LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DAVIS POPULAR NOVELS, By Richard B. Kimball. SAINT LEGEE, - - - - Price, $1 75 WAS HE SUCCESSFUL? - - " 1 75 UNDERCURRENTS, - - - " 1 75 HENRY POWERS, Banker , - * 1 75 ROMANCE OF STUDENT LIFE, - " 1 75 IN THE TROPICS, (Edited.) - " 1 75 EMTLIE A Sequel to " Saint Leger." (In press.) u Mr. KIMBALL'S books are remarkable for their happy com bination of fancy and sentiment. They possess a perpetual charin to the reader; and, being of the lusher order of literature, are growing more and more in dispensable to every library." %* All elegantly printed, and bound and sent by mail, postage free, by G. W. Carleton & Co., Publisher*, New York. HENRY POWERS, (BANKER.) How He Achieved a Fortune, and Married, BY RICHARD B. KIMBALL, AUTHOR OF "SAINT LEGER,"-" ROMANCE OF STUDENT LIFE,' "WAS HE SrCC'ESSFFL?" " UNDERCURRENTS," &c., HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 15 It is not then from any desire for greater distinction or notoriety that I indulge the public. Possibly the best reason I can give, is that "it is my humor." The summer is approaching. The gay world and the traveling world, want something to interest them as they pass to and fro, while the student and the philosopher are not at times disinclined to relaxation or to taking a leaf out of such a book as mine. Perhaps they may do so and be all the wiser for it. I dare say my financial friends, and my fash ionable friends will consider this a work of fic tion. I shall not attempt to disabuse them, but I assure my out-of-town readers, with seriousness, that this story is true, every word of it, from the avowal of the name of my banking firm in Nas sau Street to the minutest detail here recorded. A work of fiction, indeed ! That would not become the gravity of my position before the world. No. I leave novel writino- to "the rev- O erend the clergy" who are now invading this last bomb-proof of the "legitimate" author, turning 16 HENRY POWERS, BACKER. his own guns against him; appropriating all his stock in trade and leaving him helpless. Were it not that I do not wish to seem even to treat with levity things which I consider sacred, I would advise writers of romance, in their turn, to rush to the pulpit, which they would, perchance find empty, and undertake to do duty there. A fair exchange, and one, per haps, quite to the satisfaction of their hearers. Having said thus much by way of introducing myself, I will proceed straight to my work. In doing this I must begin at the beginning. CHAPTER II. I WAS born near a small village on the Con necticut River, in New Hampshire. Not pre cisely under the shadow of the White Moun tains, but where they were distinctly visible in the distance. There is no lovelier scenery in the world than that of the valley of the Connecti cut. As you advance northward, it becomes more grand and impressive, until the majestic range which culminates in Mount Washington appears in view. Our city-bred people know but little of the hardy, vigorous life which the inhab itants lead. And I fear I should not interest them if I attempted to describe it. My father was a man in delicate health. He owned a small farm of about thirty acres, which with good cultivation and a careful economy served to support my father, my mother, and myself. 18 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. Continued ill health had softened and refined my father's character. He was thoughtful and considerate, and differed much from the farmers in the neighborhood. He was fond of reading, and not being able to work all the time, he indulged his taste for it. He cultivated the soil with intelligent industry, so that our thirty acres produced as much as some farms of one hundred. My mother had a sanguine, happy- tempered, joyous nature, and made our little household always cheerful. She was not intellec tual, but she had a keen shrewd sense of the fitness of things. I was an only child, and - grew up more as a companion than any thing else. Those were happy days as I now recall them : " Us three," as we used to say, form ing the entire family. We lived a life of per fect independence. Thirty years ago, manners were much more primitive in that district than now. There were no railroads in the vicinity to connect us closely with the large towns. The stage performed its daily route, not ordinarily HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 19 more than half filled with passengers, and all the news we obtained was gleaned from the weekly paper. I attended the "district school" with the other children of the neighborhood. In the winter it was kept by a schoolmaster, in the summer by a schoolmistress, because then all the large boys were at work in the fields and none but girls and small boys were in at tendance. My father took a great deal of pains to make me like my books, and my mother used to hear my spelling lesson every morning before I started for school, to be sure I had learned it correctly. By these aids and that of close application and a good memory I kept at the head of all my classes, and acquired the reputation of being a very bright boy. After I was thirteen I no longer attended in the sum mer, and at sixteen I quitted the district school altogether. There was an excellent academy in the large village about three miles from our house, to which my father concluded to send me in order that I 20 HENRY POWERS, BANKEK. might obtain, as he said, a first-rate English education. He could not well afford to pay my board there, but it was decided that I should live at home and attend as a day scholar. In fine weather I used to walk both ways when the weather was stormy, my father drove me over and back. Thus far I had formed no plans for my future. I did not, indeed, expect to confine my self to the little thirty-acre farm. I had a vague ambitious thought of making a great deal of myself, but this was not at all defined. It had assumed no tangible shape. It was airy, ro mantic, unsubstantial, not connected with any idea of severe work, or of surmounting difficulties or enduring hardships. The fact is, I had really but a slight notion of the busy world that throb bed feverishly in our great cities, or what was going on there. So every thing was left to my imagination, and that, as you all know, plays strange freaks with serious sober fact. At the academy, however, I gained a good deal HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 2l besides what I learned from my studies. Inter course with the boys and young men, who came from different parts of New England, was of great service. My horizon began speedily to en large, and continued to expand. I was confess edly the smartest boy at the district school. In deed, I had no competitor who approached me. At the academy I met young fellows every way my equal in capacity, who had many advantages which I had not enjoyed. This stimulated me to greater exertion, and brought ambition for the first time fully into action. Here, too, I began to see and appreciate the power of money. It was at first a mysterious agency not easily to be under stood by my unsophisticated mind. I did not at first comprehend the force of the magic words, when some one would say of one of the boys, " His father is very rich !" or of another, " He is poor he is a charity scholar." I do not mean to be understood that there were at this school any thing like aristocratic cliques, or invidious distinc tions, but there was always enough to draw my 22 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. attention to the fact, that the world worships wealth. This conviction roused a throng of feel ings within me. I determined to be rich. Before this I had regarded with some envy the class of young men who were fitting for col lege. I think, had I asked my father's consent to endeavor to obtain a classical "education, he would have granted it; but with my new views (I confess it now with shame), I considered that this would not be the quickest or surest road to a fortune, and I decided not to take it. Not to go further into the details of my school life, I continued at the academy nearly four years. In that time I had mastered all that was taught there pertaining to an English education, and had gained the position of the " best scholar " in that department. I left with the highest testimonials from the principal, which I exhibited to my father and mother with an honest pride. CHAPTER III. I WAS now to begin life. For a week I suf fered from a vague irresolution. A rather singu lar circumstance decided my course and that suddenly. When I made up my mind to try above all things to make money, I concluded to enter on some commercial pursuit as the best way of doing it. In the large village where I had been studying were two or three first-class stores, where I could readily find a place to commence my business experience before under taking a higher flight. I had not yet applied to either, but was hesitating in my choice. I have purposely omitted to make an avowal of which I need not feel ashamed, since in the course of nature it overtakes everybody. I was in love, or at least I thought I was. Emma Parks was the daughter of the wealth iest man in our vicinity. He lived in the small 24 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. village which was near our house, and had a fine place. He owned two or three farms in the county, and occupied himself in various ways. He had been a contractor on the railroad, and thus made a considerable sum. He was in the habit of buying droves of cattle, and sending them to market ; he would invest money in wool, and sell or hold it as he thought best. In this way he was kept very active, and more than half his time from home; and when he was with his family, he paid little attention to what was going on in domestic matters. His wife was a pleasant lady; not in very good health. They had two children, both daughters. The eldest, Emma, scarcely a year younger than myself, the other a child of ten or twelve years old. There was but one church, or " meeting-house," as it was called, in the small village, where all gathered together on Sundays: the hard-working farmers and children to doze through the long tedious sermon, the young men and women to look very grave and think of each other, lea vino- HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 25 an exemplary few to pay a serious attention to the discourse, and profit by it if possible. I had known Emma Parks ever since I could remember. We were at the district school to gether, she was in my class and my closest com petitor. This brought us next to each other as we stood up to read or spell, and while I was generally at the head, she was quite sure to be next. I recollect well that if unfortunately she missed in a word and lost her place I felt lonely till she regained it, which she was sure speedily to do, and when she stood again by my side I experienced a pleasure which I knew she shared with me. Once I was detected in " telling," that is, in assisting her to answer a question, a grave offense^ for which I had to take my place at the foot. It was some satis faction to me that it gave Emma the head, but the distance between us seemed a thousand miles. It was a week before I could reascend to the position next her. The boys and girls tried hard, I think, to keep ine down, by getting their les- 2 26 HENEY POWEES, BANKEE. sons better than usual. Emma said nothing, but I felt that she experienced a glow of delight when I finally reached my place. Two years after, Emma was sent to a female seminary in the southern part of the State, and I went to the academy. We saw very little of each other till she returned from school to be at home. I had still a year to remain where I was. I never knew any one change so little as Emma, except that she had attained her full size, and looked like a young lady instead of a child. She treated me precisely as if she had not been away at all, and with her old partiality. I was, as I have said, still at the academy, with one more year before me. We had there a debating society, which met on Saturday after noon, and to which the public were admitted. Emma never missed an opportunity to be present, and when the season was fine we walked leisurely back the whole three miles together. These miles seemed very short, indeed a mere stroll. The punctuality with which both of us attended HENKY POWERS, BANKER. 27 the evening lectures was most remarkable. Yet not altogether inexplicable, when I tell you that after the services were over, I always was Emma's attendant home, to reach which we generally took a long detour. Once I recollect missing her in the crowd as it pressed out of the door. I was in despair; in vain I looked in every di rection, I had given up all hope of meeting her that evening and was starting on my way home, when I caught sight of her at a little distance, evidently waiting for me. She quietly put her arm in mine, and without either saying one word we walked on. I can not describe the state of ecstasy I was in through all that year. It gave me fresh strength, I studied the harder for it, and grew the more ambitious to make money. Every body said Emma Parks would be rich. I re solved I would never speak to her of marriage, I would not seek to be engaged, I would never even say I loved her until I was rich. I felt as sured of her love in return, for how else could all 28 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. these tokens be explained ? Besides, she showed no favor to any of the young men in the neigh borhood. Indeed it would seem by their conduct that they had left the field entirely to me. There was one thing alone, only one thing, which caused me any distress. On a fine Sunday morning, two or three months after Emma's return from the seminary, I saw a genteely dressed and rather good-look ing young man in her father's pew. There should be nothing very astonishing in that, though Mr. Parks was at that time away from home. I felt jealous of the stranger, I hardly knew why. He was very polite to Mrs. Parks, but not specially so to Emma. The next morning he had vanished. I heard no one allude to him, as is common frequently in coming out of church, and for some reason I was reluctant to make any inquiry. Emma and I met as usual at the lecture-room, Thursday evening. No allusion was made to the HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 29 young man who had occupied her pew. Her manner was as kind as ever, our walk longer, so that I laughed at myself for feeling as I had done over so trivial an occurrence. But it was repeated! Several weeks after, when the affair had gone quite out of my mind, the specter, in the shape of that identical stran ger, appeared again. This time I was more for tunate in getting information. The clergyman's wife, coming out, said in a low tone to the wife of one of the deacons, "That's the gentleman Emma Parks is engaged to." "Who is he?" was asked. "Dr. Emory, from Andover." I was so wedged in the crowd that I could not fail to hear this, and, although I know I turned very red, it did not affect me as much as one would suppose. The affair was so over stated that I felt a sort of relief. "Andover!" That was where Emma had been at school. What wonder people should fall in love with her. Surely she can not prevent that. Besides, I recalled the fact that the Parks family had con- 30 HENRY POWEKS, BANKEB. nections in Andover by the name of Emory ; and here was one of them. So, when I heard the same statement repeated outside the church door, I said to myself, "Ha! ha! How little they know of what is between Emma Parks and me!" In fact I rather enjoyed the common mistake of the congregation. Nevertheless I felt impatient for Thursday evening to come. I thought I might venture a joke about the current opinion. Then we could enjoy the little affair together. But when the evening did come, and when, after impatiently sitting through an unusually long lecture, I found myself once more by Emma, her arm in mine, her hand in mine, walking very slowly, as we were wont, I had not the courage nor yet the inclination to disturb, by such an allusion, the placid, the perfect happiness we were mutually enjoying. Thus matters went on till I left the academy. On the day of the " Exhibition " which marked the close of the term, and which was held in the HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 31 largest church of the village, Emma attended and occupied a conspicuous place in the gallery set aside for ladies. As I went on the " stage," at the conclusion of the day's proceedings, to receive by public announcement the first prize, I ven tured to cast a glance in the direction where she was sitting. I did not trust myself to do so before. She was looking toward me intently, but turned her eyes quickly away as they met .mine. In a few minutes we were together, taking our walk homeward of three miles. It was a lovely day in September. In this locality the foliage changes early into innumerable colors without falling off. The appearance of thfe forests was magnificent and aided to produce i dreamy, delightful sentiment. Lest our walk should come too quickly to its close we turned into an old road, leading in the same direction, formerly in use but now quite deserted On this occasion Emma talked more than usual. She spoke of her gratification at the hon ors I had gained, and asked me what I was now 32 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. going to do. She had never before said any thing to me on the subject. I told her I intended to enter on a commercial pursuit. I was uncertain where to commence, but thought I should go to Boston in a few days, and on my return decide between that city and one of the larger stores here. "Boston is a long way from here," she said hesitating; "besides, don't you think it would be better to become a little familiar with business before you go to so large a place?" She spoke in a lower tone than usual, and I fancied only fancied I could perceive the slight est possible pressure of her arm in mine. What a subtle, mysterious power have the sex ! I deter mined that instant I would begin my career not in Boston but in the large village near by. I did not say so though. I only said, "Per haps you are right," and the conversation was changed. We made very slow progress toward home. Indeed, it was not till the setting sun admonished us to quicken our steps that I re membered we had still more than a mile to walk. CHAPTER IV. YES, now I was to begin! and, as I have stated in the opening of the last chapter, I was by no means resolved where. It was Emma Parks who determined me not to go at once to the city, but to commence my career nearer home. On Thursday evening I should see her, and I would then talk with her fully about my plans. On that evening I went as usual to the lecture. Emma was not there! Who can describe the agony of my impatience as I was forced to sit out those tedious services, and go home alone. I imagined every thing. I scarcely slept that night. I tried to reason myself into a calmer state. "What occasion for such an excitement of foeling," I said half aloud. "Emma has been kept at home by some unforeseen circumstance. Am I to go through life in this way, nervous and 2* 34 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. full of fears at the least disappointment ! Non sense !" I was not very successful in the attempt to quiet myself. Still I devoted the next day to the consideration of the best store for me to enter in the large village. I thought the next morning I would walk over and talk with the owner of one of these. I had just breakfasted, and was about starting on this errand when there was a rap at the door. My mother opened it. I was in the adjoining roonu When I came out she had just finished the reading of a note she held in her hand. She had another which she gave me. Saying, "Well, it has come at last." I took the prettily folded bit of paper without a misgiving. Opening it, I read as follows: "Mr. and Mrs. Parks request the pleasure of Mr. Henry Powers's company on Monday even ing, at the wedding of their daughter." I did not turn red or pale. But it seemed as if my soul was suddenly changed to stone. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 35 My mother did not appear to notice me, but said, "They were going to be married when Emma first came home from school, but it was put off." "Yes," was my reply, as if I knew all about it, and not a word more was uttered. The next day, Sunday, I attended church as usual, and saw, of course, Dr. Emory seated in Mr. Parks's pew next to Emma my Emma ! Monday evening we attended the wedding. I stood very near and saw them married. Afterward, I congratulated the bride. She received me very sweetly yes, indeed, and looked her prettiest, as all brides do. I shook hands with the doctor, and gave his fingers a grip that brought the tears to his eyes. During the evening, after the married pair had received all the congratulations of the guests, I walked with Mrs. Emory around the room. She had my arm. I made no allusion whatever to any thing that was passing; nor did she. We talked as we had always talked, and for a little while I felt as if I had been dreaming a horrible dream, and 36 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. had happily awakened. This last hallucination was soon dissolved. The doctor came up and joined us as we were standing near the mantel piece. A few common-place words were ex changed, when Emma quietly withdrew her arm from mine and took her husband's. She smiled kindly as she did this, and both walked away. The company broke up soon after I left. It was not till I reached home and had retired, that a sense of utter desolation came over me. I did not sleep a wink that night. I made a thousand resolutions, and as quickly abandoned them. I would think no more of this wicked world ; no more of entering into business. It was sinful, carnal, diabolical. I would study for the ministry. I would devote myself to doing good. I would become a missionary, and preach the gospel to the far, very far-off heathen. I would sacrifice, yes, crucify myself. The day dawned while 1 was still feverishly resolving these lofty views. I lay until the sun began to stream into my window. My HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 37 door stood ajar. I had omitted to close it when I went to bed. It opened into the kitchen. My mother had been for some time busy in the preparations for breakfast. Soon my father came in and took a seat. "Is not Henry up yet?" he said. "No," replied my mother, "I thought I would let him sleep." "Don't you think, wife," continued my father, after a pause, " that Henry was in love with Emma Parks ?" "In love," exclaimed my mother, while she gave one of her clear ringing good-natured laughs. "In love; nothing but puppy love. It will do him good; it will shake up and settle his sympathies. Boys have to go through with it as they do with the hooping-cough and the measles." She laughed again as merrily as before, and I fancied I could hear a responsive tone from my father low and quiet, as was his way. " Puppy love !" Was this the commentary 38 HENRY POWEBS, BANKER. on my lofty aspirations, my swelling hopes, my tumultuous feelings, my tender emotions and desires ! And from my mother, my kind, par tial, affectionate mother ! " Puppy love !" What a disagreeable expression. What do my parents think of me ? I fancied my secret so well kept, and now I saw it was no secret at all. My clear-sighted, quick-witted mother knew all about it, and had held her peace, it seems, till the malady, like the measles, should have its run. Probably the whole village knew and were chuckling over it. How disgusted I was at every thing and every body. This ebullition passed off. After awhile pride began to have its proper control. Present ly my mother knocked at the door, and said, " Breakfast is ready." I rose and tried to appear as if nothing had happened. We finished the meal. Then I went back to my room. "No country store for me, no Bos ton for me, I will strike for the largest place, and I will make my mark there. I will go to HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 39 New York!" This resolve was the result of a day of bitter communing with myself. My arrangements were speedily perfected. I should require what seemed to me a very con siderable sum of money thirty-five or forty dol lars at least. My father relieved my anxiety on this point. He always had, he said, a little put by for a rainy day; and from this store, which proved to be not quite fifty dollars, I re ceived forty. My mother slipped five in my hand as she bade me farewell, and thus fortified I jumped into the stage which was to convey me about half a day's rjlde to the nearest rail road station from which I was to be whirled into the great maelstrom of metropolitan life. Of this life I had not the slightest concep tion. I had once visited Concord, the capital of my native State, a town of eight or ten thousand inhabitants. It was the largest place I was ever in, and the only one by which I could judge of New York. I could not there- 40 HENEY POWERS, BANKER. fore form the least idea of the sharp-cut divi sion of labor; the close and eager competition, the perpetual, unceasing hum of action, and the ever-varied, never-ending preparatives for pleasure which characterize the great metropolis. It was an unknown, untried sea. God help the youth who first attempts it! CHAPTER V. LET me insert a short chapter here in paren thesis. The account I give of my "affair," with Emma Parks is by no means novel. It is the ex perience of nineteen young fellows out of twenty. Doubtless my mother was right, when she char acterized my state of feverish agitation by the term "puppy love." By which expression rather grating it must be confessed to the youth concerned I suppose she meant to convey her strong conviction, that the feelings and emotions I entertained had no depth, but were from the surface, and would not stand the test of time and of new scenes, or even the ordinary change of events. This I now readily comprehend. But what of Emma Parks! Certainly her conduct can not be explained in this way. During the entire 42 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. year, and while she was engaged to the man she subsequently married, she gave me tokens of her affection which I could not mistake, and by her treatment plunged me into the condition I have endeavored to describe. Yet I can not think she was otherwise than sincere. She had not the disposition of a coquette, nor do I believe she was merely amusing herself by flirting with me. The idea that she had en gaged herself rashly, and would have broken off the compact if she could in short, that she pre ferred me to Dr. Emory, I must reject. Emma Parks, as everybody well knew, had absolutely her own way at home. Her father indulged her slightest wish, while her mother never thought for a moment of opposing any plan she ever formed. So that her temper was not of a sort to tolerate any restraint on her choice, or prevent her openly avowing any change of mind. I repeat, therefore, the whole affair is to me utterly incomprehensible. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 43 " What a goose you are," exclaimed my wife, who, while I was a few moments absent from the room, had entered and cast her eyes over the foregoing pages, "what a goose you are ! " " Why ?" I asked, in a rather subdued tone, for I felt somewhat ashamed at being caught at my little bit of sentimentality. " Why ?" responded she. " Because you make a mystery of the simplest thing in the world. The girl had been your companion from the time you were children together, and she liked you, and treated you accordingly. But you were the last person she ever would fall in love with. Besides, girls are much more mature than boys, and at nineteen she was ready to be married, when you," my wife hesitated and smiled. "I, what?" " Well, when you doubtless merited the ap pellation bestowed by your mother." "I guess you are right," was my response. 44 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. "Set a thief to catch a thief, and a woman to explain a woman." "My dear," said my wife, "I carne to call you to dinner!" CHAPTER VI. I HAD a single acquaintance in New York. It was a young man by the name of Amos Carter, a relation of one of our neighbors. He had spent a few weeks in our village, the pre vious summer, and I had become well acquainted with him. He was salesman in a wholesale grocery store, and gave me a warm invitation to come and see him, if I ever visited the city. It occurred to me that I might be assisted in the choice of a boarding-house by this young man, and I resolved to call on him without delay. I arrived in town by the New Haven Railroad, in the express train, which reaches Twenty-seventh Street about half-past eleven at night, and put up at one of the cheap hotels near the station. I slept soundly, and did not awake till late. It was the first refreshing 46 HENRY POWERS, BANKER, clumber I had experienced since the shock which had so affected me. I started up, and looked confusedly around. I was no longer in my neat little chamber at home, but in a dreary, dirty-looking room, without furniture of any kind if I may except a washstand, two chairs, and the bed I was in. I dressed as quickly as possible, in order to be rid of the impression produced by the scene, and hastened down to breakfast. That dispatched, I made the necessary inquiries for reaching Water Street, where Mr. Carter was, and started in search of it. What a sight for me, as the omnibus passed down Broadway. I can never forget it, nor the impression produced by it. It equaled the "Tales of the Arabian Nights." One wonder succeeded another, until I felt almost beside myself. At last I found the place and number. It was a large building, running through to the HENEY POWERS, BANKEK. 47 next street. I well recollect the sign over the door. It was, "Embury, Hyde & Prince." Several carts were standing by so as to almost completely block the entrance, and persons were busy loading them. I managed to push my way into the store, and endeavored to find some one sufficiently at leisure to speak to me: but everybody was at work. Not the least notice was taken of my presence. At length I seized a propitious moment, and inquired of a young man if Mr. Carter was in. The only answer he made, was to point with his finger to the interior of the store. I went forward, and asked again. Another point of the finger up-stairs. I ascended and inquired once more and got a word in reply, " Not up here." I retorted, that I had been sent up there. "Went down five minutes ago," was jerked out in answer. I retraced my steps, and finding the person who had directed me, told him Mr. Carter was not up-stairs. The man stared vacantly at me 48 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. an instant, then rapidly called out, "Jim, where's Carter?" "Pearl Street door!" was echoed back. Another finger-point toward the Pearl Street entrance, and my man was off. On I walked, and my perseverance was re warded. For there was Carter, his coat off (it was a very warm day), busy taking in goods. He recognized me at once, as I pre sented myself, and shook hands in a manner which indicated he really had not the time to do it ; while one eye was kept constantly on the men at the door. "Pm glad to see you, very glad to see you. Leave all well? Come and see me this even ing. Hold on! Let me give you my address." "Have you any room, do you think for an other boarder?" I was about to ask, when I was suddenly pushed aside, with a "Take care, those grappling-irons will hit you." " Be sure and come up this evening. Come early; don't forget, now. Busy time with us, you see. Good-day." I had too much sense to be angry at my HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 49 reception, for I could see that Carter really was busy, and unable to attend to me ; but I felt mortified and vexed nevertheless. So I said " Good-day," in return, and started off. I left the store of Embury, Hyde & Prince, with a rather diminished sense of my own im portance. The idea gradually dawned on me that I was not actually necessary to the mer chants of New York I put on a bold front, however, determining not to be faint-hearted. I spent the day riding over the city in the omni buses and horse-cars, and in the evening pre sented myself at the place named by Carter as his boarding-house. Here my reception was quite different from the greeting at the store. Carter was glad to see me; asked me at once to his room, which was a very comfortable apartment, nicely furnished, and where his repose of manner was in strange contrast with the hurry and bustle of the day. I took tea with him, and then told him what I had come to New York for. 3 50 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. "I will do what I can for you," he said, "but it is difficult to get a good place very difficult. We are full at our store am sure. One thing I can do I can get you in here. It is an excellent house. The old lady is from New England, and makes us all feel as if we were living at home. There is an attic room vacated to-day, if you don't mind climbing a little. The price is five dollars a week, very reasonable as things are going." I examined the room, which I reached after what seemed to me an interminable ascent, and which proved to be a small, cramped corner, but clean and neat. Five dollars a week for a seven- by-nine nook in a garret (Carter called it an attic), looked large to me ; but I was satisfied it was the best I could do, and that I was fortunate in securing it. So I thanked my friend; and having an intense repugnance to passing another night at the hotel, I inquired if I could not bring my trunk that very evening and install myself at once in my lodgings. There was no objection to this, HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 51 and accordingly I went back to the scene of the previous night, paid my bill, and hired a porter to carry my luggage to my new home. I had a long conversation with Carter that evening. He seemed disposed to aid me every way in his power. His suggestions were useful, though I was greatly chagrined to learn I could not step at once into a good situation. "You have no acquaintances here, then," said he, after considerable discussion. "None but yourself." "Well, never mind," he continued, "I will intro duce you to one of our firm, and from what I can say of you I have no doubt he will allow you to refer to him. That will be tip-top nothing better." "Refer to him!" That was another phase of city experience. "Do you mean that I am obliged to refer to somebody who knows me in order to get a place ?" " Certainly." " For what ?" "For your character, to be sure," said Carter, 52 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. laughing. "Nothing is taken for granted here, unless it is that every man is to be considered a rogue till he proves himself to be otherwise." " But how can anybody take me for a rogue when they know nothing of me." "That is just the difficulty," returned Carter. "When nothing is known of you, you are taken at the worst possible valuation. Don't you see that is the only safe business rule?" "No, I don't; with us in the country it is just the other way." " It won't do here, though," said my friend ; " you will soon understand why." "New York must be a pretty hard place." "Well, it is and it isn't. There are all sorts and sizes jumbled together. I call it a good place. If a man is honest and industrious, and sticks to his business, he is very sure to get along. So don't be discouraged (Carter could not fail to observe that I looked chagrined), it may be weeks before you get any thing to suit you. Keep trying ; the right thing will turn up HENET POWERS, BANKET?. 53 after awhile, and then you will go ahead no mistake about it." I felt thankful to Carter for his attempt to cheer me, for I confess my courage was not quite at the point I could desire. I assented to his prediction, and bidding him good night I climbed manfully upward till I reached the attic, and quite overcome by the day's excitements soon fell asleep. CHAPTER VII. THE next day, according to promise, Carter introduced me to Mr. Embury, the senior partner of the firm he was with, and with whom I per ceived he had been conversing. I was received very kindly. "Glad to see you, Mr. Powers. You are just from the country, I learn. We want good industrious young men like yourself here. Mr. Carter has been speaking to me about you. It is all right. Send them to me. I will take care of them." I felt much like prolonging an interview began so agreeably, but a look from Carter, who stood by, warned me to take leave of the busy mer chant. I thanked him, therefore, and came away. I will not recount the wearying details of my attempt to procure a good position in this large HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 55 and confusing city. I labored at the work with unceasing energy, but it appeared as if the "heav ens were biass" against me. I answered every ad vertisement that looked at all like what I wanted. I ventured to spend a few dollars in advertis ing, myself. I took a list of the first-class houses and went the rounds of all of them. Nobody wanted to employ me on any terms I could afford to engage for. It was curious to witness the different manner with which I was received at different places. Some would treat me with kind civility while they returned a courteous negative to my application; others would jerk out a gruff "No," or give a surly shake of the head, without deigning to favor me with a look. Occasionally I was made the butt of a poor jest, which, however, affected me but little. It was the kind response, accom panied by a refusal, which discouraged me more than any other reception. I have always felt very grateful to Carter for endeavoring to keep me in spirits. 56 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. " Don't give it up," he would say. " You will strike tlie right spot by and by. I was quite as long myself before I could get a place, and you see I have never left it." I had spent my last dollar, for I paid my board weekly, and had borrowed a few shillings of Carter to help me to an omnibus ride when too much fatigued walking. Notwithstanding my want of success, the longer I staid in New York the less discouraged I felt. For during the six weeks of my peregrinations over the city I had pretty nearly got rid of my green look, indeed of my greenness generally. That was only superficial. I soon discovered it was not difficult to acquire the ready habit and quick apprehension of city life, that also was siiperficial. My six weeks' experience was very valuable to me. I learned much that I could not have gained in any other way ; and got an insight into the character of some first-class men, when HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 57 they were off their guard and had no object in disguising it. One afternoon I took the horse-car of the Sixth Avenue Railroad to ride up town, for I had walked a great deal that day and was tired out. Before reaching Canal Street we met with an obstruction in the shape of a truck which had broken down while crossing the track. This detained us perhaps fifteen minutes. While seated there a gentleman who sat next me, on my right addressed some casual remark to me. I replied, and he continued the conver sation. At length my companion exclaimed rather ab ruptly : " Have you succeeded in finding a place yet ?" In my amazement I turned and looked the speaker full in the face. He was a man I should say about fifty, with fine expressive features, and dark searching eyes, which were turned not unpleasantly on me. 3* 58 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. "You were in my store the other morning," he continued, seeing that I did not answer. "You may have forgotten it." "I have been in so many it is impossible to remember all." " Do you not recollect," said he,- " I asked you where you were from." "I do now recollect it." "And have you succeeded?" " No." "I was so much occupied I could not attend to you. I meant to tell you to come in the next day, but my attention was called away at that moment. You quitted me very abruptly." I made no reply. "So you are from New Hampshire?" con tinued the gentleman. "Yes." "What part?" "From the upper Valley of the Connecticut." "What county?" " Grafton." HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 59 "Why, I am from Grafton County myself," said the gentleman, smiling. "You from Grafton County," I exclaimed, in astonishment. " Why not ?" he said, good-naturedly, " and if you will look in on me to-morrow morning at nine o'clock, I will see what can be done for you." "Where," I asked, still much surprised. The stranger took a pencil from his pocket, and writing on the margin of a newspaper in his hand, he tore off the slip and handed it to me. "It is the corner where I got in," he said hastily, as the car stopped at Twenty-third Street, where he left it and walked rapidly toward the Fifth Avenue. I watched his retreating form as long as I could, and then examined the scrap of paper. The writing was not very legible, but I had no difficulty -in making out the words, "Gard ner, Lynde & Co.," which I at once recognized 60 HENRY POWERS, BACKER. as one of the largest commercial houses in the city. My heart beat quick with excitement. "Was this one of the firm? And which one? What would be the result of to-morrow's interview ? "I will not be too sanguine," I said to my self; "it may amount to nothing, after all." I told Carter about it in the evening. "You don't say so," he exclaimed. "It was Gardner himself. I know, by your description. He begun a poor boy. I told you that you would hit it after awhile." " But I don't know yet, whether I have hit it or not," I replied. "You 'may count it for certain," said Carter. "He wouldn't take all this trouble for nothing, you may rely on that," and the conversation closed. Punctually at nine, I was at the counting- room of Gardner, Lynde & Co. I inquired for Mr. Gardner, and had the wit to- say I called by appointment. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 61 After a little delay I was ushered into his private apartment. He was engaged reading his letters, but he signed to me to be seated. When he had finished he turned and ad dressed me, but with none of the familiarity of the previous day. His demeanor was serious and in a sense reserved, but his tone was that of kindness. In the interview, which lasted possibly fifteen minutes, he put to me almost every conceivable question about myself, all of which I answered promptly, though I confess I did not see the necessity of so strict an examination, for it not only embraced every particular of my life in the country (with the exception of my love af fair), but every petty circumstance relating to my sojourn in New York. " You say," concluded Mr. Gardner, " that you understand book-keeping." " I do." "Please let me see your handwriting; you may copy a couple of lines there." 62 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. I complied, nothing loath to exhibit my pen manship. "You may remain," said Mr. Gardner, after glancing at the paper. " It is best for you to lose no more time." He rose and left the room returning in three or four minutes. "Come with me," he said. "This gentleman will set you at work," he continued, introducing me to one of the lie.il men. "After a few weeks we can tell where to place you." The work I was set at was to aid in loading some boxes of merchandise; not exactly what I anticipated, but I went at it with hearty good will, astonishing even the carmen with the dis play of my strength and dexterity. After so long a period of suspense and anxiety it was a luxury to be permitted to earn a living even by helping to load a cart. I returned to my boarding-house at night in a state of healthful fatigue. Carter was per fectly delighted. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 63 "You are all right now," lie said. "Keep doing, no matter what you are put at, if it is driving au old dray-horse. Gardner wants to find out what you are made of." I continued industriously at the same sort of work for a week, and was then advanced a little, that is, I was employed in a higher kind of service, which was relieved occasionally by be ing sent on various commercial errands. Every week I earned six dollars, which barely enabled me to live. But I was content, more than content, I was happy. I had secured a place in one of the first establishments in the city, and knew it depended on myself to retain it and be advanced in it. It was with intense satisfaction I could inform my parents of the good news. Hitherto my letters must have proved meager and unsatisfactory. CHAPTER VIII. I REMAINED with the house of Gardner, Lynde & Co. nearly three years and a half. I look on this period of my life with much satisfaction. From the day I entered the place till I left, I devoted myself with unwavering and steady energy to my duties. I commenced with zeal by assisting to load' the drays. Mr. Gard ner, though appearing not to notice me, really watched me closely. At the end of six months I was promoted to the counting-room, and my salary doubled. I never asked for any change of position or increase of wages, but worked hard and faith fully. It was now, that my excellent education at the Academy produced its fruits. I could not help perceiving in this respect that I was far superior to the other young men in the store, HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 65 and as to mere details the knowledge of these was easily acquired. It was the autumn of 1857 when I came to New York. In the autumn of 1860 I was at the head of my department, which was the most important in the establishment. In this position I saw much of Mr. Gardner, who conferred with me daily. Indeed he had on more than one occasion hinted that at the end of five years from the commencement of my service, he should give me an interest as one of the junior partners. Of this period of five years, over three had expired. I can not express the emotions of pride and gratification with which I informed my pa rents of the brilliant prospect which was before me, and which I felt I had gained by my faith ful assiduity. Thus far there had not been a check to what seemed to me a triumphant pro gress. All my thoughts and efforts had been directed to the business, nothing but the busi ness, of my employers. I attended church on 66 HENBY POWERS, BANKER. Sunday it is true, but I fear my thoughts* were mainly in the counting-room. As to female society, I had solemnly resolved to have none of it. My experience with Emma Parks had cured me for all time, as I then felt, of any desire to cultivate it. I had a bowing acquaintance with several young ladies of the congregation, but nothing further. I had been invited occasion ally to parties, but I declined with a feeling of grim resistance. I was often bantered on what was termed my aversion to the sex, indeed, my kind New England landlady took frequent occasions to say it was not a good sign when a young man neglected the society of virtuous young ladies, and she cautioned me against falling into the habit. If such were my tastes now, what would I get to be when I grew older. Others would declare I had been crossed in love, and hoped I would get over it some time. I stoutly with stood all these insinuations, suggestions, banter- ings, and jesting, keeping on my way undisturbed. HENKY POWEKS, BANKEK. 67 Every summer I visited home, and rejoiced my parents with the improvement in my ap pearance, and the account of my prospects. There I would hear Mrs. Emory often spoken of, but the charm had dissolved. The name no longer sent the blood bounding quickly through every vein. My tastes began to partake of the refinements of metropolitan life. The girls of my native place did not look as handsome or as well-dressed, or as "fine," as they used to do. I was now the observed of all observers in the village church. I was always particular in my dress ; and after I was firmly established in my situation, I could afford to indulge myself in this respect. Without vanity, I may say my personal appearance was good, so that with the aid of a first-class New York tailor, I could not fail to attract the attention of my country friends and acquaintances, with whom I began to pass for a "great New York merchant." In going to and returning from my native town, I went by different routes, making a wider 68 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. circuit, in order to see some of our noted places for summer resort. In this way I visited Sara toga, and Lake George, and Niagara, and even went once to Montreal. I was at the same time at great pains to improve my manners, and to acquire general information, but my heart was m the counting-room, my sole purpose was to get rich. It is with reluctance I take leave of this part of my life, I was so happy and contented in it. CHAPTER IX. WHAT American can forget the gloom of the winter preceding the breaking out of the re bellion. This gloom began to cast its shadow immediately after the November elections, and spread deeper and deeper over the land till the actual commencement of hostilities, when it was dissipated by the swift and stirring events of the war. It settled over the merchant, the artisan, the mechanic, the laborer. Above all, it gathered thick about the heart of every one who cherished the grand hope of an undivided nationality for our common country. I could lay no claim to belong to this last class, for my soul was too deeply engrossed in trade to be stirred by the possibilities of the hour. I lamented over a dull fall business, and thought of but little else. 70 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. I was seated alone with Mr. Gardner in his private room one afternoon, the latter part of December, engaged in making a special report on the condition of the debts due to the firm, from each of the Southern States, preparatory to the usual balance-sheet for the first of Jan uary. I. perceived Mr. Gardner exhibited none of his usual elasticity of spirits. He was, very seri ous, while a resolute, I may say dogged expres sion overspread his face. As I concluded, he asked, "What is the sum total of the indebtedness ?" "Do you mean that which I have marked undoubted?" I said. "I mean the whole. You will find there will be no difference in them," replied Mr. Gardner, setting his teeth firmly together. I went over the abstract, adding the various amounts together, and shortly replied, "Nearly three millions." "About as I thought," said Mr. Gardner. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 71 He half opened his lips, as if to go on, then he said, abruptly, "That will do," and I left him. For myself, I had not thus far entertained the slightest apprehension that there could be a war, although South Carolina had already "se ceded." I looked on it as a large game of brag by the politicians on both sides. I was so engaged in my daily work, that I had al most ceased to have but the one thought how to thrive in it. It may be humiliating to confess this, but I was one of a great class, who care little for any interests except what aifects their personal avocations. Going home I revolved in my mind the words and manner of my principal. He was evidently alarmed at the aspect of things. But even then, I could not bring myself to consider it to be serious. I was soon to be undeceived. The month of January satisfied the most hopeful merchant, that the worst was coming ; 72 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. if not in our national, at least in our commer cial affairs. I did not realize this; for I was inexperienced in reverses; but our firm did. I never shall forget my sensations when Mr. Gardner said to me in a quiet calm tone: "Powers, you will soon witness a great cri sis. All houses who have dealt with the South largely must break." I did not then think he included his own firm. He saw I did not, and continued, "You do not suppose we can lose three millions and go on, do you?" The clerks and employees of a large success ful mercantile house, regard their principal as soldiers do a favorite general: they not only feel safe with him, but no idea of disaster enters their minds while he commands. When Mr. Gardner asked me this question, it astounded me more than if he had struck me a blow in my face. The house of Gardner, Lynde & Co. riot go on! They stop! This magnificent edifice, with all its appurtenances HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 73 and appliances, be closed ! All the ramifications of this enormous business suspended ! My head swam. I think I must have been seized with faintness, for a moment after I found myself seated in a large arm-chair. Mr. Gardner regarded me with a compassion ate look. "My young friend," he said, "you have but yet learned your A B C in affairs. Doubtless you consider yourself a competent, well-trained merchant, and so you are ; but I repeat, it is only the A B C of commercial life that you have studied, which is the prosper ous, successful, sunny side. You can never be a full-grown man till you have experienced the reverse of this. If you are wise, the lesson you will soon learn will last you a lifetime. Try to make the most of it." " But," I interposed, " when this comes from no fault, mistake, or negligence of your own, it is very aggraA^ating." " On the contrary, that is why there is noth ing aggravating about it," said Mr. Gardner, 7-t ilmRY POWERS, BANKER. "and as to the cause," continued he, "I would rather be ruined fifty times over, and become literally a beggar than that our country should be scattered into fragments, and hold no longer a place as a great nation." Mr. Gardner continued the conversation much in the same strain. He saw how deeply I was aifected by what threatened him (for, truly, in this I had lost sight of the utter demolition of my own prospects), and he strove to impress on me a serviceable lesson. I returned home that evening prostrated in body and mind, with loss of courage, resolu tion, and energy. I did not dare speak with Carter, for I could not betray private confi dential remarks, so I had to suffer in silence. I went from that time to my daily labors, now labors indeed, with lead at my heart and a millstone around my neck, working painfully on through the winter, through the spring to April, through April to the 12th of that month, when the first gun against Sumter settled the HENKY POWEKS, BANKEK. 75 fate of our commercial house and changed for ever the destiny of the country. Long before this my feelings had been roused to the highest pitch of excitement. Mr. Gard ner himself was full of zeal and activity, so were all in the establishment. There was very little to attend to during the day, and in the evening the young men were busy drilling, while the more advanced among them were al ready waiting for marching orders. The older men were attending meetings of committees, devising plans to raise money to aid recruiting, and arranging for places in which to receive the soldiers. In short, doing every thing possible to aid and strengthen the government. The house of Gardner, Lynde & Co. sus pended: but what was that to the STOP threat ened the nation ! All was excitement, confusion, rapid prepara tion. The streets so recently filled with persons and vehicles employed only in peaceful pursuits, were resonant with the rattling of artillery 76 HENKY POWERS, BANK ICE. wagons, and the tramp of armed men, whose bright polished guns and bayonets glittered in the sunlight a strange, solemn spectacle. The parks were converted into barracks ; ad ditional hospital accommodations were got ready, and all the energies of the people directed to preparing for war. My resolution was taken. I wrote to my parents that I intended to enlist. My father, my thoughtful quiet father, returned immediate answer that he well knew what my decision would be before receiving my letter. He gave me many brave words of encouragement, and exhorted me to do my duty manfully. My mother added a trembling signature to my father's letter. I was soon at the head of a company of young men. I obtained a captain's commission without delay, and my regiment shortly after received orders to proceed to Washington. The story of the war is familiar to us all. Its history has been published in multifarious . HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 77 ways and forms. I do not propose to add a single chapter to it. During the summer campaign in Virginia my company were on one occasion deployed as skirmishers. While thus engaged, I was fired on from an ambush and received three bullets, one of which shattered my arm below the elbow, another inflicted a severe flesh wound in my thigh ; the third just missed my left lung. I dropped senseless and, as I was doubtless supposed to be dead, escaped being made prisoner. Later in the day the ground was occupied by our own troops, and I was borne off in a very exhausted and apparently dying state. But my hardy constitution, together with the excellent care I received in the hospital, saved my life, which, for some time, was in imminent danger. My wounds proved so serious that the surgeon was of opinion I could not again enter the service, and accordingly I received from the war department an honorable discharge. In the month of October I had sufficiently 78 HENKY POWERS, BANKER. recovered to be able to bear the journey home. How lovely looked iny native hills! The air, so pure and elastic, seemed to breathe fresh life in me. As we drove to the door my father and mother, who were anxiously expecting me, stood ready to lift me out, and I was soon reclining in my own little chamber, surrounded by every comfort, and cheered by the attentions of the entire neighborhood. My convalescence was rapid. I could take exercise, and with exercise came a renewal of force and vigor. I was quite the lion of the country round, as the first returned soldier of the war. I had come home severely wounded, and I was honored for what I had endured. CHAPTER X. BY the following spring I had regained my natural health and strength. During the long New Hampshire winter, I thought a great deal of what I was now to do. This had indeed become a serious question. As the spring opened I could no longer restrain myself. I must return to New York, though I had heard that every department of business was stagnant. As the phrase is, noth ing was doing. ISTot daunted, however, I started once more for the metropolis. It had the appearance of an armed camp. I sought my old boarding-house. It was not occupied. Carter I knew was in the war. So were nearly all my fellow-clerks. Mr. Gardner had gone to Europe in order to effect, if possible, some arrangement with his 80 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. creditors, nearly all of whom resided abroad, so that he might resume business. Not one of the old firm was in the city. I selected a respectable boarding-house, and took possession of a pleasant room assigned to me, for there was no lack now of empty apart ments, and at very moderate prices. On Sunday I was greeted by many old acquaintances, who seemed glad to see me, and who expressed the hope that I had quite recovered. I saw, how ever, that there was not the slightest danger of my being made a hero because I had been wounded. The city was full of just such heroes, their arms in slings, or on crutches, or sauriter T ing along pale and sickly-looking from loss of blood. When I left the service of Gardner, Lynde & Co. I had saved up about seventeen hundred dollars. My personal expenses preparing for the campaign were large. While stretched for dead on the field, I was despoiled of my watch and boots, and fifty dollars which were on my HENEY POWERS, BANKER. 81 person. My disbursements afterward further reduced my store, so that on arriving in New York I had scarcely two hundred dollars re maining. I spent several days looking about to mark the changes which had taken place, and to en deavor to get the run of affairs. Things were at a very discouraging ebb. Every species of property, real and personal, was selling at ruin ously low prices. Gold had not yet advanced beyond five or six per cent., and dullness char acterized the Stock Exchange. Passing one morning through Wall Street, I felt a hand placed familiarly on my shoulder, and heard a voice, which was not familiar, exclaim, "How are you?" I turned, and recognized the speaker as a person who used frequently to come to our place to introduce customers, or to offer an invoice of goods, from which a small commission was earned. With this man I had comparatively but a 82 HENRY POWEKS, BANKER. slight acquaintance. I had never been prepos sessed in his favor. His history I knew very well. His name was Horace Deams. He had the appearance of a person of forty-five, though I dare say he was considerably older. For prior to 1836 he had figured as partner in one of the largest silk houses in the city. Going down in the crash of 1837, he afterward successfully established himself as a wholesale grocer. Failing again in 1847, he recuperated once more, only to go down beyond hope of resuscitation in the finan cial maelstrom of 1857. After that, he maintained himself by introducing several of his old cus tomers to other houses, and acting as broker in various ways, in stocks, in merchandise, and in real estate ; sometimes, in more questionable schemes. This man was of an imposing, portly figure, and always dressed, not only handsomely, but with faultless taste. His face struck you, on first in troduction, as rather agreeable than otherwise. It HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 83 was not till you became better acquainted with him that you looked on it with aversion or disgust. Mr. Horace Deams maintained a suave, unc tuous pretension, differing entirely from the bold, egregious assumption of some men. He had so much business on his hands ! He must see an " important party " at two, and it lacked but five minutes of that hour. Another "party" had to be met at three, and no time was to be lost. Still another "party" would dine with him, that very day, when a large "operation" was to be entered into. It was, nevertheless, always easy to induce Mr. Deams to disregard these set hours, if any hope of a "transaction" could be held out, so that the young fellows about the establishment began at last to suspect that, in fact, he had not so very much to attend to after all. In my position, as one of the head men, Mr. Deams was by no means to my taste. I think he saw it, but it made no difference in his bland, oily dignity. 84: HENRY POWERS, BANKER. This was the individual that placed his hand on my shoulder, saying, " How are you ?" I never used to relish encountering Deams on any occasion. Now, the sight of him afforded me a species of pleasure. It reminded me of the time when we were in the full tide of business and every thing was moving prosperously. This man was associated in my mind with that period, and I returned his greeting with something of cordiality, not permitting myself to be unpleas antly affected by his patronizing air. After the first salutations, 1) n'-n i \cLiinied: " So you have got enough of fighting ?" "No, I have not," I retorted; "but I have been laid up for nine months, and do not expect to go back to the service at present." "Wise determination, young man," continued Deams, " very wise. Let the politicians fight it out, I say. They began it." "Mr. Deams, if you have no better opinions to express, I must wish yon good morning." "Not so fast, not so fast, Mr. Powers," re- HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 85 turned Deams, composedly. " Every one to his opinion, and you are welcome to yours. I wanted particularly to see you; very particularly." "Indeed?" " Yes. I have some business matters I want you to take hold of with me. Here is my office; step in just for one moment (he saw I hesitated), to see where I am." Mr. Deams led the way into a small basement room, in which was his desk and one or two chairs. " Good enough for such times as these," he observed, carelessly. " No rent to pay, you un derstand. The landlord was only too glad to have me occupy it ; much better for him than to leave it vacant, which is the situation of half the offices on the Street. But things are on the turn, mark me, I say, things are on the turn. I have been here the whole time watching for it." I might have remarked before that Deams was a man of quick observation, by no means deficient in intellect, and with his long and varied experi- 86 HENEY POWERS, BAXKEK. ence, not a bad judge of affairs generally. His last remark struck me, but I made no reply. "I want you to dine with me to-day, at five o'clock," he continued "sharp five," and Mr. Deams placed a card in my hand, with his name and address handsomely engraved on it. I hesitated a moment, and then said, "I will CHAPTER XI. IT is an old proverb, that misery makes one acquainted with strange bedfellows. I would never have believed it, had it been said of me twelve months before, that I should, on such a day, be dining with Horace Deams as his guest. I felt myself above this man ; first, as con nected with one of the strongest commercial houses in the city; again, from a satisfied sense of personal mercantile integrity. For recollect, reader, there is Pharisaism in affairs, marked and conspicuous; quite as marked and conspicuous as in religion. While walking along that afternoon, on my way to the residence of Deams, which I was rather surprised to find, by inspection of his card, to be in a fashionable quarter, I asked my- 88 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. self, what was my object in accepting his invita tion. Honesty compelled me to answer that it was because I hoped to derive some personal advantage from the visit. The idea humiliated me, but it was a fact, nevertheless. Things had so changed, that I was hoping for something to come of an interview with a man I had despised, and, I may say, did despise. I was learning my first lesson. On finding the number indicated, I perceived it to be a first-class boarding-house, and on in quiring for Mr. Deams, at the door, I was received by the man-servant with a great show of defer ence, and ushered to a handsome parlor on the second floor, where a table was elegantly laid with covers for two. A wine-cooler stood near, with champagne. Presently Deams entered from a side door, which I perceived led to his sleeping-room. He received me with easy politeness, in which was mingled a kind of pomposity, not altogether unbecoming his large, obese form. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 89 "I am glad to find you are punctual," he ob served. "Punctuality in all tilings, especially in appointments, more especially in a dinner appoint ment is one of the virtues." He rang the bell. "John, serve dinner." This order given, Mr. Deams proceeded. "Yes, punctuality is my motto ; without it, I could never get through the numerous operations which crowd upon me never." "I thought things were very dull at present?" I remarked. " Oh, I don't speak of the moment, I refer, generally, to what I have to do ; and the man does not exist who can say Horace Deams ever failed to meet an appointment. But here is dinner." We sat down, and the conversation, for a time, was nearly suspended. It was evident Mr. Deams had the tastes of an epicure, and was not will ing to interrupt his gastronomic delights by any attempt at discoursing, of which he was usually so fond. 90 HENKY POWERS, BANKEB. As Ms appetite gradually became less demand ing, he began to season the repast with various observations, oracularly delivered, until the des sert and wine only remaining to be dealt with he settled into a species of homily on the mor als of trade. I felt instinctively that the old fellow was endeavoring to corrupt me. In other words, he was trying to alter my standard of honesty. "Wait," said he, "till you have had my ex perience, and you will see things as they are. My family, as you know, are of the highest respectability. I inherited a handsome sum from my father, who brought me up closely to busi ness ; and, take my word for it, there was not a more competent or more active young man in the city. I was established early, on my own ac count, as partner in one of the leading houses just as good a house, my young friend, as that of Gardner, Lynde & Co. before they failed." I could not help wincing at the term "failed," HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 91 applied to such a castle of commercial strength as was our firm. "You will get used to such things in time," continued Mr. Deams, seeing that I changed color. "Your people were but men, and their means, like those of every merchant, 'in supposi tion,' as Shakespeare says, and 'there be land- rats, and water-rats' always attempting to gnaw a hole into them. No man can call himself safe, Mr. Powers, no man." I gave an assent to this general proposition. " To go back to myself," continued Mr. Deams. "The house in which I was a partner suspended; went all to flinders Why? -Not because we had not sufficient capital in the concern, for we had: but because people owed us more than the amount of that capital, and wouldn't or couldn't pay. I tried this three times," said Deams with a melancholy tone, after draining his glass of champagne and refilling it, "three times I tried it, and then 'out.' Now I want you to profit by my experience." 92 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. "It seems to me at that rate I should not go into business at all," I replied. "I don't say you would not be right. For it is a mere lottery, with nearly all blanks. Look at it, you spend your life slaving to sup port knaves, who cheat you out of your money and your earnings," "Not quite so bad as that I hope," "Yes it is. There is no real honesty, and not a particle of honor, in the whole ramifica tion of affairs." "I can not hear you say that without con tradiction," I retorted, with some warmth ; " I myself know to the contrary. I am acquainted with many individuals who are governed in their dealings by the most scrupulous ideas of honor and honesty." "All conventional, sir," returned Deams, waving his hand, as if brushing my remarks aside, "nothing but conventional. I tell you mere con ventional morality, is the morality of trade. I know what you are going to say," he continued, HENIIY POWEKS, BANKER. 93 "I know all the sacrifices the merchant is ready to make to meet his engagements, how he strains every nerve to sustain his credit. Again I ask you, why ? Because not to meet those engagements ruins him, and to allow his credit to suffer, is to commit suicide. So, keeping up one's credit is keeping up one's self. It is all selfishness, nothing but selfishness looking out for number one. Nothing high-minded or honor able about it. Talleyrand gave the correct defi nition of 'business,' when he declared it to be 'IS argent cVautres' other folk's money; ha, ha, ha; other folk's money." The working in of this little scrap of French appeared to soothe Mr. Deams's feelings, for he continued in a much less excited manner. As I saw it was useless to discuss the sub ject with him, I endeavored to gradually draw him from it. This was not easy. He evidently was determined to finish his discourse. At the same time, he mixed so much shrewd sense with his observations and his arguments to prove the 91 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. morals of trade were any thing but good morals, showed so much insight in the motives of a large class, that I confess I listened with inter est, while I shook my head at his conclusions. Dinner was at length over. Deams lighted his cigar, after offering me one, and wheeling his chair round into a friendly relation with mine, he commenced : " Now, Mr. Powers, for what I want to say to you. This present state of stag nation is over: things begin to work. We are getting on a war basis. We shall have the largest sort of operations on foot growing out of it. You are just the one to take advan tage of this, and I am just the one to pilot you. Speculation will begin this very summer. The Government are getting ready their paper money, and it will put every thing under full headway by Fall. Another year and things will be ram pant." " What prevents your taking advantage of it ?" I asked. " c Horace Deams ' I mean the name is played HENRY POWEKS, BANKEK. 05 out, my friend, played out. I am making an honest confession. It no longer goes current. I can not conjure with it as I used to. I know how to originate, how to plan, and advise, but I must have a fresh man to exe cute, you see. The speculative world likes things with new faces, and new men to operate them, and we must humor it." I did not manifest the least enthusiasm at the announcement of Mr. Deams's proposition. On the contrary I maintained an ominous si lence. " You certainly do not misunderstand me, when speaking of myself," he exclaimed, in a tone of some alarm. " ~No one sustains a bet ter social position in this city than I. No one has a higher reputation as a man of honor. But old enterprises have passed away and old ideas. This is a new era ; an era of new men ; an era, I may say, of young men. I hope, Mr. Powers, you do not misunderstand me ?" "Oh, no. I do not think, however, I shall 96 HENBY POWERS, BANKER. prove a good hand at what you call specula tion." " The very best in the world, sir, take my word for it." " What makes you think so." " Well," replied Deams, hesitating in the most natural manner, "I really do riot want to flatter you, Mr. Powers, but you have what I call a first- class address." " I hope you mean an honest address," said I, unable to keep from laughing. " That is just what I do mean," said Deams, seriously. "And you do not expect me, I hope, to do any thing dishonest under cover of this ad dress ?" " Oh, no, no, no," exclaimed Deams in a depre catory tone, coloring at the same time. " How oddly you take matters." "Not at all. I wished merely to arrive at your exact meaning." "It is this, Mr. Powers. Your business con- HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 97 nections are good. You yourself fresh, active, and persevering. A proper enterprise in your hands mark you, I say, a good, honest enter prise in your hands, with me for an adviser, will be sure to succeed. That is just what I mean." We continued the conversation, much in this way, late into the evening. In conclusion, Mr. Deams was very anxious I should make his office my head-quarters. He said that I had better spend the early part of the season in accustom ing myself to the ways of the Street, which were not to be learned in a counting-room ; and that, although things were dull, I could, no doubt, do something as stock-broker, " which is always," said Mr. Deams, soothingly, " respectable highly respectable quite different from your poor devil of a note-broker." At length I bade my new friend good-night, without committing myself to any of his pro positions, but gave a partial promise to call on him the next day. 98 HENRY FOWEES, BANKER. As I walked home that evening I felt a sense of diminution such as I never before ex perienced. It was in consequence of my com panionship with a man who endeavored to weaken my faith in human nature ; a man whose judgment of others was formed by always at tributing to them selfish motives. Still were not his judgments in the main cor rect ? Perhaps so, but the rationale was a low one. I resolved not to go near Mr. Deams's office, but endeavor to secure something to do in a mercantile establishment. I found my situation very different from what it was when I first entered New York. Then, as a youth almost, I could lay my hand to any thing; could take up with any thing that would honestly procure me a living. Now, as an educated merchant, after occupying the posi tion I had done with Gardner, Lynde & Co., it was scarcely consistent with my self-respect to begin my career again as assistant porter or HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 99 errand boy, even if I could get such a place, which a lad of nineteen could much better fill. I made many inquiries, and found to my mortification that Deams had not exaggerated the stagnation in trade. I was greatly discouraged and out of spirits. The small amount of money I had would not last long. What was to be done ! While in this state I again encountered this man. He was excessively cordial. He made no allusion to my not calling on him; he only asked if I had been out of town, and said he had just received a small commission to execute for the purchase of some merchandise, which he would give to me, as it was quite in my line. He told me what it was, and I proceeded with him to his office to get the particulars, and was delighted to find the matter to be as Deams had stated. I started at once to fill the order, which my knowledge and experience enabled me to do in a very satisfactory manner. The commission earned 100 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. was not large, but it was promptly paid. Deams indignantly refused to share it with me. He was only happy to throw something in my way. He was sure I would do the same by him if opportunity presented. CHAPTER XII. I will not weary the reader with the details of the two or three succeeding months. Indeed, I can not myself bear to recall them. By degrees I became more habituated to the society of Deams. His flow of spirits was con stant. The future was to him a vast treasure- house. He would make my fortune and his own long before another twelvemonth passed. Mean time, if I cared to trouble myself with insignifi cant commissions, he could throw plenty of them in my way. In fact, he sometimes did so. In spite of my mental resistance, the man be gan to take the position of benefactor. It is true, I had no respect for him, and he must have known it, but alas! I began to have less and less respect for myself. 102 HENRY. POWERS, BANKER. I used to wonder how Beams got the money to live as he did, and at length I asked him the question. He laughed, and said, "Do you remember Burke's famous apostrophe to the credit system ?" "No." "You should read it. I can only say it meets my entire approval." " Do you mean that you get your apartments without paying for them?" " I shall pay, of course," said Deams, " but not till we launch one of the many great enter prises I have on foot. I confess I owe my land lady a pretty good sum. So much the better. She has made the investment, and it won't do for her to ask me to quit, lest she should lose it. I keep the bait always before her and stay on." " Shameful," I exclaimed, " perfectly shame ful !" "How so?" said Deams. "Don't I tell you I intend to pay her? And I shall add a hand- HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 103 some douceur for her forbearance, but she must wait she must wait." When I left Gardner, Lynde & Co., I thought I knew New York and its business, and the ways of doing business ; but after being awhile in Wall Street I was obliged to confess myself a novice. I met a good many people whom I knew, and occasionally was -enabled to do something in a legitimate way. Sometimes I was made a dupe of, but not twice, I think, in the same way. Once an old fellow by the name of Eli Nich ols, who had an office in which he used to " shave " notes and attend to various transactions, gave me an order to purchase some land war rants for him at a certain price. I went industriously about, inquiring for them at all the leading brokers, but could find none, though the nominal quotation was two or three per cent, below my limits. I reported to Nichols my want of success* 104: HENRY POWERS, BANKER. He thanked me for the trouble I had taken, and said I need do no more about it. I after ward learned that, at that time, he was the prin cipal holder of land warrants, and close on my inquiries, had sent an outside "party" to every place where there was the least probability of my having called, and offered a limited amount of these very warrants, which were quickly taken, in the expectation of selling to me. The old knave in this way disposed of about five hundred warrants, and cleared at least fifteen hundred dol lars by his morning's work. Shortly after three o'clock there was quite a rush to Nichols's office to sell, but he was "not buying at present." As the reader will understand, I was entirely innocent. I had only been made a tool of. The affair mortified me exceedingly, but I made no complaint to Nichols. He would only have laughed at me had I done so. Thus the weeks slipped by, with Deams as my HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 105 chief companion. My occupations were petty, yet they required the exercise of a species of craft to manage them. Whenever I allowed myself to think, I was disgusted with them and with myself. But this became more and more seldom. There is a fascination about the uncertain rapid changes of the Street which attracts and chains one there whenever once actually engaged in them : and, like the strange spell of the gambling-table, exercises an inexplicable power. I was not as yet making enough to pay my expenses. Deams continued to ridicule my in dustrious habit of trying to do something. "Wait," he said, "till Fall, and you shall make all the money you want all you want." It was on a ho': Saturday afternoon, early in July, that, after a particularly profitless week, my spirits sank lower than usual. It was in vain Deams endeavored to encourage me. At last he said : " Come, let us run down to Long Branch and spend Sunday, and see the world in pleasure costume." 5* 106 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. I assented moodily. We got on board the steamer for Port Monmouth, and in due time were landed there ; then, taking the train, we arrived in a few minutes at that famous place of summer resort. The bracing sea-air, the excitement of the scenery around, the crowded beach, the whirl of handsome carriages along it, the motley groups of bathers, gave a new direction to my thoughts, and for the time I forgot my other self the wretched inhabitant of the " Street." By Monday, I had resolved to spend two or three days more at the sea-shore, and let Deams return to town alone. He assented readily and with entire good nature, and I was left to my enjoyment. That was indeed great. I did not attempt to make acquaintances I had no desire to do so but I quietly mixed in the crowd or took my solitary walk along the shore or my bath in old ocean. The beach, as most of my readers may know, is a dangerous one for those who venture outside 5* HKNRT POWERS, BANKER. 107 the prescribed limits. Nearly every year some one, from folly or negligence, goes beyond and perishes. I was a good swimmer. I had learned in the swift and sometimes treacherous current of the Con necticut. It was with a real zest that I threw myself into the surf and watched the course of the waves and breasted the dreaded " undertow." Wednesday came before I could realize a day had passed; Wednesday, when I was to return to New York. I resolved on one more grand swim ; I should just have time to take it and get ready for the train. It was a little past eleven. The surf was alive with human beings. What a masquerade ! Age and sex would seem to be perfectly disguised in the strange-looking dresses of every possible de scription, form, and color. A great many of these were fanciful and expensive, and all were grotesque. I suppose the line of bathers extended up and down for nearly two miles a curious sight. Everybody was in the noisiest spirits; an odd scene, indeed. 108 HENBY POWEKS, BANKER. I had taken my last plunge, and was slowly and reluctantly coming in shore, when there was a kind of lull in the frolic of the merry makers. A portentous murmur passed along the line, Soon it took articulate shape. " There she is !" " Where ?" " Which way ?" " Good God ! it is not possible." " What is it ?" ft " What has happened ?" " A lady carried out !" " Oh ! won't somebody help ?" " Can nothing be done!" "Where is a boat?" "Can't some one get a boat?" All this, mingled with various cries and ex-* clamations, fell on my ear in the space of an. in^ stant. Asking a person near me, who appeared less excited than the rest, where the lady had disap-> peared, I took my resolution. I had previously gained a pretty accurate knowledge of the sweep of the undertow which did not run at once ward but was drawn to the south, in the di tion where I was standing, in a deep, powerful current. HENKY POWERS, BANKER. 109 I struck out boldly toward the point I judged she would be carried to. No one not familiar with such scenes can imagine the difficulties I had to encounter. The continuous break of the waves over my head blinded me, and would have immediately strangled any one not accustomed to the water. I could not see. I could only grasp wildly round. I perceived my strength to be failing, and I was losing courage, when a clear voice from the shore sounded over the waters " To the right! more to the right!" This put new life in me. I struck to the right accordingly. "Not quite so far!" "There!" "There!" " Just before you ! " Thus far I had seen no sign or trace of the object of my search. Now, as the crest of the last wave broke over me, I perceived on the top of the succeeding one a something, rag or sea weed, or broken branch ; something which, the next moment clutching, I found was a human being. 1 10 HENBY POWERS, BANKEE. I had still strength enough to secure my prize, and sufficient appreciation to turn not directly to the shore, but diagonally, so that I should not encounter the whole force of the un dertow, and yet gradually work myself toward the beach. I remember little else, except the rush of a flood, a cataract, then a sense of delight, almost ecstatic, and all was still. CHAPTER XIII. MY next sensations were terrible. I can compare them to nothing, unless to the im agined horrors caused by the wrangling of fiends in possession of one's soul. No hitherto de scribed agonies of death were equal to what I suffered in coming to life. At last I opened my eyes. I was in a large airy apartment, where every thing appeared pleasant and comfortable. I essayed to speak, but was prevented by the physician. I looked toward a lady who stood watching me with apparent solicitude. She seemed to anticipate what was passing in my mind, for she said, "You have saved one life, you must not en danger your own by any exertion." I was satisfied. Closing my eyes again, I fell into a profound slumber. I did not awake 112 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. till evening. I felt quite well, though I was weak. It was evident I was receiving the most careful attention, for no sooner did I stir than a kind-looking woman, who was acting as nurse, offered me a soothing draught, which I drank eagerly. Then she asked how I felt. I was permitted to speak now, and I replied "Per fectly well, and very hungry." "How is the lady?" I asked. "She is getting on remarkably, though it would doubtless have killed an older person." "Is it a child?" I inquired, carelessly. " Then you do not know who it is you have saved?" " No." " Have you no curiosity about it ?" " Not very much." "I must tell you, though. One of the most beautiful young ladies that ever lived. Ever so rich; and the very top of the fashion. A New Yorker besides, Miss Worth, Hiss Mary Worth." HENRY POWERS, BANKER. '113 How much further the nurse might have gone in her description I do not know, but the doctor entering cut it short. To his in quiries I replied that I believed I was perfectly well, only suffering from hunger. However, he permitted me to eat but sparingly, with the promise of further liberty the next day. I closed my eyes to keep the nurse from talking. I wanted to enjoy the pleasure of thinking. "Miss Worth: Miss Mary Worth." I knew very well who she was as the nurse said, a very rich and fashionable young lady. Her father, Marmaduke Worth, President of the Bank of Mutual Safety, and one of the capital ists of New York. He, with his family, attended the same church I had, myself, selected when first coming to New York. Yes, I knew Miss Worth well by sight, and should have greatly admired her, doubtless, for she was considered the most beautiful girl in a congregation where there were a great number of beauties, had I not steeled my heart like a flint against any such 114: ' HENEY POWEES, BANKEK. fascination. Besides, I was too proud to think of any rich girl until I myself was rich. I lay in a charming reverie. " O yes, I recollect her perfectly, every feature, how she dresses, the hat she wears, she is rather tall, not too tall, "beautiful form, such a complexion. I remember her eyes, too. She half bowed to me once, from long habit, I suppose, seeing me in church. I took no notice of it; rather savage that. And I have saved her, that very girl. Had it not been for me, she would now she is alive and not injured that lovely saved very beautiful" The reverie I have endeavored to jot down ran gradually into dream, ending in sound sleep. The second day I felt so well that I rose and dressed myself,, and bade good-bye to my nurse and physician. I walked slowly over to the hotel where the Worths were staying, and inquired of the health of Miss Worth. The mother came into the room immediately. I recog- HENRY POWEKS, BANKER. 115 it nized her as the person who had enjoined pru dence on me the first day. After seeing her daughter in safety, she had come to see that I was properly cared for. Mr. Worth shortly entered the room. I will not repeat the extrava gant expressions of gratitude which the lady uttered. " We owe you every thing, Mr. Powers, in owing to you our daughter's preservation," said Mrs. Worth. "To think of that wretched creature," she exclaimed, "who first persuaded Mary to ven ture farther, and then abandoned her to her fate: the poltroon who was always boasting of what he could do in the water." It was embarrassing to be made the recipi ent of such a shower of thanks and blessings as Mrs. Worth poured on me. Mr. Worth stood by in silence. At length his wife paused, when he took occasion to express himself in a most heartfelt manner. "I can not feel that I am in any way de serving such demonstrations," I said. "I did as 116 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. any one would have done in my situation. I heard that a lady was carried away by the undertow I did not know who and being ac customed to the water, did what was most natu ral. I beg you not to consider yourselves under any obligation to me personally." "Just think of that Manning," broke in Mrs. "Worth. " Who is he ?" I asked. " He is the young gentleman," said Mr. Worth calmly, " who accompanied Miss Worth to bathe; He has the reputation of being an excellent swimmer." "And stood by quietly to see Mary drown," exclaimed Mrs. Worth. "Let us say no more about it," said her husband. " Our daughter is safe, and if you will call to-morrow she will be able, I hope, to thank you in person." Despite my resolve against it, I thought of little else except the next day's interview. I did every thing to kill the time till then. It HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 117 was useless to conceal a certain agitation as I sent my name in, and was ushered into the private parlor. Miss Worth rose to greet me in an unaf fected manner; she had scarcely grasped my hand, however, before she burst into tears. Her mother appeared much alarmed as she made her sit down. Miss Worth soon recovered her composure, and looking up, she said very naturally, "Excuse me, I could not help it." I had a very happy interview. After the first few minutes the conversation took a famil iar turn and flowed easily. Miss Worth gave me an account of how stie came in so great peril. She was standing, she said, with Mr. Manning who had hold of her hand, and who had assured her there was no danger, when she suddenly felt herself feorne off her feet and carried away. "Were you conscious when I seized you?" "Yes. From the first I did not attempt to 118 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. struggle, and in this way I think I retained my consciousness." The morning call lasted over an hour it seemed to me a minute when I left, promising to repeat my visit the following day. In this way one day succeeded another, dur ing which my intercourse with Miss Worth became more and more free and unrestricted. She was now well enough to take the usual walks along the beach, in which I was always her companion. Two weeks glided by literally with out my being aware of it. I forgot my condi tion, my surroundings, my very self, in her society. I can not now recollect how I acted or what I said, for it was one prolonged halcyon dream. I was rudely wakened from it one morning by overhearing a conversation in the corridor into which my room opened. It happened my door was ajar, and I could not shut my ears to what was passing between two young men. I soon perceived I was the subject of their remarks. HENHY POWERS, BANKER. "He will feather his nest, and no mistake," said one. "That's a fact. It was what I call a lucky swim." "I wouldn't have taken it, though, for all the girls in New York." "Perhaps not, but Powers knows the surf like a book." "They say they are to be married this fall." "Yes, but the old fellow don't like the idea at all. Would rather give Powers a cool twenty- five thousand, and balance the account in that way. The mother, I am told, goes in for Powers." "And the girl?" " Oh, she is all right, of course." " Shouldn't care about earning a wife that way." "Nor I. A Newfoundland dog might have done as good service." "That's a fact." A sickness came over me. I walked to the window for air. 120 HEXKT POWERS, BANKER. Swiftly it was all revealed. The old hard destiny stared me in the face. I decided at once on my course. The train would leave in half an hour. I walked to the hotel where the Worths were staying. It was too early for a call: so much the better. I sent my card for Mr. Worth. He came down. I told him I was there to say good-bye, and asked him to have the kindness to give my adieus to His wife and daughter. Despite his real politeness, I could see an evident expression of relief overspread his counte nance. "The ladies will be sorry not to see you, Mr. Powers," he said. " I will communicate- your message. When we return to town we shall expect to meet you. And," here he hesitated, "if if I can be of of any service to you in in affairs, may I ask it as a favor, my dear sir, that you will command me?" I gulped down an indignant reply, for the words I heard in the morning were sounding HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 121 in my ears, and said as calmly as I could, "Thank you," and thus the interview ended. Iii twenty minutes I was driving toward the station. I turned and gave one glance at the room I knew was occupied by Miss Worth. The window was thrown open, and a fair hand waved an adieu from it CHAPTER XIV. THE adventure at Long Branch happened just as I was five and twenty. That extra salt-water bath brought about a partial crisis in my destiny. My impression is that just at that time I was fast lapsing into a mere hanger-on of Wall Street ; half reconciled to the idea of living from hand to mouth, and becoming less and less particular as to the method of raising the means. I did not then have any such opinion of my self, but now looking back to the period, I do it with something like a shudder, for I can see just what I escaped. The fact is, although, as I have before re marked, I did not sympathize with the views of life entertained and promulgated by Deams, al though I could not call him an honest man, even after a tolerably low standard of honesty, yet, HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 123 consenting to act with him, at least to co-operate with him, I was insensibly drifting down to his standard and falling in with his notions of mo rality ; which, as the reader understands, were of " The world owes me a living " school ; when the terrible undertow of old ocean gave me a surge in the opposite direction. Then was swiftly, suddenly exhibited to me, just a glimpse of the great BEYOND, and my feel ings were still too fresh not to receive a sharp impression from the PRESENT. Besides Mary Worth. No matter what should come of so peculiar an introduction, even should nothing come of it, as was most likely, in deed proper, still an event of my life was irrev ocably interwoven with an event of the life of a beautiful young girl; one in whom already I had, despite myself, taken a romantic interest; an in terest such as only young persons can appreciate; and with whom I was unexpectedly associated in an occurrence never to be obliterated from her memory. 121 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. The thought of Deams in this connection was absolutely abhorrent to me. During my journey homeward, I took a new survey of the situation. "What does Deams want of me? What does he expect from the connec tion? After all, am I not to become his dupe when the occasion serves, just as Eli Nichols made a tool of me in the matter of the land- warrants ? Again: was it really to be credited that, as Deams would have me suppose, there was nothing going on in Wall Street but "Pitch and toss," and no rule of the game but " Heads I win, tails you lose," "Hardest fend off," and so forth? Were there not enterprises requiring quick wit, energetic action, firm nerve, and praiseworthy pru dence, which should partake neither of trick, hum bug, or rascality ? Why, then, should I allow a shallow pretender, thrice broken in fortune and of doubtful integrity, to take advantage of my fresh strength and buoyant feelings and uninjured name? HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 125 It was with such reflections that I was pre pared to enter New York once more. The recollection of Mary Worth at the win dow, and of her parting salutation, determined me, and with the strength of a Hercules bracing every nerve, I resolved to renew the contest with other plans- and firmer hopes and more honest appliances, And so I came to the great Babel again, CHAPTER XV. READER, I wish I could stop here ! You be hold me in the full enjoyment of a fresh, unhack neyed and honest resolution. But what says the proverb ? " Hell is paved with good intentions." It were a pleasant way to round a stojry, to de pict to you how this sudden change wove a new web for my future, and left nothing for me to do but rise rapidly in the scale under the effect of these new impulses, and of the patronage and assistance of Marmaduke Worth, President of the Bank of Mutual Safety. I have a pretty long history to recount before I can indulge in any such record, if, indeed, any such is to come. Not that my late resolves were cast aside. Oh, no. I had taken a wrong step by my connection with Deams, and it was not so easy to retrace it. On reaching town, that individual was the HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 127 first to welcome me. I found him at my lodg ings, waiting my coming, as he knew I was to arrive that afternoon. His treatment of me was so flattering, his manner so kind, I may say so deferential, that I lost sight of the unpleasant thoughts I had enter tained of him, or if remembered, it was with self-reproach that I could do an unfortunate man so much injustice, Deams had heard very full accounts of the Long Branch adventure. The journals were filled with it, and my exertions, severe as they really were, had been magnified to grace their columns. Deams had placed the files, which he had carefully preserved, on my table, and I read, dis played in immense headings, with double leads : "EXTRAORDINARY OCCURRENCE AT LONG BRANCH. Display of Marvelous Strength, Dexterity, and Heroism. 128 HENRY POWEES, BANKER. A YOUNG LADY SAVED FROM THE JAWS OF DESTRUCTION. A RESCUE AFTER BEING SWEPT OUT INTO THE OCEAN. HENRY POWERS, Esq., A Young New Yorker, the Hero. Miss MARY WORTH, DAUGHTER OF MARMADUKE WORTH, ESQ., PRESIDENT OF THE BANK OF MU TUAL SAFETY, THE YOUNG LADY SAVED." Following these announcements were " Details by an Eye-witness" "Further Details" "A Cor rection" "An additional Correction;" which last stated " positively and on the very best authority, that Mr. Algernon Manning did NOT make any attempt to save Miss Worth, but devoted himself solely to secure his own safety." "You see, you see," said Deams triumphantly. "I always considered you a trump. I saw 'luck' in your face the first moment I met you, but I did not think you would throw double sixes so soon." Although I could not but be flattered by what I read, the observation of Deams sounded HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 129 coarse and repulsive. When, therefore, he went on to say : " Powers, this affair is worth more to us than a cash deposit to our credit of fifty thousand dollars," my late disgust and suspicion revived. " How so ? " I asked, curtly, "Why, don't you understand," he replied, with an air of triumph, "that the favor of Mar- madtfke Worth is the best capital you can have to work on in the Street ? " "Do you think I would take advantage of it?" I exclaimed scornfully. "Do you mean to say you wouldn't take ad vantage of it?" retorted Deams, holding his breath. "That is just what I mean to say, Mr. Deams," was my defiant response. "Then you are an idiot, and no mistake," was the rejoinder. I saw the folly of an altercation with Deams, and, on the other hand, he had no disposition to enter on one with me, so after a few words, the 6* 130 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. subject was changed, he no doubt believing I could in time be induced to embrace his sugges tions, while I felt sure I should never bring my self to so debasing a situation. Another matter perhaps insensibly weighed with me, when I decided it was foolish to fall out with Deams. I had returned from Long Branch, after paying my bills, with scarcely five dollars in my pocket. Going there to spend Sun day, I remained two weeks, and the small sum which I possessed had melted clean away. How difficult, from very highest to very low est, to get rid of an association once formed. I found myself, in spite of myself, that very evening in close consultation with Deams about two or three enterprises, where I could not avoid perceiving that the most was to be made of the fact that my name was " free and clear ; " which means, reader, that I had never failed in busi ness, and owed nothing. " By Jove," said Deams y " I wish I stood in your shoes, Powers; I mean financially. Wouldn't HENRY POWERS,. BANKER. 131 1 make a fortune, though! Why, a man who owes nothing and has three cents over, can pass for a millionaire." With all the nonsense Deams was in the habit of uttering, he frequently let drop a sen tence which served to set me thinking. This ob servation was one of that kind. I recorded it in my memorandum book, and it was of use to me on future occasions. " Well, Mr. Deams, if you could make a for tune were you in my place, you can doubtless instruct me how to make one," I responded pleasantly. " Of course I can," he replied ; " that is what we are together for. I have, as you see, several enterprises on hand. In a few days I shall decide which will draw best, and we will then set to work." " Meanwhile " "Meanwhile what?" interrupted Deams, sharp ly, as if suspicious that I was about to raise fur ther objections. 132 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. " Meanwhile, nothing," I answered, " except that I am out of money." "Is that all," said Deams. "Don't let that distress you. I will put you all right to-morrow. Depend on me for that." The next day Deams handed me, for my signature, a beautifully prepared " promissory note," in which the maker, myself, promised to pay to the order of Ezeldel Hubbard, sixty days after date, the sum of five hundred and fifty dollars, value received. "Sign this," said Deams, "and I will get you the money in fifteen minutes." " Where ? " " Never you mind where, the money will come, I have already arranged for it." " Mr. Worth ? " I asked suspiciously. "Don't be such a fool, I beg of you," said Deams, with an injured air. " Mr. Worth, you know, is not in town, and do you think I would attempt such a thing after what you have said ?" "But I don't want five hundred and fifty HENKY POWERS, BANKER. 133 dollars. If I must attempt to borrow, fifty is the most I should apply for." " Which would at once destroy your credit," retorted Deams. "Henry Powers borrowing fifty dollars, indeed ! I should like to see him try it as long as I am his friend. The fact is," con tinued Deams confidentially, "I am a trifle be hind myself. I want, say, a couple of hundred dollars; I will stand all the shave. In sixty days people will be back in town, and our com pany under way ; we shall then have all the cash we require for any purpose." " But why don't you have this note drawn to your order ? And who, pray, is. Ezekiel Hubbard ?" - " Do you not understand that my name would kill the paper? Every one knows there are lots of judgments against me, and nobody knows any thing against Ezekiel Hubbard, I'll be bound," said Deams, laughing. "But who is he?" " No matter who he is. I will tell you, though, as a joke. He is the old fellow who saws wood 134 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. and does odd jobs for me at the house, and he makes a first-rate indorsement, no mistake about it," and Deams laughed again. I was learning rapidly. The great lesson was, for Wall Street uses, to keep your name so at least nothing can be said against it; and I made another note of that, marking it specially im portant. "So you will not tell now where the money is to come from?" "Yes I will, though," said Deams quickly, "and then you will have the whole story. Eli Nichols will give it to me." "How much off?" " Fifty dollars," said Deams stoutly. "Which you propose to lose?" "Yes." "How can you afford it?" " Why, am I not to have over thirteen thou sand dollars early in September from one of the matters we talked over last night ? " exclaimed Deams triumphantly ; " and do you think I mind HENKY POWERS, BANKET?. 135 a trifle like this if it serves to give you a lift, and keep us both easy until then ? " "Well, for my part," I rejoined, "I don't like this at all ; however, I will think it over and decide to-morrow." To-morrow? There is the mistake. We hesi tate and cry to-morrow, and when it comes, there is, alas, no improvement over yesterday. On the contrary, the necessity is stronger; w r e see a way out of the immediate distress, and we accept the present relief, unmindful of what is to come of it. Deams practiced the usual trick of his kind ; he undertook to serve my wants and mixed his own larger ones up with them, thus involving me to an extent in his necessities while appear ing to relieve mine. It requires a good deal of assurance, certainly, to profess to be doin^ one a great and needful service, when in reality you are actually extorting a favor instead; but Deams was not lacking in impudence, and I yielded, almost without know- 136 HENRY POWEBS, BANKER. ing why, and against my better judgment, to his suggestion. I thought much about it, however; indeed, that night I slept very little. "What if I am somewhat behind?" I said to myself, "I have several friends who would not hesitate to lend me a small sum. Why not borrow it? In a few days I can make it good." Then pride interposed, while Deams' subtle argument came to mind, that to borrow a small sum would injure my credit. In short, it was by a moral weakness such as ninety-nine of a hundred exhibit, that I de cided to embrace Deams' offer. So the note was signed, and Ezekiel Hubbard indorsed it, and the same day Deams gave me, as agreed upon, three hundred dollars. How much he received I never knew, but I dare say Eli Nichols retained a hundred dollars instead of fifty. Yes, I had the three hundred dollars ; but, per contra, time was running away with the sixty HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 137 days, when five hundred and fifty dollars were to be paid. Would Deams be ready with his por tion ? I was sufficiently doubtful of the answer to this question to make me careful of the money I received, and except the small sum I had im mediate use for, I laid by the whole, determining to practice the strictest economy and make every effort to get something ahead before the note should mature. As for Deams, he left for Saratoga the day after the affair, and I did not see him again for two or three weeks. About this time Eli Nichols sent for me to come to his office, I went accordingly. He re ceived me very cordially, and after a few words of a general nature, desired me to make certain brokers an offer for some of the bonds of the Elkton and Buffalo Railroad Company, which were then much depreciated. I saw in the re quest the repetition of the land-warrant trick, and quietly declined the business. Eli was much chagrined by my refusal. He 138 HENBY POWERS, BANKEK. asked what was the matter, " Did I object to earning a commission ?" " Oh no," I replied. " What then ?" said Eli. * " You have never paid me for helping you to make fifteen hundred dollars by the sale of those warrants, and I want you to close that account before we open a new one." The old fellow flew in a rage. "Young man," said he, " perhaps you desire to quarrel with me. Let me tell you I have driven more than one chap out of the Street who undertook to run against me. I advise you to be getting the money together to pay your note due next month." "Mr. Nichols," I exclaimed, rising as I spoke, " I have no desire to quarrel with you, but I had as lief do so as not. As to my note, if you will make it an object, I will take it up now. What say you ?" "Time enough when it is due, youngster," re torted the old fellow. "Then you will be down HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 139 on your marrow-bones for an extension. Don't you think you will get it ?" " Good-day, Mr. Nichols, I perceive you are a little irritated. I will call again some time. Per haps we can agree on a price for the note," and I left, without having my temper ruffled in the slightest. This was a real triumph. To show myself in dependent of the class to which Eli Nichols be longed was a great thing. It taught them I was not to become their serf Or bondman, and made me feel stronger by the lesson. I was exceedingly perplexed, nevertheless, what to do, and I was very glad I had been careful to save my money. It was now the dullest period of the summer, with really nothing doing. Nearly every one of my acquaintances was away, and even Wall Street appeared deserted. The return of Deams was to me a welcome event, for, with all my resolution, I began to be very desponding. I could see the current of wealth sweep by, and 140 HENRY POWEKS, BANKEK. was not able to swim with it or in it. I was only an idle spectator, when I felt that I had the capacity to take part with the strongest. When with Gardner, Lynde & Co., I had op portunities of meeting the best business men of the city, and often wondered how such and such a one had risen to wealth and influence on what seemed to me so small a mental capital. I had not yet learned that it is not apt to be the " smart " man, so called, who ultimately suc ceeds, but rather the careful, industrious, per sistent person. I was chafed because there appeared to be no chance for getting a foot-hold, and so I told Deams on our first interview when he was just from the Springs. " Served you right," he exclaimed : " no busi ness to be sitting here in the dumps when there was nothing for you to do. Knew it would be just so. You ought to have come with me. I have had a grand time, and am home fresh and fine, and ready to sit down with triple energy to HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 141 the great scheme; for while I have been away I have decided what and when and how ! You must take hold in earnest and your fortune is made." What the " great scheme " was, I will pres ently explain. CHAPTER XVI. I DO not think, in giving this literal history of my life, I should be doing justice to that which I consider the mainspring, did I not speak more particularly of it; since it was now woven into my very being. Each succeeding day I felt that this influence grew stronger and stronger. So far from trying to resist it, I rejoiced in it and in the abnegation I proposed to myself under it. I knew the feel ing I entertained toward Mary Worth was in every respect genuine, and honorable to my nature. It helped me to preserve my self-respect when I was tempted to yield to the suggestions of the moment, for I confess I was sustained by no deep well-grounded principle. The idea of what she would think of me, could she know what I was doing, saved me HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 143 from lapsing into a state of recklessness or indifference, and preserved always within me a strong ultimate resolution to become worthy of her that is, worthy of what I conceived her to be. I say ultimate resolution, because there are degrees in moral obliquity as well as in moral excellence. Often when I was engaged in something I could not justify to myself, I would say, "this is unworthy of me." Yet I would go on with the performance. This was done, however, under a sort of pro test of my better self against my worser self; and this is why I use the phrase "ultimate" with reference to what I was, and what it seemed as if I might one day become. In this connection let me observe that I de termined, when the Worth family should return to town, that I would claim no acquaintance with any member of it beyond the ordinary saluta tion. They should all understand, and especially 144- HENRY POWERS, BA.NKEK. she should understand, I demanded nothing from the accident of having saved her life. One day, it was early in September, and be fore the Worths had returned, I met Mr. Worth, who usually came in two or three times a week, face to face on the sidewalk. He stopped me as I was passing, and gave me his hand very cordially. "I intended to call on you, Mr. Powers, before this," he said, " but when I am in the city I am usually much hurried till I get out of it. In two or three weeks my family will be in town, and I shall then have a better opportunity for seeing you and learning if in any way I can be useful to you." It was delicately put, and in a manner that could not offend my pride ; but I was resolved then and there to define my position apropos of the Long Branch adventure. " Mr. Worth," I replied, " I am greatly obliged to you for your kindness, but you must permit me to say I have no intention of drawing on it. The nature of the accident which made us ac- HKNBY POWERS, BANKER. 145 quainted, precludes any possibility of my taking advantage of it to further my interests. I hope Miss Worth has entirely recovered," " She is quite wellj" answered Mr. Worth, hur riedly, " quite well, I am thankful to say. Young man," he continued, "I honor you ! Good morning." " I honor you !" The words came spontaneously out of the heart of the old experienced man of Wall Street, I repeated them several times to myself. "I honor you : I honor you !" What was the capital of fifty thousand dollars which Deams had talked of compared with the reward I had just received ? Would I exchange the one for the other? No, indeed. I entered my office disgusted with its atmos phere and every association connected with it. Deams was at his desk, in close conference with two or three individuals whose appearance I par ticularly disliked. He beckoned me to approach, and I was thereupon introduced to Mr. Philo 7 146 HKNKY POWERS, BANKER. Coldbrook, Mr. Elton Pope, and Mr. Aaron Mas- terman. I give these names in full to my readers, because Deanis gave them in full to me, and because, further, I have some particular reasons to remember them. " We were waiting for you, Mr. Powers," said Deams, with a deferential air, which I saw was assumed for some object or other. " These are the gentlemen who control the immense coal-fields I was speaking to you about (it was the first I had heard of them), and Mr. Powers, gentlemen, is the capitalist I told you of." "Very happy to meet you, Mr. Powers," ex claimed Mr. Aaron Masterman, a portly, big-bellied individual, with small, snuif-colored eyes, rubicund visage, and a delicate pug nose. " Glad to meet you," he continued, " and talk over matters. We think with your assistance we can make our affair a lively one ; if we can coax the market to change eh?" and Mr. Aaron Masterman laughed a low, coarse laugh, which HENRY POWERS, BANKER. added to my disgust, and which caused Dearns to exhibit a frightened air. "Yes," said Mr. Elton Pope, a small, thin- visaged fellow, with a yellow wig, very large protruding orbs, and an immense Roman nose which occupied nearly his entire face. " Yes, and we hope Mr. Powers will regard our scheme favorably." "We hope so," chimed in Mr. Philo Cold- brook, a tall, spare fellow, with lank hair and wall eyes which had a sneaking side sweep "we hope so." There was a pause. Even Deams, who usually was so ready, did not appear to know what to say. "Let me have a word with you, Mr. Deams," I said at length, proceeding to the front part of the office. Deams followed with alacrity. Evidently I had come in unexpectedly, at least too soon, and he was as anxious to explain as I was to have an explanation 14:8 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. " What does all this mean ?" I asked, in a tone of angry impatience. "Now keep cool, will you," said Deams, sooth ingly ; " keep cool, and don't spoil a fortune for us all by your rashness and irritability." "Whom do you mean by < us all?'" I de manded in the same tone. " Why, you and I, to be sure. But for heav en's sake don't act in this manner ! They are watching us." " Deams," said I, indignantly, " do you expect me to assume any role you choose to invent for me, without even exhibiting the decency of con sulting me on the subject ?" " It is all a mistake, my dear boy, it is all a mistake. I did not know my friends would be in to-day, but when they did come, I could not send them off. I had spoken of you very highly financially, I admit, but in no way which you will disapprove of, I swear to you, when I come to tell you all about it." " Now don't spoil all, please don't," he added HENRY POWERS, BANKER. beseechingly. " In thirty days our fortune will be made, if you will only hear to reason. This evening you shall look over the papers and judge for yourself. Then accept or reject the scheme, just as you please, only don't be precipitate." " You don't expect me, then, to give those gentlemen an interview to-day?" " Certainly not ; of course not ; indeed, I much prefer you should not," exclaimed Deams hur riedly. "I think you had better just leave us now, and I will explain to " Say what you please, Deams, for yourself, but not a word for me till you have my author ity to do so." " Quite right," interrupted Deams, in his turn, at the same time opening the door of the office, as if fearing the effect of a longer discussion ; " quite right, I will be with you early this even ing." What Deams said to his three "friends," I leave the reader to imagine. I only know at the next interview and there was a next interview 150 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. they seemed doubly impressed with my conse quence, and the necessity of conciliating me. For myself, I left the office in no pleasant state of mind, a state in strange contrast with that in which I entered it, after my interview with Mr. Worth. " How I wish I had a clerkship in a first-class mercantile or banking house," I muttered audibly to myself. " I am not made for this kind of life, and I can't stand it." Just then, Mr. James Stokes, a leading broker, overtook me. I had but a brief acquaintance with him ; but he placed his arm in mine in an exceeding friendly manner. " I understand you will soon bring out your new company," he said, in a confidential tone. " I think I may guess who your bankers are. What I would say is, that our firm has peculiar advantages in the management of such a stock, and if you can arrange to give us the control of it, we will make it all you can desire." What should I reply? It was a risk to speak, HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 151 to be sure; but was I to make myself ridiculous by appearing ignorant of what Mr. Stokes meant ? Doubtless this was the affair Deams had begged me to listen to, and which the shrewd broker had already got wind of. Perceiving that I hesitated, Mr. Stokes contin ued : " You must not suppose I wish to commit you. Only when you are ready, think of what I tell you, and give me a call. Affairs have been very dull, but we shall have active times this fall, depend on it. Gold can't stand where it is. I am sorry to say so, very ; but I must not act against my own convictions. Good-day." " Gold can't stay where it is." The observation struck me with a strange and almost unearthly significance. I knew Mr. Stokes was one of the most loyal men in the Street, and had invariably discouraged attempts at speculation in gold. His present observation seemed to come from him without premeditation, yet as the result of an opinion audibly arrived at against his will. As I said, it produced the strongest impression on me. 152 HENBY POWERS, BANKEB. It went down in my book with an 231P, which should recall it to my particular attention. Punctual to his appointment, Deams was at my room at seven o'clock precisely. " How lucky every thing seems to turn with you," was his first salutation. "I have seen Onis, and he told me Stokes, Mead & Co. think veiy highly of our scheme, and are ready to act as our brokers. What do you think of that, you unbeliever ?" I confess I was a good deal mollified at this remark, for I began to think there must be something of value after all in an enterprise which Mr. Stokes should go out of his way to speak to me about. I afterward learned the secret of his conduct. I could not, however, put away from my recollection the appearance of the three gentlemen whom I encountered at my office, and for whom I entertained such a repugnance. " Yes," continued Deams, " we are at length all right. In fact, we are getting into shape HENRY POWEKS, BANKEK. 153 much more rapidly than I had myself calculated on. In a few weeks, my boy, you may draw a pretty large check on your bank, say with five figures, and the only question the teller will ask is : ' How will you have it ?' " Deams continued to rattle on in this stra n, without any interruption from me. A very pleas ing vision was flitting before my mind, produced by a momentary indulgence of the fancy. " What if all these brilliant predictions prove true? Who knows but you will suddenly realize a fortune ? Did not Alfred Johnson clear a hundred thousand by bringing out the great Nugget Bullion Company ? Chester Symonds, too: he discovered a tin mine in New Hamp shire, and sold out to Sparks, Hodge & Co. for seventy-five thousand. Of course, it is- not your legitimate business man who undertakes these things, but what of that ? What matter how the money is made, if honestly made ? and if I do make it !" I held my breath unconsciously. A thought 154 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. of Mary Worth was natural in this connection. Yes, indeed, if I do make it, I would seek her out, and the thought of the adieu she waved to me from her window made my heart beat audibly. " What the deuce is the matter ?" It was the voice of Deams which recalled me to myself. "I say, are your wits wool-gathering? What were you thinking of?" he exclaimed. " Of that large check you were speaking about, with five figures in the margin." " Good !" cried Deams, " I am glad you begin to have some appreciation of what I am doing for you. I shall expect an apology for your savage manner this morning." " You shall have it, Deams, the moment my check is honored; and now let me have the prom ised explanation. First, what is your famous scheme, then who are your three * friends,' and why did you represent me as a capitalist? How did Stokes come to know me in the matter at all ?" POWERS, BANKER. 155 " One at a time, then," said Deams, " and first, can you tell me the price of coal ?" " lS T o." " I suppose not ; but I can tell you it is nearly fifty per cent, higher than it has ever been before, with a prospect of a rising mar ket." " What of it ? Neither you nor I are at housekeeping, and we do not intend to be for the present, I fancy." "Look at that," cried Deams, with an air of triumph, " see that." He unrolled a large lithograph sheet, covered with many colored lines and sections. On one corner I read " Map of coal lands belonging to Grover P. Wilcox, Esq., situated in Shawnee County r , Penn sylvania, consisting of thirteen thousand seven hundred acres" " Well ?" " Well," echoed Deams, " \ r ou have got con trol of that magnificent tract. I have arranged 156 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. all the details for the largest and most success ful coal company ever originated in this city." "Superior to Parker Vein?" I inquired dryly. "Have done with your jesting," said Deams. "This is the real thing. Property unsurpassed. Veins fourteen feet in width, and inexhaus tible. Transportation, Shawnee Railroad to pass right through it. Price, only a million and a half of dollars. Three hundred thousand cash, balance in stock of the company at par. Easy terms of payment." "And the three hundred thousand dollars, cash payment? " " Runs over a space of five years only sixty thousand per annum." "But, the first sixty thousand?" "We shall go to the public for that," said Deams. " Meantime, you are the capitalist. Do you take?" "No, I don't." "Well, I did not suppose you would with out further explanation, and to do that I must HENKY POWERS, BANKER. 157 show you the prospectus as soon as I have pre pared it. To-morrow I shall fill up the list of the Trustees of the new company, and I will then open the whole budget. In a word, how ever, we have secured this property. A number of ' good ' men are ready to take it up. "You know," he continued, "there must always be some one to stand between the seller and the company, else there could be no ' ground floor.' 1 I have put you into that position, where I rather think you can take care of our inter ests. Now you see the value of a name free and clear. If you had any thing against you, it wouldn't do, you know, to hold the title." I did see. " Now, all I ask is," continued Dearns, " that you say nothing which shall commit yourself till I have the papers ready to submit to you." "But those disgusting wretches " "You mistake them, Powers. They are the gentlemen who introduced me to the property acquaintances of Mr. Wilcox, the proprietor." 158 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. " Who help make the c UNDERGROUND ' below the ' ground floor ' eh ! ' a lower deep below the lowest deep,' I suppose?" Deams turned very red in the face. " You do not think " he began. "Oh, no, I don't think any thing, Deams, only this: if you have a fair case for a proper speculation, and want nothing improper of me, why, I will go into it that's all." "Now, you talk like a rational man," said Deams. "That's a little doubtful," I responded, "only don't attempt to humbug me." "7" attempt it," and Mr. Horace Deams as sumed an air of desperate astonishment. " One word more," I said. " That five hun dred and fifty dollar note is due next week. Shall you be ready with your portion of the money ?" "Don't be in the least alarmed. I have already spoken to Mr. Masterman and told him HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 159 I should want a few hundred dollars, and he has promised I should have all I required." "I am glad of it. You will not, on any account, disappoint me ?" "You may rely on me, positively," said Deams. And thus the conference ended. CHAPTER XVII. THE Worth family returned to town earlier than I anticipated. On entering church the following Sabbath I well recollect it was the third Sunday in Sep tember I felt by a species of magnetism, elec tric affinity, odic force, call it what you will, that Mary Worth was in the house. This was before I had looked toward the pew. My heart beat loudly. I hardly dared raise my eyes. At length I did raise them, and glanced in the direction of her seat. She was there. I could not see her face, only the side of the hat which concealed it. On the instant a delicious sense of repose stole over me ; a feeling that whatever should come, or happen, all was right. On my word, at that time I had no wish HENRY POWEES, BANKER. 161 or desire for any further acquaintance. I did not care even to speak to Mary Worth. To know that every week we should be seated near each other, under the same roof, was happiness enough. Reader, this sounds desperately romantic and sentimental, does it not ? Perhaps you think that my Wall Street delineations are to turn out mere lackadaisical vapors of the Pamela school. I can not help it. I only say in reply that the person is, indeed, God forsaken who has lost his romance, and I, Henry Powers, declare to you I have not lost mine, and do not intend to lose it either. Therefore, I repeat that what I say of my feelings for Mary Worth is true. I did feel just as I say I did, and I am not ashamed to own it. Well, how is it with yourself, great Operator, or petty Schemer ; millionaire, or poor devil ; Wielder of immense power in finance, or des- 162 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. perate Shinner around the curb-stones from ten to three? Tell me, each one of you, is there not some thing that breeds around your heart, and keeps you within the pale of humanizing emotions? A wife whom you love; a young girl to whom faith and truth are plighted; a mother or sister dependent on you; in short, something, or some body, which touches your affections? Man of money ! you don't acknowledge this as you drive a hard bargain, or employ the power of your wealth to force a contract ? Poor devil! you confess to no such weak ness, while you practice a miserable deception to raise the needful X, which must, in some way, be laid hold of. No, neither of you admit it while in the "Street," but you dare not deny it as you go homeward in the afternoon. There fore you need not stop in the reading of my narrative, and affect to be disgusted at my sen timentality. The services were over. As the crowd HKNBY POWERS, BANKER. 163 swept into the center aisle I was brought close upon Mr. Worth, who bowed to me as usual. I have omitted to state that after my inter view with him in Wall Street, described in the last chapter, he never stopped me to shake hands, but was particular, however, always to bow after a peculiar manner as one bows to an equal with whom one is well acquainted, but not on intimate terms. I enjoyed and felt flattered by this delicate mark of appreciation. "That man understands me, and wishes to let me know it," I^said to myself. So then, coming out of church, Mr. Worth turned and bowed after the style I have men tioned. Mrs. Worth walked a little in advance; she, too, took evident pains to salute me, and in a way that satisfied me her husband lad given her an account of our late interview. Mary Worth was still further on. She did not turn her head, and I got no glimpse of her face. But on going out I saw her standing in the vestibule, as if waiting my approach. 164 HENKY POWERS, BANKER. She did not stop for me to put in practice my plan of demeanor toward the Worth family, but, extending her hand, she exclaimed: "I am glad to see you, Mr. Powers, and to see you looking well. I do not think you had fully recovered when you left Long Branch, and I was very anxious about you, till papa met you, and told me you were really quite well again." These words were spoken with such genuine earnestness that I was in great danger of break ing over the rule I had laid down for myself. I stood looking straight into her eyes, and saying not a word. There was nothing in their expression which denoted anything beyond the natural and proper interest in one who had saved her life at the risk of his own " Only this, and nothing more." Her manner was neither confused nor timid perhaps I should have been better satisfied had it been so but frank and unhesitating. All this flashed through my mind, in time HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 165 for me to recover, and reply in the same out spoken, open manner. I said, "I was certainly entirely well again, and I hoped she was well, and was pleased to hear so through her father" that was all. During this scene, Mr. Worth and his wife stood near with complacent countenances, exhibit ing no sign of impatience or of distrust. Our little chat at an end, Mary Worth joined her parents and all walked away. I noticed two or three young men eyeing me with a jealous air, and one or two young ladies turned quite round to take a look at me. I cared little for either. I felt sad, I hardly knew why. From that day I was to avoid further intercourse with Miss Worth such was iny determination except the ordinary saluta tions of courtesy. CHAPTER XVIII. THE next morning on going to my office, I found on my table a small paper slip which read as follows: BANKING HOUSE OF ELI NICHOLS. HENRY POWERS, Your note for $550 is due 25th September. The sight of this little printed reminder sent a cold shiver through me. I was perfectly aware that my note fell due on that day, and was in Eli Nichols' hands : indeed, as the reader knows, I had already stir red Deams on the subject, and was doing every thing possible to scrape some money together myself. Here, however, was something provokingly HENRY POWERS, BANKEK. 167 tangible. It might be paraphrased in this way : " Remember, Henry Powers, that you have a note of five hundred and fifty dollars to pay to Eli Nichols on Saturday of this week 1" There was no mistaking it. It must be paid. After what had passed between me and old Eli, I think I would have submitted to any thing rather than fail to pay that note. Why had I not followed the hint in my memorandum book, and been careful to keep my name " free and clear ?" I could have borrowed easily the few dollars I required, and now, as I begun to realize, I must provide for the two hundred and fifty dollars which Deams had undertaken to respond to. In the midst of my cogitations that estimable gentleman entered the office. I handed him the little "notice." "Well," said Deams in an indifferent tone, "No* fresh information here, I imagine. As the man in the play says : ' We knew it be fore.' " 168 HENKY POWKKS, BANKER. " Certainly, but are you quite sure you will be ready on your part ? Had you not better see your friend Masterman to-day about the money ?" " And provide Monday for Saturday 1" retorted Deams. " Now I call that queer enough. I tell you, Masterman has promised me the money; I have informed him I should want it this week, and he would think it very odd for me to speak about it again. 7 ' 44 On the contrary, I should consider it very natural for you to tell him to-day that you are obliged to use the money Saturday ; and then you have settled on a definite tune, and he will have no excuse for disappointing you." "Don't you know, my dear Powers," said Deams in an easy tone, "that every man has his own way in arranging these matters ? You have your method; I have mine; and I don't think it of any advantage for either of us to lecture the other about how to manage with his friends." Here the conversation dropped. HENBY POWERS, BANKER. 169 I confess I began to have but small hope that Dearns could raise his share of the cash, notwithstanding the confidence he professed to place in the ability and good-will of Mr. Aaron Masterniaii. I felt instinctively the absolute necessity of raising the amount myself; for the note once protested, I was satisfied that Eli Nichols, whom I had greatly incensed, would do all in his power to harrass me, and could at least greatly injure my credit in the Street. "It is paying pretty dear for my first lesson," I said to myself; "but after all the loss of two hundred and fifty dollars shall never ruin Henry Powers : no, indeed !" I had already made good my three hundred from some commissions on two or three notes which I had sold, for I found I should very likely have to starve while waiting on the im mense fortune to be realized from the Coal Company, if I did not condescend to turn an honest penny in an honest though small way. 8 170 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. Deams, it is true, manifested a good deal of disgust at seeing me "trotting about," as he termed it, " chasing eighteen pence around the corner." I am happy to say his remonstrances had no effect on me; though the business of running from place to place, occupying a whole day, perhaps two days, in attempting to carve a trifling commission out of a piece of paper, while the seller insists on receiving so much, and the buyer will only give so much, is a very disgusting one. I am sorry to record the fact that some of the larger brokers, when they see a respectable piece of paper, practice, for certain reasons, the habit of encouraging a belief that it can be dis posed of at a much more favorable rate than the facts subsequently justify. I remember that very day, there was a note for seventeen hundred and odd dollars, about four months to run, placed in my hands, made by a commercial house in good standing. Indeed, I will tell you, in confidence, the name of the HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 171 house. It was that of Malcolm, Edgerton & Co., in South Street. The man who gave it to me, said, rather significantly, " The firm keeps their account in the Bank of Mutual Safety you un derstand." I did not, at the moment, understand, but shortly it occurred to me that the note was handed to me to negotiate from my supposed intimacy with Mr. Marmaduke Worth, the presi dent. "What are the terms?" I asked. " Well," said my visitor, " no better note is made in New York: that you know. You know too, of course, as well as I, that at certain seasons this house puts out an immense quantity of paper, and then their notes stand a heavy shave, have known it as high as two per cent, a month. But, without any chaffing, I can say you may take this and return the amount to me, less one and a half net, and make as much as you can out of it ?" I had no opportunity to reply, and probably 172 HENRY POWEKS, BANKER. should have made none under any circumstances. I took the note, which was really all that the man had claimed for it, and proceeded to the well-known shop I say " shop," for I consider that the proper name for it of Peter T. Strain, which was not far from my own office. The principal himself happened to be in. I showed him the note. "Ah, yes (in the blandest tones), about ten to twelve per cent., I suppose ; yes, ten to twelve twelve, as outside that will probably be the rate -prime note ; still, you know, their paper rubs a little just at present. Step in, and let the book-keeper enter it." Accordingly, I walked in, deposited the note, and left my name and address. "When shall I call?" " Some time in the course of the afternoon ; or say to-morrow morning; my best customer who is in the habit of buying this paper has already been here, but I expect he will return again to-day." HENRY POWERS, BANKEK. 173 I left the place thinking I should make a very good thing of the note of Malcolm, Edgerton & Co. I found my man waiting for me on going back to my office. " Was he in ? did you fix it ?" he inquired, eagerly. I was a little nettled. I did not relish being followed up so closely. . "I can do nothing to-day," I said; "I hope to close it to-morrow." " All right," was the response, " only my people want money badly. I will look in to-morrow." I called pretty early the next day on Mr. Strain. " Oh, I am very glad to see you, was going to send in to your place. The gentleman who is in the habit of taking the Malcolm paper does not care to buy any more at present thinks he has enough invested there. But understand me, there is no difficulty in selling the paper, none whatever, only we must submit to a little stiifer 174 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. rate; that is what I wish to see you about. Shall we say twelve to fifteen, with fifteen as a limit ?" As " fifteen " was but one and a quarter per cent, a month, anl I was to get "eighteen," or one and a half per cent., I said "yes" to Mr. Strain's suggestion, and begged him thereupon to expedite the affair. " Certainly, certainly ; call to-morrow, and I hope to have a check for you ?" Here was "to-morrow" again, but I submitted, and put my constituent off the best way I could for another day. He was not quite content, but I gave him a strong assurance, and he departed. My own profits were melting away, but I was now ambitious to carry the business through, and so I rendered myself in very good season next morning at the " shop." Once more I was met by the bland and cour teous Mr. Strain, and once more told that " fif teen" would not quite do, but he thought, in- HENRY POWERS, BA.XKER. 175 deed he believed he could say almost positive ly, that the offer of eighteen would bring the money. " I will advise you confidentially," he con tinued, " to accept the offer, for I am told there will be another large amount on the market by Saturday." I was thoroughly indignant, but restrained my wrath. " Mr. Strain, if you can discount the note at one and a half to-day, I will take it. If you are not sure of doing this before three, let me have the note now." " My dear sir," said Mr. Strain, mildly, " I do say I feel confident of the offer, and for to-day you know I never buy notes myself; all on com mission all on commission; but call at two and the money will be ready, I am entirely confi dent." I quitted the place with the determination of not returning to my own office till I had visited Mr. Strain at two, for I had no disposition to enter on a further explanation with the anxious 176 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. gentleman, who, I knew, was waiting for the money. In this way I threw away the entire morning. " Never mind," I said : " It is true, I have lost a good deal of time and made nothing, but I shall have carried my point, and perhaps secured a customer/* At two o'clock I called on Mr. Strain, and received a check for the net proceeds of Messrs. Malcolm, Edgerton & Co.'s note. It was ready drawn, waiting my arrival. I expressed myself satisfied, and was turning to leave, when the book keeper gave me a small strip with a memorandum as follows: "Dis. Malcolm, E. & Co., $1,734 20 Corns. 1-4, $4 34." "Excuse me," I said, hurriedly. I handed out five dollars, received sixty-six cents in change, and came away " silently," like the Arabs. The joke was too good, so I only laughed at myself for being minus four dollars and thirty- HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 177 four cents, besides about two days' gratuitous labor. I had the discretion to deposit the money in the bank where I kept my account, and draw my own check for it; this done, I stepped quickly to my office, handed the check to my customer, who had been waiting since twelve o'clock, and was getting very red in the face. I apologized briefly for the delay, but in the tone of a man who feels himself to be strong. The effect was evident. "To-day is just as well, just as well, exactly," said he, " though we could not have got along very well over to-day, I admit. It takes a little time, I know, to turn to advantage. You have made a good thing out of it, that is, in a small way. There is some difference between seven per cent, and eighteen." " I am content," said I, with a peculiar em phasis, which I will be bound my man did not understand, but which I felt. Thereupon he took his leave. 8* 178 HENET POWEKS, BANKER. Perhaps you would like to know why I mani fest so much indignation at the conduct of Mr. Peter T. Strain. Was he not very frank in all his explanations? Did he not account satisfacto rily for the delays, and, finally, did he not promptly give the money at the very moment promised ; indeed, when he had not quite abso lutely promised ? A word in your ear. Do not let this bo repeated, for Mr. Peter T. Strain's establishment is highly respectable, and he himself a very cred itable member of the community. From des perate insolvency he has risen to great wealth. He has a handsome house in town, and a beau tiful country-seat in Westchester County, and all from this one-quarter of one per cent, commission on the notes which pass through his hands. So he would have you suppose. After this, will you believe me when I tell you that Peter T. Strain never offered the note of Malcolm, Edgerton & Co. for sale at all dur ing the three days he was finessing with me ; HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 179 never offered it at all until after he had given me a check for the amount agreed on? Then he doubtless placed it at about ten per cent, per annum with some customer who relied on his judgment. It was nothing very bad, you know. Peter T. Strain was too respectable to cheat me much. Besides, he only deals in first or second class paper, and never descends to vulgar shaves. Peter T. Strain is not a bad man out of the Street. Pie is a " good husband and a kind father," and a " very liberal person." In his "shop" he is a knave, and nothing else. Why ? This was Thursday, and quite the close of the day. Deams had not spoken to me about the note since our Monday's conversation. He ap peared very busy, however, with his " prospec tus." His "three friends" Mr. Aaron Mastcr- man, Mr. Elton Pop 3, and Mr. Philo Coldbrook came in to see him on two several occasions. 180 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. On Friday I ventured to speak to Deams again. Had he asked Mr. Masterman for the money? and if not, I begged he would do so at once, that I might be relieved from apprehen sion. Deams changed countenance slightly. "It's a deuced pity, Powers, that we can't manage to throw the thing over for another week." "For what reason?" " Why, I am just at a point with Masterman which makes it a little awkward, you see, to ask him to lend me. Don't you perceive?" "I can't say I do. On the contrary, you told me you had actually engaged the money from him for this week. He has already promised you the amount, has he not?" "Well, yes, indirectly." " What makes you say ' indirectly,' Deams, when you told me decidedly that he promised to let you have the money?" I exclaimed in an irri tated tone. "Xow, if you insist on it, Powers, I will bor- HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 181 row it, but I beg you to hold off if possible for just one week more." "7" hold off! I should rather think Eli Nich ols is the man to be consulted on that head." "Just the thing," said Deams, "I can renew it with him for fifteen days easy enough, and then we shall be out of the woods." " Not with my consent." " Pshaw ! don't talk nonsense ! Just pay what you have on hand, and, by George, we can renew like a knife for two hundred and fifty." " What has become of your tender regard for my credit r" I said, with a sneer. " Please don't talk in that way, when you know I am bending every effort to securing a fortune for us both. You know, Mr. Powers, I have thought of nothing else all summer. For heaven's sake, don't ask me to injure myself with our new friends." " How much can you tlo toward your part ?" I asked, calmly. "Well, you see, Powers, my expenses have been 182 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. rather large lately. I have had to entertain these gentlemen on several occasions, for we must keep up appearances, you know." "Which means you do not intend to help me with a dollar." " It means that, literally, I can not," said Deams, in a deprecatory tone. I had recovered my temper. Really, I was not much disappointed, and it was useless to exhibit any idle ebullition. " Had you told me this, Deams," I said quietly, " at first, instead of - " Don't reproach me : I feel worse about it than you do, and will get the note renewed if you will let me, or do anything you tell me to. In fact," continued Deams, starting from his seat, " you need not pay it at all if you say so, it was a cursed cut-throat usurious transaction, and the old screw can't recover a dollar. Let him sue and be " " We will say no more about it, Deams ;" and I left the office, very much to his relief, I fancy. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 183 I felt myself in a bad way, as I walked down the street. " What are my prospects ? Let me look them in the face. At five and twenty, with good health, a good education, a thorough knowl edge of commercial business, and an untiring en ergy, I bid fair to settle down into a petty note broker, or what is worse, a schemer in bubble companies." I believe I have not mentioned a Mr. Holman, who was a junior partner in the house of Gard ner, Lynde & Co. when I was with that firm. He was but five or six years older than I, and was an agreeable, companionable man. While Mr. Gardner was in Europe making an effort to settle with the creditors of the concern, Mr. Holman had engaged in some Government contract, in which, being an incorruptibly honest man, it was quite impossible for him to make any thing be yond a respectable living. His wife had a snug little sum in her own right, and so he was altogether in very comfort able circumstances. 184 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. I resolved to call and see him, and ask him to lend me the two hundred and fifty dollars. He was still a young man, and I did not doubt his entire sympathy with me. I found him at his place of business, and alone. Without delay or circumlocution I explained how I had been caught, and asked him to help me to the required sum. " I have not got the amount in hand," he said, "but I can borrow it. I perceive of how much importance it is to you, and I will see that you have the money," he said promptly. What different types of men we encounter ! Look at Eli Nichols: look at Deams: look at Mr. Holman. Why can't all the world be honest and kind and good ? and what are those other crea tures made for ? Such was my soliloquy as I left Mr. Holman's place, after receiving a cordial invitation from him to call and talk over affairs, the state of the coun try, and so forth. The next day, before twelve o'clock, Mr. Hoi- HENEY POWERS, BANKER. 185 man sent me a check for two hundred and fifty dollars. I said nothing about it to Deams, nor he to me. Indeed, I doubt very much if he gave the matter a thought after he had fairly saddled it on me. I at once had my own check certified for the amount of my note, five hundred and fifty dollars, and as Deams had made it payable at my office, I sat and quietly waited for it to be sent in. About half-past two who should enter but old Eli himself! It was quite out of the business course, as it was the duty of a clerk to present the note. Doubtless the old fellow wished to wit ness my mortification, if not able to pay. I after ward learned that he had previously sent and as certained I was in. The old fellow advanced stoutly to the desk where I was sitting and placed the note before my eyes. I took the certified check from the drawer and placed it quietly before his eyes. Eli looked chopfallen. He picked up the 186 HENRY POWERS, BANKEK. check, turned and left the room without a word being spoken on either side. I counted the man my enemy after this ; but I was mistaken. He had not the capacity to be a friend of anybody, but he rather admired the way I treated him payment of the note included and I frequently heard of his passing encomiums on me in his rough, vulgar way, such as that I would " do :" the man who would get ahead of me "must get up early," and the like. All this because I had refused to be made his tool, and had been prompt in meeting my ob ligations. CHAPTER XIX. I AM about to give you another phase of my Wall Street experience. Thus far, reader, you must have felt dissatisfied, if not disgusted, with the petty scope of my proceedings. You have looked, doubtless, for some record which should amply sustain your notions of the magnitude of " Street " operations, and explain how, as if by magic, men and things change like resolving and dissolving views. Behold me, then, an active inquirer into the famous coal scheme which Deams has introduced to me, and which is represented by the solid house of Masterman, Coldbrook & Pope. Do you ask me why I consented even to ex amine the affair, when I so thoroughly knew the character of Deams by actual observation, and felt that I knew equally well, by intuition, the status of Masterman, Coldbrook and Pope ? 188 HENRY POWEKS, BANKER. I can only say in reply that I was allured in sensibly by the dazzling idea of somehow or other " making a strike." Other enterprises which had turned out well had been started in weak and often doubtful hands, yet ultimately found their proper place on the market and settled on a solid and respectable basis. Mind, I was only committed to "look into" the affair. But Deams knew, and his "three friends " knew, which I did not, that this was tantamount to enlisting me in it. I had afterward to learn that the apothegm " to hesitate and parley is to be lost " will bear many applications, none more true than with reference to such transactions. One morning time has carried us on to the middle of October, with little or no change in my own matters, only that I was living, more than ever, perhaps, from hand to mouth one morning, I say, Deams announced to me that he was ready to go " fully into details " on the subject of the Great Coal Company, and that for the purpose HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 189 of being quite uninterrupted he thought we had better go round to the establishment of Master- man, Coldbrook & Pope, where every document could be seen and all questions answered " by the book." "I thought we were first to look over the papers together before admitting any one to the interview," I said tartly. " So we are, Mr. Powers, but we shall have a private room quite to ourselves, and since all the books, papers, reports, specimens, and so forth, are at Masterman's, I think we can't do better than go there." It was impossible to say a word against so plain a proposition; accordingly we started to gether to visit the " establishment " (so Deams always called it) of Masterman, Coldbrook & Pope. Perhaps I should state that ever since the affair of the note, Deams had treated me with a good deal of deference. Whether h's object was merely to flatter me, 190 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. or whether he inferred from the circumstances of my paying the five hundred and fifty dollars so promptly that I had funds in reserve, it is of little purpose to inquire. He certainly was much more respectful in his manner than ever before, and now said, " Mr. Powers," when addressing me, in stead of the more familiar, " Powers*" "What business are these people in," I asked, as we passed along. " Well, they have now opened very fine offices for the purposes of the company, as well as for their own use, so that the company can com mence at once, you perceive, with superior ac commodations." Deams had an odd habit of saying, " You per ceive," whenever any thing was a little obscure, or when he was not prepared to afford explanations. Thinking I should shortly be able to "per ceive" for myself, I made no reply, but marched on in silence. " Here we are," said Deams, stopping before one of the finest buildings in the street. HENRF POWERS, BANKER. 191 We mounted one flight of stairs only, when I saw over the door in front of me, in large let ters : HOPE AND ANCHOR MUTUAL COAL COMPANY. HORATIO J. DEMPSEY, President. On the door I read : MASTERMAN, COLDBROOK & POPE, BANKERS, There was no time for further queries Deams entered, and I followed him into the main room, which was protected from intruders by a line of counters and iron railing, with two or three small spaces in the latter to admit conference if de sired. Over a small archway, in the center, I read : Cashier; at another, Transfer Clerk; and so on. At one of these interesting points, I observed the protruding nose of Mr. Elton Pope, and caught u glimpse of his carroty wig. 192 HENKY POWEKS, BANKER. He looked littler, and his nose larger than ever, as he bobbed his head in token of wel come. Deams did not wait for any further demonstra tion, but walked to a side door which opened into a cozy room, where we found a pleasant fire; the day was cool; and sitting before it Mr. Aaron Masterman, who was busily occupied read ing a long advertisement in one of the daily papers. He rose as we entered, shook hands with Beams cordially, and with me in a deferential style, which was quite overcoming. "That will do, I guess," he said, handing the paper to Deams, as he placed his thick forefinger on the notice. The latter made a careless assent, scarcely looking at the article in question. " Mr. Powers has consented to give us an hour or two this morning for examination and confer ence, before investing in our enterprise or under taking to interest his friends in it. May I trouble HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 193 you for the title papers and the contract held by your firm, also the report of Professor Silex, and of Dr. Quartz, besides the various letters relating to the property." " Certainly, sir," said Mr. Masterman. " I will speak to Mr. Pope, and you will have them be fore you without a moment's delay." He left the apartment, and thereupon I took occasion to look about me. The room was elegantly carpeted, and furnished in the most handsome manner. On one side was a rosewood cabinet filled with various mineralogical specimens, admirably selected, many of which were rare. A shelf was entirely devoted to "Specimens of coal from the lands of Grover P. Wilcox, Esq." These were remarkably fine ones, and ought certainly to have satisfied the most critical and fastidious examiner. " It looks all right, don't it ?" said Deams con fidently. I made no reply. " Splendid cabinet : it belongs to Professor 194 HENKY POWERS, BANKKE. Quartz. We have borrowed it for the season. Good idea, don't you think so ?" I had no time to make any observation, for the door opened and Mr. Elton. Pope came in with his arms filled up to the end of his long proboscis, with several immense books, maps, news papers, printed pamphlets, and divers rolls of man uscript. The little man stood for a moment as if doubt ful how to get rid of his load, each eye wandering restlessly from point to point, as if quite inde pendent of the other. " Let me relieve you, my dear sir," said Deams, and he proceeded gradually to unload the poor fellow, who, when the operation was concluded, bowed, in the most touching manner, to me, and turned and left the room. " Xow for work," said Deams, taking up one of the large volumes, which I saw was marked " Geological Survey of the State of Pennsyl- What is all this for?" I asked. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 195 "I wish," continued Deams, with an innocent air, " to show you the immense value of the coal deposits of the State of Pennsylvania." " Don't make an ass of yourself, Deams, or at tempt to make a fool of me," I said, in an angry tone. " If you have any wish to talk business, why, proceed ; if not, I'm off." " Now, then, don't flash in this way, when I am doing my best to please you. The fact is, one never knows where you will break out next. I thought, of all things, you would like it if I began at the beginning, and now my sincere de sire to suit you puts you in a passion." Deams had a singular power of mollifying wrath, at least with me. The innocent simplicity he assumed was so ludicrous that I laughed in spite of myself. " Shall we take up the titles to the Wilcox Estate ?" he inquired in the same tone. " I am no lawyer, Deams, and I suppose your counsel has already passed on them." "That is true; Joel P. Phillips, a distinguished 196 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. lawyer, has examined the papers and pronounced them all right. His opinion should satisfy any body." " What next ?" " Next, if you please, are very particular de tails of the properties, with maps and descriptions of the different veins. " Look here," continued Deams, producing a pamphlet of about one hundred pages, contain ing maps covered with sections of the different veins. The pamphlet also embraced the reports of Pro fessor Silex and Dr. Quartz, besides numerous let ters from practical men who were more or less known to me. "I am willing to call this 'all right,' as you term it, Deams ; so let us come to the actual mat ter in hand. Let me see your scheme, then I will tell you how far I am willing to co-operate with you." "Here is the Prospectus," said Deams. I took it and read as follows: HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 197 Hope and Anchor Mutual Coal Company, es tablished under the act of the State of New York, passed Feb. 17, 1848. Capital $2,750,000, divided into 550,000 shares of $5 each. This company is organized on the plan of enabling each share holder to become the producer of his own coal, and each share of stock entitles the holder to one ton of coal a year at cost. President, HORATIO J. DEMPSEY. Vice President^ ELIHU PRICE PETERS. Treasurer, AARON H. MASTERMAN. Secretary, ELTON POPE. Trustees, HORATIO J. DEMPSEY, Antartic Iron Mills. ELIHU PRICE PETERS (Peters & Osterhaus). AARON H. MASTERMAN (Masterman, Coldbrook & Pope). 198 HENKY POWERS, BANKER. JOHN" R. STILLHOUSE (Stillhouse, Fleet & Co). DAYID BROKAW, United Steam Wire Co. ELTON POPE (Masterman, Coldbrook & Pope). HENRY POWERS, Banker. JBanJcers, Bank of Mutual Safety, MASTERMAN, COLDBROOK & POPE. Counsel, JOEL P. PHILLIPS, ESQ. ; ERASTUS EAMS, ESQ. Geologist. Prof. PAOLI SILEX. Practical do. Dr. Rums QUARTZ. I sat and looked at the names in perfect amazement. With the exception of Masterman, Pope, and myself, these names were as well known and re spectable as any in New York. Indeed, so per fectly was I taken by surprise at the sight of them, that, at first, I never thought of the unwar rantable use made of my own name. After I recovered a little, it occurred to me that the others might have been placed there, as HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 199 mine had been, without consulting the parties con cerned. Deams watched me in silence. At length I looked up. " Tell me," I said, " are these names here with the consent of the persons indicated ?" " Every one of them, on my honor," said Deams, stoutly, " except your own." "And why did you not consult me?" I asked. " I will tell you why, Mr. Powers. It is be cause you are so very queer sometimes, so very queer. One can never tell what you are going to do or what you will say, and I candidly con fess to you, now we are all strait, that I was afraid to let you know about it indeed I was." " But why do you put me on at all ?" " Now don't, I beg," said Deams, laughing, " don't try to look simple, as if you didn't know as much about some things as the next man. I say," he continued, " do you see my name there ?" " No." 200 HENRY POWERS, BANKEE, " I should rather suppose not. Yet am I not the life and soul of the enterprise, the originator, developer, promoter, and so forward. Are you not my ally, associate, and friend, and at the same time entirely competent to represent, care for, and protect our interests in the Hope & Anchor Mu tual Coal Company ?" Deams evidently had gained considerable cour age since the list of trustees was completed, which made him particularly grandiloquent on this oc casion. "Honestly, then, without prevarication, you declare these individuals have consented to act as trustees ?" I said very seriously. "I do," replied Deams. "Well, then, now for the scheme." "Now for it," echoed Deams in a business tone. " Let us keep our wits about us, Mr. Powers, and we have made all the money we shall require for the rest of our lives ; let me tell you that." HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 201 " Never mind that, now, Deams, but give me the programme." " Here you have it. First, you understand the principle on which we propose to run the machine the mutual principle, I mean ?" " Yes, I believe I do, and what is more I think the principle a first-rate one. In my opinion, if honestly conducted, it will take well." " Aha ! I thought you would come to it," said Deams triumphantly. " I invented the idea my self. I was brought to it, partly by seeing notices of the high price of coal, but more particularly by reading lots of newspaper articles, abusing the retailers. " If every newspaper had been under pay, they could not have served the Hope and Anchor bet ter. No, indeed; everybody is crying out against the coal dealers, and the public are ready to go in for any thing which will bring the rascals to terms. " On this hint I spake, as Othello says, and you see how I have got on. Besides, I came the be- 9* 202 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. nevolent dodge, which secured Mr. Dempscy for President. You know he is great on taking care of the city poor. He is interested in a dozen different societies. We are going to supply the whole of them with coal at cost. Poor folks shall be victimized no longer. " With Dempsey once in, you may judge it was not difficult to get Stillhouse, his son-in-law. The rest followed like sheep." "Then you have all the funds you want?" "Why, nofr exactly. You see all these good sort of people are just as ready to make money as the other kind ; why shouldn't they be ? So I explained to Mr. Dempsey that we had re served for him two thousand shares of stock, as compensation for his services, and that we should not call on him for any money. So we say to all the trustees. Mr. Dempsey was content. He consented to act, but declined to keep the stock for himself; he said he would hold it, however, for the poor of the Five Points. Noble fellow, that !" HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 203 " How are you to get money then," I asked. " From the public, sir, on this prospectus ! Let me explain." And thereupon Deams went into the figures, which I propose shall be the subject of the next chapter. CHAPTER XX. MARY WOKTH ! Reader you have these cabalistic to me cab alistic words placed at the head of this chapter, instead of the " figures " which were promised you of the magnificent scheme of the HOPE & ANCHOR MUTUAL COAL COMPANY! In this connection you doubtless consider it quite out of place, just as yon are seated at the table with Deams and myself, your wits sharpened for the trial, to have only these two words put on the programme ! " It satisfies me," you say pettishly, " that Powers will never succeed." Besides, you feel, perhaps, that I am trifling with you; or, you imagine, on consideration, I don't deem it pru dent to let you into the affair, and you call this very shabby treatment after my holding out so many inducements to attract your attention. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 205 Suppose it to be so; what have you to com plain of? Are we not in Wall Street? Have we passed our words to each other? Jones, having taken up my enterprise without exami nation, while you, Robinson, are wasting precious time in examining it, has secured the right to a "call" of the stock at a favorable rate, thus shutting you out from a participation in this magnificent and colossal enterprise. After this, Robinson, think quick, and strike quick, or you will not do for the " Street." However, on this occasion, I admit I am alarming you without cause. The matter is still " open." Let me say my say about Mary Worth, and then to business. In the midst of these figures, how came her name interposed? I will tell you. It happened, just as I was setting myself to the work of investigation, that something whispered, "Succeed in this, and you will win her!" 206 HENBY POWERS, BANKER. And was it not impossible for me to become her suitor without first acquiring a fortune, or at least a competency? No, it was not possible, because not consist ent with self-respect. I knew very well several young men about town, who were always on the look out for rich girls. There is Trovers, who was for fifteen years, as I have been told, indefatigable in his attempts to obtain a rich wife [you know Tro vers, lately a teller in this same Bank of Mutual Safety], and only last year accomplished his object secured a young widow with two hun dred thousand. But everybody points at Tro vers, and calls him disagreeable names. To be sure he has quit the bank, and set up an es tablishment, and goes into " society ;" still I doubt if any one respects him. Besides, although scarcely a year married, people say he and his wife do not live happily together. He does not care, it is true, but I should care, and so I could never place myself in his position. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 207 " If I make a fortune, I shall feel satisfied to cultivate an acquaintance with Miss Worth, and attempt to win her. Otherwise not." So I said to myself after returning from Long Branch. When, therefore, some spirit whispered in my ear the words I have just recorded, it made my pulse beat very quick, so that I breathed with difficulty, when I thought what was possi ble to come of the morning's work which was before me. CHAPTER XXI. " Now, Mr. Powers, I am going to act oil the square with you," said Deams, with the courageous air of a man who had just adopted a virtuous resolution. "So I suppose." " Yes, you shall have the whole story. What I know, you shall know. We will work like two brothers, and divide even." " Well ?" "Well," continued Deams, "this affair is all MINE. Those chaps in there (pointing to the other room) are mere " "Tools of yours; I thought as much," inter rupted I. " No, no, Mr. Powers, I was not going to say * tools' but agents; they are my agents well, not exactly agents either; in fact, I got the affair up, and they do as I say." HENKY POWERS, BANKER. 209 "I think you had better let my application stand, Deams. Go on." " You see," continued Deams, " I have known Pope for several years. He keeps a small hat and cap store in Sixth Avenue. Very honest fellow is Pope, very snug too, has laid by four or five thousand cash. " Now Pope knew Grover P. Wilcox, the owner of the coal land, and one day was men tioning the subject to me, and how Wilcox would like to sell. "I turned it over in my mind, and finally told Pope that if Wilcox would go to the ex pense of a map, and have the property reported on by Quartz and Silex, I would take it up, provided we could agree on the terms. Well, we came to an agreement (between us, Powers, only between us)," exclaimed Deams, convuls- ingly, as he grasped my hand in token of the confidence he was reposing in me, " which was, I say, that I should pay Wilcox sixty thousand dollars cash for the entire property." 210 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. " Sixty thousand dollars !" I said in amaze ment. " Why, Deams, you go to the public with a statement that we pay a million and a half of dollars. Three hundred thousand dollars in cash, and the balance in stock of the Company at par." " I beg your pardon, Mr. Powers. I do not say we do any such thing. I say the Company pays that amount for the property, and so it does and so it will, or my name isn't Deams." "That's what I call rascality," I said with emphasis. " You are a fool, Powers, and nothing else," exclaimed Deams, thrown out of his sense of propriety by my rather startling proposition. " Hold on," he continued, seeing my face flush, " hold on, and let me ask you a question or two. Suppose you had a chance to buy a lot up town for a thousand dollars, and y knew at the same time you could sell it i sixty days for two thousand, would you make the purchase?" HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 211 "Very likely." "Then you see no objection to buying at one price and selling at a better one, provided you use no deception ?" " No." " Well, then, where is the * rascality ' in this case? Wilcox has a very large tract of what is now to him wild land. It probably cost him a mere song twenty years ago, or he may have inherited it. He has no knowledge of the machinery of getting up a company to work his mines. We have. So he furnishes the raw material at a low figure. We buy, and get the price it should really command when prop erly developed. I don't suppose you are so very benevolent as to wish to work for the public exactly for nothing?" "I 'admit, Deams, there is a good deal in what you say," I remarked, considerably softened, " but it is the tremendous difference between the price we pay and the price it is put in at to the Company, that staggers me." 212 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. " Now stop just there," said Deams; "stick a pin there. You admit my principle is cor rect, only you fear I overcharge the Company for the property. What if I show you, by proper computations and by certificates of first- class men, that we are not overcharging, it is all right, is it not?" "Let the matter rest where it is, Deams, and go on with your explanation." I felt that he had the best of the argument, but I was not altogether convinced either. "I will resume," said Deams pompously. " But I beg you, Mr. Powers, not to interrupt me again with objections until I am through ; then raise as many as you please." I was silent, and Deams proceeded. " Let me see, where was I ? oh, I was say ing I had agreed to pay sixty thousand dollars cash for the property. So far, so good. Then came the organization, where to begin and how to do it. That is, how to get the property HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 213 honestly mind you, I say honestly to the Com pany at our price. "Once deciding that it is worth all the Com pany is asked to pay for it, the only question is, you perceive, the mere manipulation. Pope, was acquainted with Coldbrook. They are first cousins. Coldbrook is in the hosiery line, and he too has some money. Neither of these gentle men are particularly presentable, as you have doubtless observed, but they are straightforward, honest fellows ; they mean right, and will do just as they agree. "As to Masterman, I have known him a good while. He used to be knocking about the Street ten years ago ; he went off to California, and turned up here about three months since. He knows the ropes and will do what I tell him." " How about his honesty ?" " I entreat you not to interrupt me," repeated Deams. "You make me lose the thread of let me see oh, I was about saying that Pope at- 214: HENRY POWKES, BANKER. tends the same church with Horatio J. Dempsey, and is a very active person in all that is go ing on. Helps look up orphan children, calls on the indigent families, in fact, does a great deal of good. "Just as soon as I thought of the benevo lent idea of furnishing coal to the poor at cost, without regard to their taking stock, I told Pope he must secure Mr. Dempsey for President ; that he must urge it on him as a matter of duty. The thing took splendidly Dempsey was delighted. He was cautious enough, too. He had a formal interview with Quartz and Silex, and insisted that his own counsel, Mr. Phillips, should certify as to the titles, before he con sented to act. " Of course we asked him for no money, and donated two thousand shares all round. "So far all was successful. Next came the bargain with my friends. " I wanted them to open a * banking house,' where the office of the Company should be HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 215 located. It would cost at least a thousand dol lars to furnish it ; besides, the rent is fearfully high, but I considered it essential to success. " At length we agreed on the following : Wil- cox was to give Masterman, Coldbrook, and Pope a contract for the sale of the property to them, which was to be laid before the Company, and for which contract the Company are to pay the aforesaid Masterman, Coldbrook, and Pope, the sum of twelve thousand dollars cash, and assume the entire responsibility of carrying it out. " This twelve thousand our three friends are to divide ; but in consideration of that, they hire these offices and furnish them. They get, besides, a hundred thousand dollars apiece of the stock, after the Company is in full mining operation not before." Deams paused to take breath, and to see what effect his recital had on me. " Go on," I said, quietly. Deams did not go on, but instead, he contin ued silent. He looked for a while very hard at 216 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. me, as if trying to satisfy himself of the impres sion he had made. At length he broke out as follows : " Powers one word we know each other well, or ought to. What I want to say is, if you are not will ing to go into this with me, you will do nothing to my prejudice, will you?" I answered at once " Certainly not." "I knew you wouldn't, my dear fellow, I knew you wouldn't. You are true as steel. I always felt you were. As to our Company, it is right. You may depend on it, and if you will let me, I will make an independent fortune for you." " Go on, Deams," I repeated. " I certainly shall not decide against the scheme until I have heard you through." "Thank you, my boy, thank you," said Deams, in a grateful tone. " Now let me have your attention to these figures." Thereupon Deams placed a sheet of paper be fore me, and, drawing his chair near, pointed with his pencil to the schedule, which read as follows: HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 217 HOPE AND ANCHOR. Capital stock $2,750,000 Set aside for working capital 1,250,000 Remaining $1,500,000 Masterman, C. & P., 100,000 each . $300,000 Four other parties, $10,000 each 40,000 For the press 100,000 Six benevolent clergymen 60,000 Broker 100,000 Incidentals 100,000 700,000 To be divided between Beams and Powers in stock $800,000 To be received in cash in five install ments $300,000 To be paid Wilcox 60,000 Cash to be divided between Deams and Powers. ; $240,000 10 218 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. " What do you think of that ? Say, now what do you think of that, Powers? Four hun dred thousand dollars of the stock apiece ! Eighty thousand shares ! Why, I tell you, they will go oif like hot cakes, at two dollars a share, which means a clear one hundred and sixty thou sand dollars each, cash, besides our yearly cash receipts of sixty thousand dollars for four years, making " "Deams, what do you wish me to do for being allowed to participate in this ?" "Always suspicious," replied Deams, with en tire good-humor. "I have already explained that my name must not appear in this, because I am tabooed, financially. I want you to represent my interest and your own ; besides, you are active, competent, and can be trusted. There, you have it." I sat five minutes without making the least reply. Deams, meantime, was careful not to inter rupt me. My thoughts, if put into language, would run HENEY POWERS, BA.NKE#. 219 something in this way. " I have a sort of innate conviction that this affair is all wrong I can't exactly argue it out either. I only feel it. Still, am I not too straight-laced in my notions Deams's scheme is the ordinary one for specula tive companies which often pay well and do well, and finally become remunerative. I am sorry I have taken such a dislike to his * three friends' I dare say, though, I do Pope and Cold- brook injustice. Deams says they are honest men. Doubtless they are. Masterman, unmistakably, is a hard case. However, I won't judge from ap pearances, at least not hastily. What is the necessity of judging at all ? If such men as Dempsey, Peters, Stillhouse, and Brockaw have gone into this and indorsed the scheme to the public by consenting to act as trustees, why, Henry Powers, do you hesitate ? Four first-class New Yorkers lead the enterprise, not you. ' Be not righteous overmuch.' I don't exactly know what that means, but it must mean something. Doesn't it mean, Henry Powers, you can safely 220 HENRY POWERS, BANKKR. leave the morality of this scheme to those four excellent persons, and do your best to co-operate with them? Four hundred thousand dol lars in stock One hundred and sixty thousand dollars in money . . . Thirty thousand dollars a year cash for four years. . . . Wealth. Commanding position Mary Worth !" " Deams ?" "What?" " I will go in !" " Good. I knew you would when you thought it over." " Very well, I have thought it over. ISTow let me know what your plan is for raising the money that is the first point." " Of course it is. I will tell you my difficulty, and why I introduced you as the capitalist. The twelve thousand dollars which I have promised to these people, they are getting a little restive about. The fact is, Pope and Coldbrook have HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 221 furnished the offices, and the concern has rented them, and the whole will count up a pretty fig ure. I have told them you would advance the twelve thousand 'dollars as soon as you were sat isfied, and so forth. Now you have entered on the examination you can take a little time for it eh ?" "Deams?" "What?" " How much of the twelve thousand dollars goes to you? Recollect you are on the square with me." " One-fourth of it three thousand dollars," re sponded Deams, with the contortion of a man undergoing the extraction of an eye-tooth. " One-half of which is mine." " Certainly " another tooth drawn. "Well, Deams, that was very thoughtful in you to provide for a little ready money." " Wasn't it though !" said Deams, still wincing. "How do you propose to procure this twelve thousand dollars ?" 222 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. " I am a little uncertain. I did think you would raise it through the Bank of Mutual Safety, but I suppose there is no use asking you to do that ?" I shook my head. " Do you propose any thing ? " continued Deams. "I do. Let us put the matter into the hands of a first-class broker, and raise what money we Want through him. We will double the amount of stock he is to receive, if necessary. I will speak to Stokes myself about it." "Will you?" said Deams, brightening up. "That is just what I was going to ask you to do. The whole thing is clear. Now I think we may call in our friends from the other room." CHAPTER XXII. AARON MASTERMA^, Elton Pope, and Philo Coldbrook were anxiously awaiting in the count ing-room of their showy " banking-house," the result of my examination into the aifairs of the new Company. Each had a particular interest in this. Masterman was impatient to handle his share of the twelve thousand dollars, while Pope and Coldbrook were beginning to tremble, as well they might, for their investment in so much fine furniture, and for their liability on account of so much rent and clerk hire. Deams proceeded to open the door, and in a trice the firm of "Masterman, Coldbrook & Pope" entered. " I am happy to announce to you, gentlemen," said Deams, in a pompous tone, "that my friend, Mr. Powers, has made very considerable progress in looking into our matters. He authorizes me to 224 HENBY POWERS, BANKEK. say, that he has no doubt he will bring the ex amination to a favorable conclusion. That done, I am further instructed to observe that the little sum you require, on passing the contract, will be forthcoming." Here Deams looked toward me, as if seeking some token of acquiescence. The "three friends," at the same time, turned their ardent gaze in my direction, while breath lessly waiting a confirmation of the welcome in telligence. "Gentlemen," I said, "I am not very rapid in such matters, but I think I have seen enough of your scheme to warrant me in saying I have no doubt I shall take it up, and you will find me prompt in whatever I do undertake. I hardly think you can expect more from me to-day." "Perfectly satisfactory," exclaimed Mr. Master- man, who acted as a sort of claqueur for the other two, "perfectly satisfactory. Speaks like a trump !" " Very satisfactory, truly," said little Mr. Popo. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 225 " Indeed it is," echoed Coldbrook. "That being the case," said Deams, "suppose we have lunch. Masterman, let Abram order some lamb-chops, and a tenderloin, with the et ceteras, from Hinckley's, and seeing it is Mr. Powers' first visit to our office, why, two or three bottles of champagne won't come amiss." Masterman bustled out to give the order, while Pope and partner manifested a very amia ble assent, certainly, considering the disburse ments for the repast were to come from their treasury. Two of Hinckley's waiters speedily appeared, and very soon the table of the " Board of Trus tees of the Hope and Anchor Mutual Coal Com pany" presented a very inviting appearance. Deams was now in his element. Visions of a " splendid success " grew more and more vivid as each successive bumper of champagne was tossed down. Masterman was no way behind Deams in his practical appreciation of the article. In fact, 10* 226 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. these two worthies rather monopolized the three bottles. I think little Mr. Pope and lank Mr. Coldbrook were helped to a glass each only. For myself, I partook of the lunch and the wine with considerable relish. I had a good op portunity to judge of the company I was keeping. "In vino veritas" you know; and I was pleased to be able to reconsider the hasty judgment I had previously formed of Pope and Coldbrook. I was convinced they were really honest persons, who had been carried away with the hope of rap idly making a fortune, and who had actually been made to believe, through the agency of Deams, that they were fitted for Wall Street operations. As to Masterman, he simply developed, as he guzzled the wine, the characteristics I had previ ously given him credit for. The hilarious occasion could not last forever. All things mundane must have an end. Our little company at length broke up. Every one, myself included, expressing the opinion that we were on the road to fortune, if not to fame. HENEY POWERS, BANKER. 227 "Possibly to notoriety" something whispered. I checked the mentor. " I am in for it, and will go through," I mut tered, as I turned down the street. CHAPTER XXIII. THE next day, on coming down town, I stop ped in to look at some offices which were to let in a central position in Wall Street. These consisted of two small, but neat and handsomely furnished rooms, in the second story. The occupant had taken, originally, a five years' lease of them ; and having been fortunate in busi ness, was now going to Europe, leaving eighteen months of the term unexpired. I found the price reasonable, and I secured the rooms on the spot, I next proceeded to a sign-painter, where I ordered a fine large sign, which should be placed over the door and running its entire width. On this sign I directed to be painted in gilt letters : HENRY POWERS. Two or three small tin signs for the outside of the building and the passage-way completed the arrangements. HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 229 I made no specifications after my name, but stood before the public simply as "HENRY POWERS." It struck me that as long as I could claim no particular occupation, I had better let the name rest on its merits. "HENRY POWERS," standing by itself was rather imposing than other wise. "HENRY POWERS, Stock-Broker," was alto gether insignificant. These arrangements concluded, I went to my old office, twisted off the tin sign which was stuck on one side of the door, and in its place affixed a sheet of paper, on which was written : Henry Powers, removed to N~o. Wall Street. While I was inside collecting the few papers which belonged to me, Deams suddenly entered. Consternation was pictured on his countenance " Good gracious ! Mr, Powers, what does this mean ? What can it mean ?" "Deams, do you suppose that 'Henry Powers, Banker,' is going to take up with desk-room in 230 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. this insignificant basement? Let me tell you I change my office to suit my position " "For mercy's sake, no joking. Let me know, truly, the meaning of all this." " Come with me, Deams, and I will explain." Deams followed me in silence. I led the way to my new office, and unlocking the door, ushered him in. " By Jove !" said Deams, brightening up ; " I think I understand it now ; Delain left his office to be let, I knew. I wonder I had not thought of it myself. You have got it at a bargain, I dare say. The rooms will suit us splendidly." " Me you mean, Deams. I do not propose that any one shall occupy the place but myself." "How so?" said Deams. " Just this. I have undertaken, as you know, to float this new company. To do this, we must have separate offices." " Do you really mean it ?" "Of course I do. Think a moment, Deams," HENRY POWERS, BANKER. 231 * I continued kindly, " and you will admit I am right; you yourself would not permit your name to be used on the prospectus, or as trustee, be cause you thought it would injure the Company. I appreciated your motives, and I want you to appreciate mine." " I do, my dear Powers, I do," replied Deams, almost with tears in his eyes. " Your course is the correct one. It is better for you to have a respectable place to hail from, disconnected from mine. We can meet at my place when you like, and here when you like, while carrying out our plans." " Exactly," I replied, and Deams left in excel lent spirits. I will let you, reader, a little further into my motives for so abruptly changing my place of business. I had made a mistake in my connection with Deams, and determined in future to sail in com pany with the four first-class trustees, Messrs. Dempsey, Peters, Stillhouse, and Brokaw, and not 232 HENRY POWERS, BANKER. with the members of the other department of the concern. To do this I must cut loose from Deams, as well as from the associations of his office; and I must have a place where I should not be ashamed to ask my co-trustees to call on me. I determined further, if any thing should go wrong in the affairs of the Company, that the four gentlemen I have mentioned should bear their full share of the responsibility. Again, if I was to confer with Stokes, the large stock-broker, what could I expect hailing from that basement yonder ? You see I had calculated all the advantages before incurring this additional expense. The next day I called on Mr. Stokes. He re ceived me cordially, but was, of course, full of business. He proposed, however, to give me an interview at his house that evening, when I was to open up the subject of the " Hope and Anchor Mutual Coal Company." Accordingly, about eight o'clock, I presented HENKY POWERS, BAKKER. 233 myself at an elegant mansion in West Thirty- fourth Street. I was ushered into a small library room, where I found Mr. Stokes comfortably smoking, while reading the Evening Post. He welcomed me cordially, and offered me a cigar, which I accepted, and which proved to be of the choicest description. After some general conversation about the war and the state of the country, I commenced my explanation. I went minutely into the mat ter, and explained the " situation," without re serve or keeping back. Finally I proposed to put the whole into the hands of his house, with such favorable arrangements as he him self should consider adequate for the services rendered. "First, you want twelve thousand dollars to pay for the contract ?" "Yes." " Then sixty thousand dollars for the first installment?" 234: HENRY POWERS, BANKER. Yes." "Then how much for opening and developing the mines, side tracks, cars, &c., &c.,