A Speech on the Principles of Finance
Transcriber’s Note:
The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.
VICTORIA C. WOODHULL,
DELIVERED AT
COOPER INSTITUTE, NEW YORK CITY,
THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1871.
NEW YORK:
WOODHULL, CLAFLIN & CO., No. 41 BROAD STREET.
1871.
THE PRINCIPLES OF FINANCE.
To the careful student of history, there is a very great deal more to be considered than the mere political facts that stand as landmarks along the path of progress which the nations have traversed since the plains of Iran poured forth their hosts westward. These facts are the mere externals that adorn the pages of historic lore, and embellish the memories of the great men who have lived in and moved the world at various times in various nations, or which clothe the lives of tyrants and usurpers with their just reward.
The superficial student of history cares only for the results of the evolution of nations—for the fact that Sesostris was the greatest of Egyptian kings; or that Semiramis rose by her military sagacity from the rank of a mean official’s wife to be, first, the Queen of Ninas, and afterward, to be the Assyrian Queen, who should march an army of three millions men across the Indus to conquer the Indian King. Running down the course of events, he traces the rise and fall of nations—after Assyria then Egypt, next Persia, Greece, Rome and then the Dark Ages, out of whose womb was evolved modern Europe; and, lastly, the birth, development, struggle and recovery of the most remarkable nation which has yet arisen in the world.