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        The legislature opened on January 18th, 1849, when 
		Lord Elgin had the
		gratification of informing French Canadians that the restrictions imposed by the Union Act on the use of their 
		language in the public
		records had been removed by a statute of the imperial parliament. For the first time in Canadian history the 
		governor-general read the speech in the two languages; for in the past it 
		had been the practice of 
		the president of the legislative council to give it in French after it had been read in English from the throne. The 
		session was memorable in 
		political annals for the number of useful measures that were adopted. In later pages of this book I shall give 
		a short review of these 
		and other measures which show the importance of the legislation passed by the LaFontaine-Baldwin ministry. For the 
		present I shall confine 
		myself to the consideration of a question which created an extraordinary amount of public excitement, 
		culminated in the
		destruction of valuable public property, and even threatened the life of the governor-general, who during one of the 
		most trying crises in
		Canadian history, displayed a coolness and patience, an indifference to all personal considerations, a political 
		sagacity and a strict
		adherence to sound methods of constitutional government, which entitle him to the gratitude of Canadians, who might have 
		seen their country torn 
		asunder by internecine strife, had there been then a weak and passionate man at the head of the executive. As it 
		will be seen later, he, 
		like the younger Pitt in England, was "the pilot who weathered the storm." In Canada, the storm, in which the 
		elements of racial
		antagonism, of political rivalry and disappointment, of spoiled fortunes and commercial ruin raged tumultuously 
		for a while, threatened 
		not only to drive Canada back for years in its political and material development, but even to disturb the 
		relations between the 
		dependency and the imperial state. 
		
		The legislation which gave 
		rise to this serious convulsion in the country was, in a measure, an aftermath of the 
		rebellious risings of
		1837 and 1838 in Upper and Lower Canada. Many political grievances had been redressed since the union, and the French 
		Canadians had begun to
		feel that their interests were completely safe under a system of government which gave them an influential position 
		in the public councils. 
		The restoration of their language to its proper place in a country composed of two nationalities standing on 
		a sure footing of equal 
		political and civil rights, was a great consolation to the French people of the east. The pardon extended to 
		the rash men who were 
		directly concerned in the events of 1837 and 1838, was also well calculated to heal the wounds inflicted on the 
		province during that
		troublous period. It needed only the passage of another measure to conceal the scars of those unhappy days, and to 
		bury the past in that
		oblivion in which all Canadians anxious for the unity and harmony of the two races, and the satisfactory operation of 
		political institutions, 
		were sincerely desirous of hiding it forever. This measure was pecuniary compensation from the state 
		for certain losses
		incurred by people in French Canada in consequence of the wanton destruction of property during the revolt. The 
		obligation of the state
		to give such compensation had been fully recognized before and after the union. 
		
		The special council of Lower 
		Canada and the legislature of Upper Canada had authorized the payment of an indemnity 
		to those loyal
		inhabitants in their respective provinces who had sustained losses during the insurrections. It was not possible, 
		however, before the
		union, to make payments out of the public treasury in accordance with the ordinance of the special council of Lower 
		Canada and the statute
		of the legislature of Upper Canada. In the case of both provinces these measures were enacted to satisfy the demands 
		that were made for
		compensation by a large number of people who claimed to have suffered losses at the outbreak of the rebellions, or 
		during the raids from the United States which followed these risings and 
		which kept the country
		in a state of ferment for months. The legislature of the united provinces passed an act during its first session 
		to extend compensation 
		to losses occasioned in Upper Canada by violence on the part of persons "acting or assuming to act" on Her 
		Majesty's behalf "for 
		the suppression of the said rebellion or for the prevention of further disturbances." Funds were also voted out 
		of the public revenues 
		for the payment of indemnities to those who had met with the losses set forth in this legislation affecting 
		Upper Canada. It was, on 
		the whole, a fair settlement of just claims in the western province. The French Canadians in the legislature 
		supported the measure, 
		and urged with obvious reason that the same consideration should be shown to the same class of persons in 
		Lower Canada. It was
		not, however, until the session of 1845, when the Draper-Viger ministry was in office, that an address was passed 
		to the governor-general, 
		Lord Metcalfe, praying him to take such steps as were necessary "to insure to the inhabitants of 
		that portion of this
		province, formerly Lower Canada, an indemnity for just losses suffered during the rebellions of 1837 and 1838." The 
		immediate result was the appointment of commissioners to make inquiry into 
		the losses sustained by 
		"Her Majesty's loyal subjects" in Lower Canada "during the late unfortunate rebellion." The commissioners found 
		some difficulty in
		acting upon their instructions, which called upon them to distinguish the cases of those "who had joined, aided or 
		abetted the said
		rebellion, from the cases of those who had not done so," and they accordingly applied for definite advice from Lord 
		Cathcart, whose advisers 
		were still the Draper-Viger ministry. The commissioners were officially informed that "it was his Excellency's 
		intention that they
		should be guided by no other description of evidence than that furnished by the sentences of the courts of law." 
		They were further
		informed that it was only intended that they should form a general estimate of the rebellion losses, "the particulars 
		of which must form the 
		subject of more minute inquiry hereafter, under legislative authority." 
		
		During the session of 1846 the 
		commissioners made a report which gave a list of 2,176 persons who made claims amounting 
		in the aggregate to
		L241,965. At the same time the commissioners expressed the opinion that L100,000 would be adequate to satisfy all 
		just demands, and
		directed attention to the fact that upwards of L25,503 were actually claimed by persons who had been condemned by a 
		court-martial for their
		participation in the rebellion. The report also set forth that the inquiry conducted by the commissioners had been 
		necessarily imperfect in 
		the absence of legal power to make a minute investigation, and that they had been compelled largely to trust to the 
		allegations of the
		claimants who had laid their cases before them, and that it was only from data collected in this way that they had been 
		able to come to
		conclusions as to the amount of losses. 
		
		When the Draper-Viger ministry 
		first showed a readiness to take up the claims of Lower Canada for the same compensation 
		that had been granted to 
		Upper Canada, they had been doubtless influenced, not solely by the conviction that they were called upon to perform 
		an act of justice, but 
		mainly by a desire to strengthen themselves in the French province. We have already read that their efforts 
		in this direction
		entirely failed, and that they never obtained in that section any support from the recognized leaders of public 
		opinion, but were
		obliged to depend upon Denis B. Papineau and Viger to keep up a pretence of French Canadian representation in the 
		cabinet. It is, then, 
		easy to believe that, when the report of the commissioners came before them, they were not very enthusiastic on 
		the subject, or prepared 
		to adopt vigorous measures to settle the question on some equitable basis, and remove it entirely from the 
		field of political and 
		national conflict. 
		
		They did nothing more than make provision for the 
		payment of L9,986, which 
		represented claims fully investigated and recognized as justifiable before the union, and left the general 
		question of indemnity 
		for future consideration. Indeed, it is doubtful if the Conservative ministry of that day, the mere 
		creation of Lord Metcalfe, kept in power by a combination of Tories and other 
		factions in Upper
		Canada, could have satisfactorily dealt with a question which required the interposition of a government having the 
		confidence of both
		sections of the province. One thing is quite certain. This ministry, weak as it was, Tory and ultra-loyalist as it 
		claimed to be, had
		recognized by the appointment of a commission, the justice of giving compensation to French Canada on the principles 
		which had governed the
		settlement of claims from Upper Canada. Had the party which supported that ministry been influenced by any regard for 
		consistency or
		principle, it was bound in 1849 to give full consideration to the question, and treat it entirely on its merits with 
		the view of preventing 
		its being made a political issue and a means of arousing racial and sectional animosities. As we shall now 
		see, however, party
		passion, political demagogism, and racial hatred prevailed above all high considerations of the public peace and 
		welfare, when parliament was asked by the LaFontaine-Baldwin ministry to 
		deal seriously and
		practically with the question of indemnity to Lower Canada. 
		
		The session was not far 
		advanced when LaFontaine brought forward a series of resolutions, on which were subsequently 
		based a bill, which set 
		forth in the preamble that "in order to redeem the pledge given to the sufferers of such losses ... it is necessary 
		and just that the
		particulars of such losses, not yet paid and satisfied, should form the subject of more minute inquiry under 
		legislative authority (see p. 65 ante) and that the same, so far only as they 
		may have arisen from the 
		total or partial, unjust, unnecessary or wanton destruction of dwellings, buildings, property and effects ... 
		should be paid and
		satisfied." The act provided that no indemnity should be paid to persons "who had been convicted of treason during 
		the rebellion, or who, 
		having been taken into custody, had submitted to Her Majesty's will, and been transported to Bermuda." Five 
		commissioners were to be appointed to carry out the provisions of the act, 
		which also provided
		L400,000 for the payment of legal claims. 
		
		Then all the forces hostile to 
		the government gathered their full strength for an onslaught on a measure which such 
		Tories as Sir Allan
		MacNab and Henry Sherwood believed gave them an excellent opportunity of arousing a strong public sentiment which might 
		awe the governor-general 
		and bring about a ministerial crisis. The issue was not one of public principle or of devotion to the 
		Crown, it was simply a 
		question of obtaining a party victory per fas aut nefas. The debate on the second reading of the bill was full 
		of bitterness,
		intensified even to virulence. Mr. Sherwood declared that the proposal of the government meant nothing else than the 
		giving of a reward to
		the very persons who had been the cause of the shedding of blood and the destruction of property throughout the 
		country. Sir Allan MacNab went so far in a moment of passion as to insult 
		the French Canadian
		people by calling them "aliens and rebels." The solicitor-general, Mr. Hume Blake,[10] who was Irish by birth, and 
		possessed a great power of invective, inveighed in severe terms against "the 
		family compact" as
		responsible for the rebellion, and declared that the stigma of "rebels" applied with complete force to the men 
		who were then
		endeavouring to prevent the passage of a bill which was a simple act of justice to a large body of loyal people. Sir 
		Allan MacNab instantly
		became furious and said that if Mr. Blake called him a rebel it was simply a lie. 
		
		Then followed a scene of 
		tumult, in which the authority of the chair was disregarded, members indulged in the most 
		disorderly cries, and
		the people in the galleries added to the excitement on the floor by their hisses and shouts. The galleries were 
		cleared with the greatest difficulty, and a hostile encounter between Sir 
		Allan and Mr. Blake was 
		only prevented by the intervention of the sergeant-at-arms, who took them into custody by order of the House until 
		they gave assurances 
		that they would proceed no further in the unseemly dispute. When the debate was resumed on the following day, 
		LaFontaine brought it 
		again to the proper level of argument and reason, and showed that both parties were equally pledged to a measure 
		based on considerations
		of justice, and declared positively that the government would take every possible care in its instructions to the 
		commissioner; that no
		rebel should receive any portion of the indemnity, which was intended only as a compensation to those who had just 
		claims upon the country
		for the losses that they actually sustained in the course of the unfortunate rebellion. At this time the 
		Conservative and ultra-loyal press was making frantic appeals to party passions 
		and racial prejudices, 
		and calling upon the governor-general to intervene and prevent the passage of a measure which, in the 
		opinion of loyal
		Canadians, was an insult to the Crown and its adherents. Public meetings were also held and efforts made to arouse 
		a violent feeling
		against the bill. The governor-general understood his duty too well as the head of the executive to interfere with the 
		bill while passing
		through the two Houses, and paid no heed to these passionate appeals dictated by partisan rancour, while the ministry 
		pressed the question to 
		the test of a division as soon as possible. The resolutions and the several readings of the bill passed both Houses by 
		large majorities. The 
		bill was carried in the assembly on March 9th by forty-seven votes against eighteen, and in the legislative council 
		on the 15th, by fifteen 
		against fourteen. By an analysis of the division in the popular chamber, it will be seen that out of 
		thirty-one members from
		Upper Canada seventeen supported and fourteen opposed the bill, while out of ten Lower Canadian members of British 
		descent there were six
		who voted yea and four nay. The representatives of French Canada as a matter of course were arrayed as one in favour of 
		an act of justice to
		their compatriots. During the passage of the bill its opponents deluged the governor-general with petitions asking 
		him either to dissolve 
		the legislature or to reserve the bill for the consideration of the imperial government. Such appeals had no 
		effect whatever upon
		Lord Elgin, who was determined to adhere to the well understood rules of parliamentary government in all cases of 
		political controversy. 
		
		When the bill had passed all its stages in the two 
		Houses by large
		majorities of both French and English Canadians, the governor-general came to the legislative council and gave the royal 
		assent to the measure, 
		which was entitled "An Act to provide for the indemnification of parties in Lower Canada whose property was 
		destroyed during the
		rebellion in the years 1837 and 1838." No other constitutional course could have been followed by him under all the 
		circumstances. In his
		letters to the colonial secretary he did not hesitate to express his regret "that this agitation should have been 
		stirred, and that any
		portion of the funds of the province should be diverted now from much more useful purposes to make good losses sustained 
		by individuals in the 
		rebellion," but he believed that "a great deal of property was cruelly and wantonly destroyed" in Lower Canada, 
		and that "this
		government, after what their predecessors had done, and with Papineau in the rear, could not have helped taking up this 
		question." He saw
		clearly that it was impossible to dissolve a parliament just elected by the people, and in which the government had a 
		large majority. "If I
		had dissolved parliament," to quote his own words, "I might have produced a rebellion, but assuredly I should not 
		have procured a change 
		of ministry. The leaders of the party know that as well as I do, and were it possible to play tricks in such 
		grave concerns, it would 
		have been easy to throw them into utter confusion by merely calling upon them to form a government. They were 
		aware, however, that I 
		could not for the sake of discomfiting them hazard so desperate a policy; so they have played out their game of 
		faction and violence
		without fear of consequences." 
		
		His reasons for not reserving 
		the bill for the consideration of the British government must be regarded as equally 
		cogent by every student
		of our system of government, especially by those persons who believe in home rule in all matters involving purely 
		Canadian interests. In
		the first place, the bill for the relief of a corresponding class of persons in Upper Canada, "which was couched in 
		terms very nearly
		similar, was not reserved," and it was "difficult to discover a sufficient reason, so far as the representative of 
		the Crown was concerned, 
		for dealing with the one measure differently from the other." And in the second place, "by reserving the 
		bill he should only
		throw upon Her Majesty's government or (as it would appear to the popular eye in Canada) on Her Majesty herself, a 
		responsibility which
		rests and ought to rest" upon the governor-general of Canada. If he passed the bill, "whatever mischief ensues may 
		probably be repaired,"
		if the worst came to the worst, "by the sacrifice" of himself. If the case were referred to England, on the other hand, 
		it was not impossible 
		that Her Majesty might "only have before her the alternative of provoking a rebellion in Lower 
		Canada, by refusing her
		assent to a measure chiefly affecting the interests of the habitants and thus throwing the whole population into 
		Papineau's hands, or of
		wounding the susceptibilities of some of the best subjects she has in the province." 
		
		A Canadian writer at the 
		present time can refer only with a feeling of indignation and humiliation to the scenes of 
		tumult, rioting and
		incendiarism, which followed the royal assent to the bill of indemnity. When Lord Elgin left Parliament 
		House--formerly the Ste. Anne market--a large crowd insulted him with 
		opprobrious epithets. In his own words he was "received with ironical 
		cheers and hootings, and a small knot of individuals, consisting, it has 
		since been ascertained, 
		of persons of a respectable class in society, pelted the carriage with missiles which must have been 
		brought for that purpose." A meeting was held in the open air, and after 
		several speeches of a
		very inflammatory character had been made, the mob rushed to the parliament building, which was soon in flames. By 
		this disgraceful act of 
		incendiarism most valuable collections of books and documents were destroyed, which, in some cases, could not be 
		replaced. Supporters of
		the bill were everywhere insulted and maltreated while the excitement was at its height. LaFontaine's residence was 
		attacked and injured.
		His valuable library of books and manuscripts, some of them very rare, was destroyed by fire--a deplorable incident which  ecalls the burning and 
		mutilation of the rich historical collections of Hutchinson, the last loyalist governor of Massachusetts, at the 
		commencement of the
		American revolution in Boston. 
		
		A few days later Lord Elgin's 
		life was in actual danger at the hands of the unruly mob, as he was proceeding to 
		Government House--then the old Chateau de Ramezay on Notre Dame Street--to 
		receive an address from 
		the assembly. On his return to Monklands he was obliged to take a circuitous route to evade the same mob who were 
		waiting with the object 
		of further insulting him and otherwise giving vent to their feelings. 
		
		The government appears to have 
		been quite unconscious that the public excitement was likely to assume so dangerous a 
		phase, and had
		accordingly taken none of those precautions which might have prevented the destruction of the parliament house and its 
		valuable contents.
		Indeed it would seem that the leaders of the movement against the bill had themselves no idea that the political storm 
		which they had raised by 
		their inflammatory harangues would become a whirlwind so entirely beyond their control. Their main object was to 
		bring about a
		ministerial crisis. Sir Allan MacNab, the leader of the opposition, himself declared that he was amazed at the 
		dangerous form which the public indignation had at last assumed. He had 
		always been a devoted
		subject of the sovereign, and it is only just to say that he could under no circumstances become a rebel, but he had 
		been carried away by his 
		feelings and had made rash observations more than once under the belief that the bill would reward the same class 
		of men whom he and other 
		loyalists had fought against in Upper Canada. Whatever he felt in his heart, he and his followers must always be 
		held as much responsible 
		for the disturbances of 1849 as were Mackenzie and Papineau for those of 1837. Indeed there was this 
		difference between them: 
		the former were reckless, but at least they had, in the opinion of many persons, certain political grievances to 
		redress, while the
		latter were simply opposing the settlement of a question which they were bound to consider fairly and impartially, if 
		they had any respect for 
		former pledges. Papineau, Mackenzie and Nelson may well have found a measure of justification for their past madness 
		when they found the
		friends of the old "family compact" and the extreme loyalists of 1837 and 1838 incited to insult the sovereign in the 
		person of her
		representative, to create racial passion and to excite an agitation which might at any moment develop into a movement 
		most fatal to Canada and 
		her connection with England. 
		
		Happily for the peace of the 
		country, Lord Elgin and his councillors showed a forbearance and a patience which could 
		hardly have been
		expected from them during the very serious crisis in which they lived for some weeks. "I am prepared," said Lord Elgin 
		at the very moment his 
		life was in danger, "to bear any amount of obloquy that may be cast upon me, but, if I can possibly prevent it, 
		no stain of blood shall 
		rest upon my name." When he remained quiet at Monklands and decided not to give his enemies further 
		opportunities for outbursts of passion by paying visits to the city, even if 
		protected by a military
		force, he was taunted by the papers of the opposition with cowardice for pursuing a course which, we can all now 
		clearly see, was in the
		interests of peace and order. When at a later time LaFontaine's house was again attacked after the arrest of certain 
		persons implicated in
		the destruction of the parliament house, and one of the assailants was killed by a shot fired from inside, he positively 
		refused to consent to 
		martial law or any measures of increased rigour until a further appeal had been made to the mayor and corporation 
		of the city. The issue 
		proved that he was clearly right in his opinion of the measures that should be taken to restore order at this 
		time. The law-abiding
		citizens of Montreal at once responded to a proclamation of the mayor to assist him in the maintenance of peace, and the 
		coroner's jury--one
		member being an Orangeman who had taken part in the funeral of the deceased--brought in a unanimous verdict, 
		acquitting LaFontaine of all blame for the unfortunate incident that had 
		occurred during the
		unlawful attack on his residence. 
		
		The Montreal disturbances soon 
		evoked the indignation of the truly loyal inhabitants of the province. Addresses came 
		to the governor-general 
		from all parts to show him that the riots were largely due to local causes, "especially to 
		commercial distress acting on religious bigotry and national hatred." He had 
		also the gratification 
		of learning that his constitutional action was fully justified by the imperial government, as well as 
		supported in parliament 
		where it was fully discussed. When he offered to resign his office, he was assured by Lord Grey that "his 
		relinquishment of that
		office, which, under any circumstances, would be a most serious blow to Her Majesty's service and to the province, 
		could not fail, in the
		present state of affairs, to be most injurious to the public welfare, from the encouragement which it would give to 
		those who have been
		concerned in the violent and illegal opposition which has been offered to your government." In parliament, Mr. Gladstone, 
		who seems never to have 
		been well-informed on the subject, went so far as to characterize the Rebellion Losses Bill as a measure for 
		rewarding rebels, but both Lord John Russell, then leader of the government, 
		and his great opponent, 
		Sir Robert Peel, gave their unqualified support to the measure. The result was that an amendment proposed 
		by Mr. Herries in favour 
		of the disallowance of the act was defeated by a majority of 141. 
		
		This action of the imperial 
		authorities had the effect of strengthening the public sentiment in Canada in 
		support of Lord Elgin
		and his advisers. The government set to work vigorously to carry out the provisions of the law, appointing the same 
		commissioners as had
		acted under the previous ministry, and was able in a very short time to settle definitely this very disturbing 
		question. It was deemed
		inexpedient, however, to keep the seat of government at Montreal. After a very full and anxious consideration of the 
		question, it was decided 
		to act on the recommendation of the legislature that it should thereafter meet alternately at Toronto and Quebec, 
		and that the next
		session should be held at Toronto in accordance with this arrangement This "perambulating system" was tried for several 
		years, but it proved so 
		inconvenient and expensive that the legislature in 1858 passed an address to Her Majesty praying her to choose a 
		permanent capital. The
		place selected was the city of Ottawa, on account of its situation on the frontier of the two provinces, the almost 
		equal division of its
		population into French and English, its remoteness from the American borders, and consequently its comparative security 
		in time of war. Some 
		years later it became the capital of the Dominion of Canada--the confederation of provinces and territories 
		extending across the
		continent. 
		
		In the autumn of 1849 Lord Elgin made a tour of 
		the western part of the 
		province of Upper Canada for the purpose of obtaining some expression of opinion from the people in the very 
		section where the
		British feeling was the strongest. On this occasion he was attended only by an aide-de-camp and a servant, as an 
		answer to those who were constantly assailing him for want of courage. Here 
		and there, as he
		proceeded west, after leaving French Canada, he was insulted by a few Orangemen, notably by Mr. Ogle R. Gowan, who 
		appeared on the wharf at Brockville with a black flag, but apart from such 
		feeble exhibitions of 
		political spite he met with a reception, especially west of Toronto, which proved beyond cavil that the heart 
		and reason of the
		country, as a whole, were undoubtedly in his favour, and that nowhere was there any actual sympathy with the unhappy 
		disturbances in
		Montreal. He had also the gratification soon after his return from this pleasant tour to receive from the British 
		government an official
		notification that he had been raised to the British peerage under the title of Baron Elgin of Elgin in recognition of 
		his distinguished
		services to the Crown and empire in America. 
		
		But it was a long time before 
		Lord Elgin was forgiven by a small clique of politicians for the part he had taken in 
		troubles which ended in 
		their signal discomfiture. The political situation continued for a while to be aggravated by the serious 
		commercial embarrassment which existed throughout the country, and led to 
		the circulation of a
		manifesto, signed by leading merchants and citizens of Montreal, urging as remedies for the prevalent depression a 
		revival of colonial
		protection by England, reciprocal free trade with the United States, a federal union or republic of British North 
		America, and even
		annexation to the neighbouring states as a last resort. This document did not suggest rebellion or a forceable 
		separation from England. It even professed affection for the home land; but it 
		encouraged the idea that 
		the British government would doubtless yield to any colonial pressure in this direction when it was convinced 
		that the step was beyond 
		peradventure in the interest of the dependency. The manifesto represented only a temporary phase of sentiment 
		and is explained by the 
		fact that some men were dissatisfied with the existing condition of things and ready for any change whatever. The 
		movement found no active 
		or general response among the great mass of thinking people; and it was impossible for the Radicals of Lower 
		Canada to persuade their 
		compatriots that their special institutions, so dear to their hearts, could be safely entrusted to their 
		American republican
		neighbours. All the men who, in the thoughtlessness of youth or in a moment of great excitement, signed the 
		manifesto--notably the  Molsons, the Redpaths, Luther H. Holton, John Rose, David 
		Lewis MacPherson, A.A. 
		Dorion, E. Goff Penny--became prominent in the later public and commercial life of British North America, as 
		ministers of the Crown,
		judges, senators, millionaires, and all devoted subjects of the British sovereign. 
		
		When Lord Elgin found that the 
		manifesto contained the signatures of several persons holding office by commission from 
		the Queen, he made an 
		immediate inquiry into the matter, and gave expression to the displeasure of the Crown by removing from office 
		those who confessed that 
		they had signed the objectionable document, or declined to give any answer to the queries he had addressed to 
		them. His action on this occasion was fully justified by the imperial 
		government, which
		instructed him "to resist to the utmost any attempt that might be made to bring about a separation of Canada from the 
		British dominions." But
		while Lord Elgin, as the representative of the Queen, was compelled by a stern sense of duty to condemn such acts of 
		infidelity to the
		empire, he did not conceal from himself that there was a great deal in the economic conditions of the provinces which 
		demanded an immediate
		remedy before all reason for discontent could disappear. He did not fail to point out to Lord Grey that it was 
		necessary to remove the
		causes of the public irritation and uneasiness by the adoption of measures calculated to give a stimulus to Canadian 
		industry and commerce. 
		"Let me then assure your Lordship," he wrote in November 1849, "and I speak advisedly in offering this 
		assurance, that the
		dissatisfaction now existing in Canada, whatever may be the forms with which it may clothe itself, is due mainly to 
		commercial causes. I do
		not say that there is no discontent on political grounds. Powerful individuals and even classes of men are, I am well 
		aware, dissatisfied with 
		the conduct of affairs. But I make bold to affirm that so general is the belief that, under the present 
		circumstances of our commercial condition, the colonists pay a heavy pecuniary 
		fine for their fidelity
		to Great Britain, that nothing but the existence of an unwonted degree of political contentment among the masses has 
		prevented the cry for
		annexation from spreading like wildfire through the province." He then proceeded again to press upon the consideration of 
		the government the
		necessity of following the removal of the imperial restrictions upon navigation and shipping in the colony, by the 
		establishment of a
		reciprocity of trade between the United States and the British North American Provinces. The change in the navigation 
		laws took place in 1849, 
		but it was not possible to obtain larger trade with the United States until several years later, as we shall see 
		in a future chapter when 
		we come to review the relations between that country and Canada. 
		
		Posterity has fully justified 
		the humane, patient and discreet constitutional course pursued by Lord Elgin during 
		one of the most trying 
		ordeals through which a colonial governor ever passed. He had the supreme gratification, however, before he left 
		the province, of finding 
		that his policy had met with that success which is its best eulogy and justification. Two years after the 
		events of 1849, he was
		able to write to England that he did not believe that "the function of the governor-general under constitutional 
		government as the moderator between parties, the representative of interests 
		which are common to all 
		the inhabitants of the country, as distinct from those that divide them into parties, was ever so fully and so 
		frankly recognized." He
		was sure that he could not have achieved such results if he had had blood upon his hands. His business was "to 
		humanize, not to harden." One of Canada's ablest men--not then in 
		politics--had said to him: "Yes, I see it all now, you 
		were right, a thousand times right, though I thought otherwise then. I own that 
		I would have reduced 
		Montreal to ashes before I would have enduredhalf of what you did," and he added, "I should have 
		been justified, too." "Yes," answered Lord Elgin, "you would have been justified because 
		your course would have 
		been perfectly defensible; but it would not have been the best course. Mine was a better one." And the result was 
		this, in his own words:
 
		
		"700,000 French reconciled to 
		England, not because they are getting rebel money; I believe, indeed that no 
		rebels will get a 
		farthing; but because they believe that the British governor is just. 'Yes,' but you may say, 'this is 
		purchased by the 
		alienation of the British.' Far from it, I took the whole blame upon myself; and I will venture to 
		affirm that the Canadian 
		British were never so loyal as they are at this hour; [this was, remember, two years after the 
		burning of Parliament 
		House] and, what is more remarkable still, and more directly traceable to this policy of 
		forbearance, never, 
		since Canada existed, has party spirit been more moderate, and the British and French races on 
		better terms than they 
		are now; and this in spite of the withdrawal of protection, and of the proposal to throw on the 
		colony many charges 
		which the imperial government has hitherto borne." 
		
		Canadians at the beginning of 
		the twentieth century may also say as Lord Elgin said at the close of this letter, Magna 
		est Veritas. |