登陆注册
26292300000071

第71章 Chapter XXIII(1)

Then, after several years of this secret relationship, in which the ties of sympathy and understanding grew stronger instead of weaker, came the storm. It burst unexpectedly and out of a clear sky, and bore no relation to the intention or volition of any individual. It was nothing more than a fire, a distant one--the great Chicago fire, October 7th, 1871, which burned that city--its vast commercial section--to the ground, and instantly and incidentally produced a financial panic, vicious though of short duration in various other cities in America. The fire began on Saturday and continued apparently unabated until the following Wednesday. It destroyed the banks, the commercial houses, the shipping conveniences, and vast stretches of property. The heaviest loss fell naturally upon the insurance companies, which instantly, in many cases--the majority--closed their doors. This threw the loss back on the manufacturers and wholesalers in other cities who had had dealings with Chicago as well as the merchants of that city. Again, very grievous losses were borne by the host of eastern capitalists which had for years past partly owned, or held heavy mortgages on, the magnificent buildings for business purposes and residences in which Chicago was already rivaling every city on the continent. Transportation was disturbed, and the keen scent of Wall Street, and Third Street in Philadelphia, and State Street in Boston, instantly perceived in the early reports the gravity of the situation. Nothing could be done on Saturday or Sunday after the exchange closed, for the opening reports came too late. On Monday, however, the facts were pouring in thick and fast; and the owners of railroad securities, government securities, street-car securities, and, indeed, all other forms of stocks and bonds, began to throw them on the market in order to raise cash. The banks naturally were calling their loans, and the result was a stock stampede which equaled the Black Friday of Wall Street of two years before.

Cowperwood and his father were out of town at the time the fire began. They had gone with several friends--bankers--to look at a proposed route of extension of a local steam-railroad, on which a loan was desired. In buggies they had driven over a good portion of the route, and were returning to Philadelphia late Sunday evening when the cries of newsboys hawking an "extra" reached their ears.

"Ho! Extra! Extra! All about the big Chicago fire!"

"Ho! Extra! Extra! Chicago burning down! Extra! Extra!"

The cries were long-drawn-out, ominous, pathetic. In the dusk of the dreary Sunday afternoon, when the city had apparently retired to Sabbath meditation and prayer, with that tinge of the dying year in the foliage and in the air, one caught a sense of something grim and gloomy.

"Hey, boy," called Cowperwood, listening, seeing a shabbily clothed misfit of a boy with a bundle of papers under his arm turning a corner. "What's that? Chicago burning!"

He looked at his father and the other men in a significant way as he reached for the paper, and then, glancing at the headlines, realized the worst.

ALL CHICAGO BURNING FIRE RAGES UNCHECKED IN COMMERCIAL SECTION SINCE YESTERDAY EVENING. BANKS, COMMERCIAL HOUSES, PUBLIC BUILDINGS IN RUINS. DIRECT TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION SUSPENDED SINCE THREE O'CLOCK TO-DAY. NO END TO PROGRESS OF DISASTER IN SIGHT.

"That looks rather serious," he said, calmly, to his companions, a cold, commanding force coming into his eyes and voice. To his father he said a little later, "It's panic, unless the majority of the banks and brokerage firms stand together."

He was thinking quickly, brilliantly, resourcefully of his own outstanding obligations. His father's bank was carrying one hundred thousand dollars' worth of his street-railway securities at sixty, and fifty thousand dollars' worth of city loan at seventy. His father had "up with him" over forty thousand dollars in cash covering market manipulations in these stocks. The banking house of Drexel & Co. was on his books as a creditor for one hundred thousand, and that loan would be called unless they were especially merciful, which was not likely. Jay Cooke & Co. were his creditors for another one hundred and fifty thousand. They would want their money. At four smaller banks and three brokerage companies he was debtor for sums ranging from fifty thousand dollars down. The city treasurer was involved with him to the extent of nearly five hundred thousand dollars, and exposure of that would create a scandal; the State treasurer for two hundred thousand. There were small accounts, hundreds of them, ranging from one hundred dollars up to five and ten thousand. A panic would mean not only a withdrawal of deposits and a calling of loans, but a heavy depression of securities. How could he realize on his securities?

--that was the question--how without selling so many points off that his fortune would be swept away and he would be ruined?

He figured briskly the while he waved adieu to his friends, who hurried away, struck with their own predicament.

"You had better go on out to the house, father, and I'll send some telegrams." (The telephone had not yet been invented.) "I'll be right out and we'll go into this thing together. It looks like black weather to me. Don't say anything to any one until after we have had our talk; then we can decide what to do."

Cowperwood, Sr., was already plucking at his side-whiskers in a confused and troubled way. He was cogitating as to what might happen to him in case his son failed, for he was deeply involved with him. He was a little gray in his complexion now, frightened, for he had already strained many points in his affairs to accommodate his son. If Frank should not be able promptly on the morrow to meet the call which the bank might have to make for one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, the onus and scandal of the situation would be on him.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 宝贝闹学记

    宝贝闹学记

    这是一部充满温情的小说,完全以孩子的视角,孩子的语言,以孩子的理解来看待世界。书中的几个主人公背景都是“留守儿童”,他们或是从小失去母爱,或是被寄养在亲戚家,或是父母正在闹离婚……,但有幸,他们遇到一位非常有爱心的幼儿教师,在方小妍老师的照顾和帮助下。调皮的阿毛变得乖巧,自卑的元宝找回了信心,还有迷糊的小点点最终找回了妈妈,另外,书中还有二个穿插的小主人公,可爱的小肥羊和爱拍马屁的丫丫。整个故事情节既有儿童所特有童真童趣,又不乏教育意义,是宝爸宝妈和小宝宝们理想读物。
  • 霉男偷女

    霉男偷女

    一个是大门不出、二门不迈的泡面女,一个是作息不定、喜着白衣的神秘男,他们之间唯一的联系是一台望远镜。什么,两人都是天文爱好者?老大,您也太没想象力了吧……在不小心开始了一段匪夷所思的交集之后,她才发现,原来感情的世界里根本没有“丢脸”可言。而他呢?他懂得“喜欢”两个字怎么写吗?
  • 欢乐的教师

    欢乐的教师

    九零后王晓初入职场当老师,看他如何混的风生水起,叱咤风云,引无数银熊竞折腰。。。。。
  • 御宅启示录

    御宅启示录

    每个人都有自己的二次元梦,每个人心中的二次元天空都不相同,我能做的就是把我心中的二次元尽可能描绘出来。寻常的无限流,不寻常的故事,刘越的二次元故事开始了......
  • 牛角包一样的会计3:破围记

    牛角包一样的会计3:破围记

    以机智风趣的笔调雕刻职场。以唯美动人的笔调描画情场,《破围记》给你不一样的阅读快慼,此刻黯然销魂,彼时却又喜笑颜开。被人设局,中招者反叹服骗子演技了得一一金鸡、百花称帝毫无悬念,好莱坞林雄邡朱可知。真诚网恋,开始子心醉的纯真。却结束于心碎的美好。
  • 海风吹佛

    海风吹佛

    南疆硝烟刚散去的时候,十九岁的我被当领导的父亲要求去当兵,极不情愿地来到了海军却是工程兵部队。新兵连凭借小聪明赢得良好口碑,内定为团部机关兵,却被人后门顶替去农场当了一名种田的庄稼兵。好不容易调回团部却遇上裁军,又被精简到基层连队驻守海岛。面对连续的裁军和精简整编,当同年入伍的战友纷纷退伍时,选择留守军营,只为了兑现与父亲“当个好兵”的承诺,咬牙坚持在艰苦的工程兵岁月里锻炼成长,亲历了共和国历史上史无前例的百万大裁军,见证了人民海军工程兵部队这支光荣之旅撤编的全过程,历经艰辛和磨难,忠实履行了一名军人的神圣使命,带着优秀士兵和党员的荣耀离开军营……
  • 绝世红颜:美人泪·相思劫

    绝世红颜:美人泪·相思劫

    《绝世红颜:美人泪·情人劫》姊妹篇,他,温和持重,医术高超,为她隐居山林;他,清俊飘逸,痴情不悔,为她断送江山;他,残暴魅惑,喜怒无常,身世浮沉,为她用尽心机。她,清丽出尘,聪慧善良,然而,她一生都辗转纠结于三个男人之间。是否今生的一切恩怨和劫难都来自于前世的因?那个诡异的梦境到底是真是幻?她究竟爱谁?飘零辗转,蓦然回首中荆棘遍地,绝世红颜,到底该何去何从?
  • 曼珠沙华:为你倾尽天下

    曼珠沙华:为你倾尽天下

    她,是雇佣界的杀手第一人,她做事雷力风行、干净利落。一朝意外穿越成王府的痴傻小姐。。。。断肠梦醒、脱胎换骨,平庸的相貌下掩藏着风华绝代、天人之姿的惊人相貌。。。。。他,是灵玖大陆的战神七王爷,他在人前做事果断,心狠手辣。。可他在遇到了王府的痴傻小姐后。一切都改变了。。他想要和她一生一世一双人,,而她,一生注定不会只有他一个男人。。。看她闯异世,曼珠沙华,。。看美男成群,为她倾尽天下。。。。
  • 风雨嘻哈唯我独尊

    风雨嘻哈唯我独尊

    从开始带结束,从平凡到登顶,这条路是多累!她雪府长女雪瑶梦兰慧心巧,一步步登上高位!岁月弄人!该来的总是要来!北远恒,让这一切都结束吧!没有我就没有今日的你,你就是这样对待你的恩人吗!你愿意陪我一生一世吗?南洋高浩,我愿意!时间弄人,很遗憾我们到最后一个孩子都没有!试链结束,更早的结束,只为迎接更残忍地将来!主人好,我来拉!若不是大雪纷纷,摇篮中谱一曲梦中乡
  • 沉浮凤舞:醉妃无意酒

    沉浮凤舞:醉妃无意酒

    穿越到一个被变态妹妹要挟性命的林府小姐身上,身边的小丫鬟居然杀手组织的人!带她参加组织,却不教她武功。“我们就是需要不会武功的人,进去做细作自然有很多人保护你。”到头来还是一条小白,女主欲哭无泪。“上次我来过,不过貌似你的处境不好啊。我是来还给你东西的。”看来是指装疯卖傻那事吧呢。一只小猫从他的肩头上爬出来,喵了声还给了自己一个白眼。喂,到底你是谁家的猫啊?“哦,还给我吧。”却见某小猫厚颜无耻地抱住了他的大腿。一场角色的阴谋,背后的背后,是毒命解药。“从你接近我开始,就已下蛊。”你的好算盘呵,这局棋我终究下输了。“九月,喝药。”徐渊来了,他的眼里的温柔好像能照亮整个世界。