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Madame Law depicted in a flowing gown and a feathered three-cornered hat. Her portrait is enclosed in a circular frame, and a decorative frame that includes multiple goblins.

Portrait of Madame Law

A chaotic scene with many people tearing at a well dressed man in the center. There is a nun with a rosary kneeled over him. Behind him there is a well-dressed woman holding paper notes and a blind pauper boy

Philibert Bouttats (Flemish, ca. 1650–?) after Romeyn de Hooghe (Dutch, 1645–1708), The Dying Bubble-Lord in the Lap of Madame Compagnie, 1720, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints, and Photographs

Lady Credit, Fickle Goddess

Lady Credit, sometimes identified by her French moniker, “Madame Compagnie,” assumes the role of John Law’s sidekick in The Great Mirror of Folly. She appears variously as a beautiful, bewitching temptress, similar to her mythological counterpart Fortuna, or as a grotesque female personification of avarice and greed.

On the one hand, following the misogynistic musings of an eighteenth-century British treatise, we might interpret Lady Credit’s portrayal as embodying the “Deceit and vile Stratagems of Women.” Her rapacious thirst for New World commodities like chocolate and sugar drove these international trading ventures. On the other hand, she also evokes the robust participation of real-life women in the Mississippi and South Sea Bubbles. Some, like the French regent’s mistress, invested heavily and got out early (possibly following insider advice). But others, such as the famous Parisian salon hostess Madame de Tencin, became active share traders and set up their own businesses on Paris’s rue Quincampoix and elsewhere. Perhaps the most notorious among these women was Lady Katherine Knollys, a descendant of the unlucky Queen Anne Boleyn, who became the Scottish financier’s common-law wife and accomplice to his schemes. She is portrayed in one print crowing about the couple’s triumph and her subsequent escape to Venice, safe haven for all serious pretenders.

The New York Public Library believes that this item is in the public domain under the laws of the United States, but did not make a determination as to its copyright status under the copyright laws of other countries.

Items in Lady Credit, Fickle Goddess

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  • A chaotic scene with many people tearing at a well dressed man in the center. There is a nun with a rosary kneeled over him. Behind him there is a well-dressed woman holding paper notes and a blind pauper boy

    Lady Credit, Fickle Goddess Introduction

  • Madame Law depicted in a flowing gown and a feathered three-cornered hat. Her portrait is enclosed in a circular frame, and a decorative frame that includes multiple goblins.

    Portrait of Madame Law

  • John Law in a suit lays with his head in Lady Credit's lap while a flurry of activity happens around them. There is a blind beggar to the top right, a nun praying and hovering over him, and many more men and women holding stock shares.

    The Dying Bubble-Lord in the Lap of Madame Compagnie

  • A winged, nude female figure stands atop a globe and holds a chalice with her right hand and horse tack in her left

    Nemesis or The Great Fortune

  • beneath a portrait of John Law, a mass of all ages and backgrounds rush towards a figure of lady fortune in the top right corner, only to fall off a large cliff

    Greed Tries Either to Overtake or to Outrun Fortune

  • a carriage led by two horses- one is covered in human faces- pulls a chariot that carries a driver and the goddess fortuna. The carriage is surrounded by a cast of characters, including lust, idle pleasure, and betrayal

    The Triumph of Riches from The Cycle of Vicissitudes of Human Affairs

  • a woman sits painting surrounded by putti holding art supplies and books, the scene is enclosed in an oval and labelled: le peinture

    Painting

  • A chaotic scene with many people tearing at a well dressed man in the center. There is a nun with a rosary kneeled over him. Behind him there is a well-dressed woman holding paper notes and a blind pauper boy

    Lady Credit, Fickle Goddess