The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 4, February, 1858 by Various
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page 1 of 282 (00%)
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THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY,
A MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART, AND POLITICS. * * * * * VOL. I.--FEBRUARY, 1858.--NO. IV. * * * * * THE GREAT FAILURE. The _crucial_ fact, in this epoch of commercial catastrophes, is not the stoppage of Smith, Jones, and Robinson,--nor the suspension of specie payments by a greater or less number of banks,--but the paralysis of the trade of the civilized globe. We have had presented to us, within the last quarter, the remarkable, though by no means novel, spectacle of a sudden overthrow of business,--in the United States, in England, in France, and over the greater part of the Continent. At a period of profound and almost universal peace,--when there had been no marked deficit in the productiveness of industry, when there had been no extraordinary dissipation of its results by waste and extravagance,--when no pestilence or famine or dark rumor of civil revolution had benumbed its energies,--when the needs for its enterprise were seemingly as active and stimulating as ever,--all its habitual functions are arrested, and shocks of disaster run along the ground from Chicago to Constantinople, toppling down innumerable well-built |
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