[Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market by Walter Bagehot]@TWC D-Link bookLombard Street: A Description of the Money Market CHAPTER III 26/36
In England and Scotland a diffused system of note issues started banks all over the country; in these banks the savings of the country have been lodged, and by these they have been sent to London.
No similar system arose elsewhere, and in consequence London is full of money, and all continental cities are empty as compared with it. II. The monarchical form of Lombard Street is due also to the note issue.
The origin of the Bank of England has been told by Macaulay, and it is never wise for an ordinary writer to tell again what he has told so much better.
Nor is it necessary, for his writings are in everyone's hands.
Still I must remind my readers of the curious story. Of all institutions in the world the Bank of England is now probably the most remote from party politics and from 'financing.' But in its origin it was not only a finance company, but a Whig finance company.
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