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Ten Years In Wall Street; or, Revelations of Inside Life and Experience

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Author: Wm. Worthington Fowler

Publisher: Worthington, Dustin & Co.

Year Printed: 1870

Edition: First

Printing: First

Condition: Good

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Pages: 536

Height: 9 inches

Width: 6.25 inches

Notes:
Hardcover;

Including the histories, mysteries, and men of the "Street" - the Stock Exchange - the Gold Room - the speculations in stocks, gold, governments, pork, petroleum, grain, etc. - sketches from life of the noted speculators and money kings, with anecdotes and incidents of their careers - the women who speculate - the great rises and panics, and how they are produced - the personal experiences of the author - the famous pools, rings, cliques, and corners, and how and by whom they were formed - a description of the battles of the giants, and of the great gold ring of 1869. "All of which I saw, and part of which I was," since 1857. First Edition, illustrated by Arthur Lumley.
Quotes:

"To the merchant and banker it is a financial centre, collecting and distributing money, regulating the exchanges of a continent and striking balances of trade with London and Frankfort. To the outside observer and novice it is a kind of work-shop thronged by cunning artisans who work in precious metals, where vessels of gold and silver are wrought or made to shine with fresh luster, and where old china is fire-gilt as good as new. The moralist and philosopher look upon it as a gambling-den, a cage of unclean birds, an abomination where men drive a horrible trade, fattening and battening on the substance of their friends and neighbors—or perhaps a kind of modern coliseum where gladiatorial combats are joined, and bulls, bears and other ferocious beasts gore and tear each other for public amusement. The brokers regard it as a place of business where, in mercantile parlance, they may ply a legitimate trade, buying and selling for others on commission. To the speculators it is a caravansera where they may load or unload their camels and drive them away betimes to some pleasant oasis. To the financial commanders it is an arsenal in which their arms and chariots are stored, the stronghold to be defended or besieged, the field for strategy, battles and plunder."

-William Worthington Fowler

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