The French did catch a few whiffs of the truth. Sometimes thesuspicious could be prosperously purged of their suspicion. The policechief of Calais, for example, suddenly was able to live in suchdistracting luxury that he found it difficult to patrol the shorelinethoroughly....
While Napoleon struggled his might away in the Russian Winter,there passed through France itself a gold vein to the army staving inthe Empire's back door.1
1. Morton, p. 47.
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THE CREATURE FROM JEKYLL ISLAND
At a dinner party in later years, Nathan casually summed up the episode as though it were merely a good piece of routine business. He said:
The East India Company had £800,000 worth of gold to sell. I went to the sale and bought it all. I knew the Duke of Wellington must have it. The government sent for me and said they must have the gold. I sold the gold to them, but they didn't know how to get it to the Duke in Portugal. I undertook all that and sent it through France. It was the best business I have ever done.1
THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO
The final outcome of the battle at Waterloo between Wellington and Napoleon was crucial to Europe both politically and economically. If Napoleon had been victorious, England would have been in even greater economic trouble than before. Not only would she have lost international power and prestige, but even at home, her subjects would have been further disgruntled over such great personal and financial wartime sacrifices. Her defeat almost surely would have resulted in not being able to repay the great amounts she had borrowed to conduct the war. In the London stock
exchange, therefore, where British government bonds were traded along with other securities, everyone waited anxiously for news of the outcome.
It was well known that the Rothschilds had developed a private courier service that was used, not only to transport gold and other tangible cargo, but to rapidly move
1. Morton, p. 45.
THE ROTHSCHILD FORMULA 227
At least one friendly biographer claims that Nathan's first act was to deliver the news to the Prime Minister, but that government officials were hesitant at first to believe it, because it ran contrary to reports they had received previously telling of serious British setbacks. At any rate, there is no doubt that Nathan's
All eyes were upon him as he slumped dejectedly, staring at the floor. Then, he raised his gaze and, with pained expression, began to
Prices tumbled, and Nathan sold again. Prices plummeted, and still Nathan sold. Finally, prices collapsed altogether and, in one quick move, Nathan reversed his call and purchased the entire market in government bonds. In a matter of just a few hours, he had acquired the dominant holding of England's entire debt at but a tiny fraction of its worth.1
SIDONIA
Benjamin Disraeli, the Prime Minister of England, wrote a book in 1844 called