-6- France after the chaotic days of Mazarin." However, it collapsed in 1789 with a crash and a thunder which rever- berated for a score of years all over the world. Thus the best laid schemes of Bourbon autocrats failed as dismally as that of their Stuart cousins. Governments from the top fail as often as those from the bottom; and every great failure brings a sad social reaction, thousands and mil- lions of helpless men laying down their lives in the un- happy process. Why may not statesmen study the past and avoid such catastrophes? V. When Napolean I came to his end in 1815, a great world congress had set everything to rights in Vienna and told everybody how to behave for a hundred years; but soon came the accustomed chaos in victorious as well as defeated countries. From 1818 to 1846 there was depression; here and there, everywhere, as now the markets of Europe, except for cotton, were dead for young America, and Europe was distracted by debts and new revolutions. Would mankind never learn the effects of war? In far-off Kentucky a lean, lanky, half-educated but clever orator, Henry Clay, worked out in 1823 another economic nationalism. He would bar the ports of the United States against cheap but excellent European goods, asso- ciate all Latin-American peoples with those of his own country, create huge markets by building cities, roadways and canals and leave the builders of the new industry and the new-old banking system the utmost freedom in exploiting their |