The Rothschild – Nathan Mayer Rothschild (part four)

“By 1815, Nathan controlled England’s finances. He did a large amount of direct business with the English Treasury. John Hemes was allowing deals that would hurt England but fill the pockets of the House of Rothschild. The following quote by one of Nathan’s contemporaries describes his eerie countenance: ‘Eyes are usually called windows of the soul. But in Rothschild’s case you would conclude that the windows are false ones, or that there was no soul to look out from them. There is not one pencil of light from the interior, nor is there any gleam of that which comes from it without being reflected in any direction. The whole thing puts you in mind of an empty skin, and you wonder why it stands upright without at least something in it. By and by, another figure comes up to it. It then steps two paces aside, and the most inquisitive glance that you ever saw, and a glance more inquisitive than you would have thought of, is drawn out of the fixed and leaden eyes, as if one were drawing a sword from a scabbard….’

This description is disturbingly similar to either MPD or demonic possession. A Prussian official said that Rothschild had ‘an incredible influence upon all financial affairs here in London. It is widely stated that he entirely regulates the rate of exchange in the city. His power as a banker is enormous.’ ‘When Nathan made a fuss, the Bank of England trembled.’ Once he tried to cash a cheque from his brother Amschel at the bank, but the bank refused, saying it cashed only its own notes. Nathan’s volcano-like temper exploded. The next morning, he and nine of his clerks arrived at the bank and began exchanging bank notes for gold. In one day, he had reduced the bank’s gold reserves by a substantial amount. The next day, he and his clerks arrived with more bank notes. A bank executive nervously asked how long he intended to keep this up. Nathan replied something to the effect of, ‘The Bank of England refused to take my bills, so I will not keep theirs.’ A meeting was quickly called and they decided that from then on the Bank of England would be pleased to cash any Rothschild cheque.”

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