An intelligent penniless American and an equally impoverished Italian prince deny their love for each other and marry two members of a cultivated and wealthy family
Originally written for Harper's Weekly and first published in book form in 1914, these essays provide an incisive analysis of the activities of the financial oligarchy, and its central element, the investment banker as revealed in the testimony and findings of the Pujo Committee. "Within the voluminous reform literature ... Brandeis' attack on the U.S financial structure ... stands out as among the most important." The Reprint Bulletin
An intelligent penniless American and an equally impoverished Italian prince deny their love for each other and marry two members of a cultivated and wealthy family