were sensible of its strength, and they soon generally
became its obedient instruments, ready at all times
to execute its mandates; and with the banks necessarily
went also that numerous class of persons in our commercial
cities who depend altogether on bank credits for their
solvency and means of business, and who are therefore
obliged, for their own safety, to propitiate the favor
of the money power by distinguished zeal and devotion
in its service. The result of the ill-advised
legislation which established this great monopoly
was to concentrate the whole moneyed power of the Union,
with its boundless means of corruption and its numerous
dependents, under the direction and command of one
acknowledged head, thus organizing this particular
interest as one body and securing to it unity and concert
of action throughout the United States, and enabling
it to bring forward upon any occasion its entire and
undivided strength to support or defeat any measure
of the Government. In the hands of this formidable
power, thus perfectly organized, was also placed unlimited
dominion over the amount of the circulating medium,
giving it the power to regulate the value of property
and the fruits of labor in every quarter of the Union,
and to bestow prosperity or bring ruin upon any city
or section of the country as might best comport with
its own interest or policy.
We are not left to conjecture how the moneyed power,
thus organized and with such a weapon in its hands,
would be likely to use it. The distress and alarm
which pervaded and agitated the whole country when
the Bank of the United States waged war upon the people
in order to compel them to submit to its demands can
not yet be forgotten. The ruthless and unsparing
temper with which whole cities and communities were
oppressed, individuals impoverished and ruined, and
a scene of cheerful prosperity suddenly changed into
one of gloom and despondency ought to be indelibly
impressed on the memory of the people of the United
States. If such was its power in a time of peace,
what would it not have been in a season of war, with
an enemy at your doors? No nation but the freemen
of the United States could have come out victorious
from such a contest; yet, if you had not conquered,
the Government would have passed from the hands of
the many to the hands of the few, and this organized
money power from its secret conclave would have dictated
the choice of your highest officers and compelled
you to make peace or war, as best suited their own
wishes. The forms of your Government might for
a time have remained, but its living spirit would
have departed from it.