THE COLLAPSE OF THE BANK 91
deposited there. Some of them, while strongly assuring
me of its soundness had withdrawn their money and
opened accounts elsewhere.
Gradually I discovered that the bank had, through dis-
honest agents, sustained heavy losses at the South; that
there was a discrepancy on the books of forty thousand
dollars for which no account could be given, and that,
instead of our assets being equal to our liabilities, we
could not in all likelihoods of the case pay seventy-two
cents on the dollar. There was an air of mystery, too,
about the spacious and elegant apartments of the bank
building, which greatly troubled me, and which I have
only been able to explain to myself on the supposition
that the employees, from the actuary and the inspector
down to the messengers, were (perhaps) naturally anxious
to hold their places, and consequently have the business
continued. I am not a violent advocate of the doctrine of
total depravity of human nature. I am inclined, on the
whole, to believe it a tolerable good nature, yet instances
do occur which oblige me to concede that men can and
do act from mere personal and selfish motives. In this
case, at any rate, it seemed not unreasonable to conclude
that the finely dressed young gentlemen, adorned with
pens and bouquets, the most fashionable and genteel of
all our colored youth, stationed behind those marble
counters, should desire to retain their places as long as
there was money in the vaults to pay them their salaries.
Standing on the platform of this large and complicated
establishment, with its thirty-four branches, extending
from New Orleans to Philadelphia, its machinery in full
operation, its correspondence carried on in cipher, its
actuary dashing in and out of the bank with an air of
pressing business, if not of bewilderment, I found the path
of enquiry I was pursuing an exceedingly difficult one. I
knew there had been very lately several runs on the bank,
and that there had been a héavy draft made upon its
reserve fund, but I did not know, what I should have been
told before being allowed to enter upon the duties of my
office, that this reserve, which the bank by its charter was
required to keep, had been entirely exhausted, and that
hence there was nothing left to meet any future emergency.