd quietly
dispersed, after an assurance had been given by the regent that the three bodies they had
brought to shew him should be decently buried at his own expense. The parliament was
sitting at the time of this uproar, and the president took upon himself to go out and see
what was the matter. On his return he informed the
councillors that Law's carriage had been broken by the mob. All the members rose
simultaneously, and expressed their joy by a loud shout, while one man, more zealous in
his hatred than the rest, exclaimed, "And Law himself, is he torn to
pieces?"
Much, undoubtedly, depended on the credit of the Company of the Indies, which was
answerable for so great a sum to the nation. It was therefore suggested in the council of
the ministry, that any privileges which could be granted to enable it to fulfil its
engagements, would be productive of the best results. With this end in view, it was
proposed that the exclusive privilege of all maritime commerce should be secured to it,
and an edict to that effect was published. But it was unfortunately forgotten that by such
a measure all the merchants of the country would be ruined. The idea of such an immense
privilege was generally scouted by the nation, and petition on petition was presented to
the parliament that they would refuse to register the decree. They refused accordingly,
and the regent, remarking that they did nothing but fan the flame of sedition, exiled them
to Blois. At the intercession of D'Aguesseau, the place of banishment was changed to
Pontoise, and thither accordingly the councillors repaired, determined to set the regent
at defiance. They made every arrangement for rendering their temporary exile as agreeable
as possible. The president gave the most elegant suppers, to which he invited all the
gayest and wittiest company of Paris. Every night there was a concert and ball for the
ladies. The usually grave and solemn judges and councillors joined in cards and other
diversions, leading for several weeks a life of the most extravagant pleasure, for no
other purpose than to show the regent of how little consequence they deemed their
banishment, and that, when they willed it, they could make Pontoise a pleasanter residence
than Paris.
Of all the nations in the world the French are the most renowned for singing over their
grievances. Of that country it has been remarked with some truth that its whole history
may be traced in its songs. When Law, by the utter failure of his best-laid plans,
rendered himself obnoxious, satire of course seized hold upon him; and while caricatures
of his person appeared in all the shops, the streets resounded with songs, in which
neither he nor the regent was spared. Many of these songs were far from decent; and one of
them in particular counselled the application of all his notes to the most ignoble use to
which paper can be applied.
Among the caricatures that were abundantly published, and that shewed as plainly as
graver matters that the nation had awakened to a sense of its folly, was one, a facsimile
of which is preserved in the Memoires de la Regence. It was thus described by its
author: "The 'Goddess of Shares,' in her triumphal car, driven by the Goddess of
Folly. Those who are drawing the car are impersonations of the Mississippi, with his
wooden leg, the South Sea, the Bank of England, the Company of the West of Senegal, and of
various assurances. Lest the car should not roll fast enough, the agents of these
companies, known by their long fox-tails and their cunning looks, turn round the spokes of
the wheels, upon which are marked the names of the several stocks and their value,
sometimes high and sometimes low, according to the turns of the wheel. Upon the ground are
the merchandise, day-books and ledgers of legitimate commerce; crushed under the chariot
of Folly. Behind is an immense crowd of persons, of all ages, sexes, and conditions,
clamouring after Fortune, and fighting with each other to get a portion of the shares
which she distributes so bountifully among them. In the clouds sits a demon, blowing
bubbles of soap, which are also the objects of the admiration and cupidity of the crowd,
who jump upon one another's backs to reach them ere they burst. Right in the pathway of
the car, and blocking up the passage, stands a large building, with three doors, through
one of which it must pass, if it proceeds farther, and all the crowd along with it. Over
the first door are the words, 'Hopital des Foux,' over the second, 'Hopital des
Malades,' and over the third, 'Hopital des Gueux.'" Another caricature
represented Law sitting in a large cauldron, boiling over the flames of popular madness,
surrounded by an impetuous multitude, who were pouring all their gold and silver into it,
and receiving gladly in exchange the bits of paper which he distributed among them by
handfuls.
While this excitement lasted, Law took good care not to expose himself unguarded in the
streets. Shut up in the apartments of the regent, he was secure from all attack; and
whenever he ventured abroad, it was either incognito, or in one of the royal
carriages, with a powerful escort. An amusing anecdote is recorded of the detestation in
which he was held by the people, and the ill-treatment he would have met had he fallen
into their hands. A gentleman of the name of Boursel was passing in his carriage down the
Rue St. Antoine, when his farther progress was stayed by a hackney-coach that had blocked
up the road. M. Boursel's servant called impatiently to the hackney-coachman to get out of
the way, and, on his refusal, struck him a blow on the face. A crowd was soon drawn
together by the disturbance, and M. Boursel got out of the carriage to restore
order. The hackney-coachman, imagining that he had now another assailant, bethought him of
an expedient to rid himself of both, and called out as loudly as he was able, 'Help! help!
murder! murder! Here are Law and his servant going to kill me! Help! help!" At this
cry the people came out of their shops, armed with sticks and other weapons, while the mob
gathered stones to inflict summary vengeance upon the supposed financier. Happily for M.
Boursel and his servant, the door of the church of the Jesuits stood wide open, and,
seeing the fearful odds against them, they rushed towards it with all speed. They reached the altar, pursued by the
people, and would have been ill-treated even there if, finding the door open leading to
the sacristy, they had not sprang through, and closed it after them. The mob were then
persuaded to leave the church by the alarmed and indignant priests, and finding M.
Boursel's carriage still in the streets, they vented their ill-will against it, and did it
considerable damage.
The twenty-five millions secured on the municipal revenues of the city of Paris,
bearing so low an interest as two and a half per cent, were not very popular among the
large holders of Mississippi stock. The conversion of the securities was, therefore, a
work of considerable difficulty; for many preferred to retain the falling paper of Law's
company, in the hope that a favourable turn might take place. On the 15th of August, with
a view to hasten the conversion, an edict was passed, declaring that all notes for sums
between one thousand and ten thousand livres should not pass current, except for the
purchase of annuities and bank accounts, or for the payment of instalments still due on
the shares of the company.
In October following another edict was passed, depriving these notes of all value
whatever after the month of November next ensuing. The management of the mint, the farming
of the revenue, and all the other advantages and privileges of the India, or Mississippi
Company, were taken from them, and they were reduced to a mere private company. This was
the death-blow to the whole system, which had now got into the hands of its enemies. Law
had lost all influence in the Coun cil of Finance, and the company, being despoiled
of its immunities, could no longer hold out the shadow of a prospect of being able to
fulfil its engagements. All those suspected of illegal profits at the time the public
delusion was at its height, were sought out and amerced
in heavy fines. It was previously ordered that a list of the original proprietors should
be made out, and that such persons as still retained their shares should place them in
deposit with the company, and that those who had neglected to complete the shares for
which they had put down their names should now purchase them of the company, at the rate
of 13,500 livres for each share of 500 livres. Rather than submit to pay this enormous sum
for stock which was actually at a discount, the shareholders packed up all their portable
effects, and endeavoured to find a refuge in foreign countries. Orders were immediately
issued to the authorities at the ports and frontiers, to apprehend all travellers who
sought to leave the kingdom, and keep them in custody, until it was ascertained whether
they had any plate or jewellery with them, or were concerned in the late stock-jobbing.
Against such few as escaped, the punishment of death was recorded, while the most
arbitrary proceedings were instituted against those who remained.
Law himself, in a moment of despair, determined to leave a country where his life was
no longer secure. He at first only demanded permission to retire from Paris to one of his
country-seats--a permission which the regent cheerfully granted. The latter was much
affected at the unhappy turn affairs had taken, but his faith continued unmoved in the
truth and efficacy of Law's financial system. His eyes were opened to his own errors; and
during the few remaining years of his life he constantly longed for an opportunity of
again establishing the system upon a securer basis. At Law's last interview with the
prince, he is reported to have said, -- "I confess that I have committed many faults.
I committed them because I am a man, and all men are liable to error; but I declare to you
most solemnly that none of them proceeded from wicked or dishonest motives, and that
nothing of the kind will be found in the whole course of my conduct."
Two or three days after his departure the regent sent him a very kind letter,
permitting him to leave the kingdom whenever he pleased, and stating that he had ordered
his passports to be made ready. He at the same time offered him any sum of money he might
require. Law respectfully declined the money, and set out for Brussels in a post-chaise
belonging to Madame de Prie, the mistress of the Duke of Bourbon, escorted by six
horse-guards. From thence he proceeded to Venice, where he remained for some months, the
object of the greatest curiosity to the people, who believed him to be the possessor of
enormous wealth. No opinion, however, could be more erroneous. With more generosity than
could have been expected from a man who during the greatest part of his life had been a
professed gambler, he had refused to enrich himself at
the expense of a ruined nation. During the height of the popular frenzy for Mississippi
stock, he had never doubted of the final success of his projects in making France the
richest and most powerful nation of Europe. He invested all his gains in the purchase of
landed property in France a sure proof of his own belief in the stability of his
schemes. He had hoarded no plate or jewellery, and sent no money, like the dishonest
jobbers, to foreign countries. His all, with the exception of one diamond, worth about
five or six thousand pounds sterling, was invested in the French soil; and when he left
that country, he left it almost a beggar. This fact alone ought to rescue his memory from
the charge of knavery, so often and so unjustly brought against him.
As soon as his departure was known, all his estates and his valuable library were
confiscated. Among the rest, an annuity of 200,000 livres (8000£ sterling) on the
lives of his wife and children, which had been purchased for five millions of livres, was
forfeited, notwithstanding that a special edict, drawn up for the purpose in the days of
his prosperity, had expressly declared that it should never be confiscated for any cause
whatever. Great discontent existed among the people that Law had been suffered to escape.
The mob and the parliament would have been pleased to have seen him hanged. The few who
had not suffered by the commercial revolution rejoiced that the quack had left the
country; but all those (and they were by far the most numerous class) whose fortunes were
implicated regretted that his intimate knowledge of the distress of the country, and of
the causes that had led to it, had not been rendered more available in discovering a
remedy.
At a meeting of the Council of Finance and the General Council of the Regency,
documents were laid upon the table, from which it appeared that the amount of notes in
circulation was 2700 millions. The regent was called upon to explain how it happened that
there was a discrepancy between the dates at which these issues were made and those of the
edicts by which they were authorised. He might have safely taken the whole blame upon
himself, but he preferred that an absent man should bear a share of it; and he therefore
stated that Law, upon his own authority, had issued 1200 millions of notes at different
times, and that he (the regent), seeing that the thing had been irrevocably done, had
screened Law by antedating the decrees of the council which anthorised the augmentation.
It would have been more to his credit if he had told the whole truth while he was about
it, and acknowledged that it was mainly through his extravagance and impatience that Law
had been induced to overstep the bounds of safe speculation. It was also ascertained that
the national debt, on the 1st of January, 1721, amounted to upwards of 3100 millions of
livres, or more than 124,000,000£ sterling, the interest upon which was 3,196,000£.
A commission, or visa, was forthwith appointed to examine into all the
securities of the state creditors, who were to be divided into five classes; the first
four comprising those who had purchased their securities with real effects, and the latter
comprising those who could give no proofs that the transactions they had entered into were
real and bona fide. The securities of the latter were ordered to be destroyed,
while those of the first four classes were subjected to a most rigid and jealous scrutiny.
The result of the labours of the visa was a report, in which they counselled the
reduction of the interest upon these securities to fifty-six millions of livres. They
justified this advice by a statement of the various acts of peculation and extortion
which they had discovered; and an edict to that effect was accordingly published and duly
registered by the parliaments of the kingdom.
Another tribunal was afterwards established under the title of the Chambre de l'Arsenal, which took cognisance of
all the malversations committed in the financial departments of the government during the
late unhappy period. A Master of Requests, named Falhonet, together with the Abbe Clement,
and two clerks in their employ, had been concerned in divers acts of peculation to the
amount of upwards of a million of livres. The first two were sentenced to be beheaded, and
the latter to be hanged; but their punishment was afterwards commuted into imprisonment
for life in the Bastille. Numerous other acts of dishonesty were discovered, and punished
by fine and imprisonment.
D'Argenson shared with Law and the regent the unpopularity which had alighted upon all
those concerned in the Mississippi madness. He was dismissed from his post of Chancellor
to make room for D'Aguesseau; but he retained the title of Keeper of Seals, and was
allowed to attend the councils whenever he pleased, lie thought it better, however, to
withdraw from Paris, and live for a time a life of seclusion at his country seat. But he
was not formed for retirement; and becoming moody and discontented, he aggravated a
disease under which he had long laboured, and died in less than a twelve-month. The
populace of Paris so detested him, that they carried their hatred even to his grave. As
his funeral procession passed to the church of St. Nicholas du Chardonneret, the
burying-place of his family, it was beset by a riotous mob; and his two sons, who were
following as chief mourners, were obliged to drive as fast as they were able down a
by-street to escape personal violence.
As regards Law, he for some time entertained a hope that he should be recalled to
France to aid in establishing its credit upon a firmer basis. The death of the regent in
1723, who expired suddenly as he was sitting by the fireside conversing with his mistress,
the Duchess de Phalaris, deprived him of that hope, and he was reduced to lead his former
life of gambling. He was more than once obliged to pawn his diamond, the sole remnant of
his vast wealth, but successful play generally enabled him to redeem it. Being persecuted
by his creditors at home, he proceeded to Copenhagen, where he received permission
from the English ministry to reside in his native country, his pardon for the murder of
Mr. Wilson having been sent over to him in 1719. He was brought over in the admiral's ship
-- a circumstance which gave occasion for a short debate in the House of Lords. Earl
Coningsby complained that a man who had renounced both his country and his religion should
have been treated with such honour, and expressed his belief that his presence in England,
at a time when the people were so bewildered by the nefarious practices of the South-Sea
directors, would be attended with no little danger. He gave notice of a motion on the
subject; but it was allowed to drop, no other member of the House having the slightest
participation in his lordship's fears. Law remained for about four years in England, and
then proceeded to Venice, where he died in 1729, in very embarrassed circumstances. The
following epitaph was written at the time:
"Ci git cet Ecossais celebre,
Ce calculateur sans egal,
Qui, par les regles de l'algebre,
A mis la France a l'hopital."
His brother, William Law, who had been concerned with him in the administration both of
the bank and the Louisiana Company, was imprisoned in the Bastille for alleged
malversation, but no guilt was ever proved against him. He was liberated after fifteen
months, and became the founder of a family, which is still known in France under the title
of Marquises of Lauriston.
In the next chapter will be found an account of the madness which infected the people
of England at the same time, and under very similar circumstances, but which, thanks to
the energies and good sense of a constitutional government, was attended with results far
less disastrous than those which were seen in France.
south sea
tulips
|