CHAPTER XIV
THE GREAT PANIC
My investigations for "The Metropolis" had brought me
several permanent friendships; for there are true and gracious
people in New York "society," as everywhere else. One of
them was Edmond Kelly, who was not only a thinker and
writer of distinction, but an international lawyer, known in
all the capitals of Europe, and up to the time of his death
the only American who had received the cross of the Legion
of Honor in France. Kelly had been counsel for Anna
Gould in her famous divorce suit, and told me the incredible
story of Count Boni de Castellane. "The Metropolis" was
being published in Paris, and causing a sensation there; as
I read the eulogies of the French critics, I used to smile to
myself, wondering what they would have said if I had made
a book about the manners and morals of French "society,"
as seen through the eyes of Edmond Kelly!
It happened that I was in New York in the fall of 1907, and was in Kelly's study late one evening. I had to wait an hour or two for him, and he came in, deeply moved, and told me that he had just left the home of an old friend, Charles T. Barney, President of the Knickerbocker Trust Company, who was in dire distress. I had been reading in the papers for a couple of days wild rumors of trouble in this institution, which had built itself a miniature Greek temple at the corner of Thirty-fourth Street and Fifth Avenue. Now I got the inside story of what was going on. It appeared that the masters of high finance in New York, of whom the late J. P. Morgan was king, had determined to break these new institutions, the independent trust companies which were creeping in upon their preserves. Morgan had deliberately led Barney into entanglements, and had given him definite promise of support. That night, when called upon by Barney, he had repudiated his pledge; so the Knickerbocker Trust Company was doomed, several other trust companies would go with it, and the whole financial structure of New York would be shaken to the foundations. Kelly had promised