Picturesque Quebec, By James Macpherson Le Moine










































































































































 - 

A curious glimpse of high life at Quebec, in the good old days of Lord
Dalhousie, is furnished in a - Page 133
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A Curious Glimpse Of High Life At Quebec, In The Good Old Days Of Lord Dalhousie, Is Furnished In A Letter Addressed To Delta, Of Blackwood's Magazine, By John Galt, The Novelist, The Respected Father Of Our Gifted Statesman, Sir Alexander Tilloch Galt.

[40]

The talented author of the "Annals of the Parish," after expatiating on the dangers he had that day incurred in crossing over from Levis to Quebec in a canoe, among the ice-floes, thus alludes to the winter amusements: -

QUEBEC, 22nd February, 1827.

MY DEAR SIR, - I am under very great obligations to you. A copy of the "Laird" having come to the castle from the New York publishers, Lady Dalhousie lent it to me. * * * I am much pleased with Quebec. It is at present filled with Highland regiments, in which I have many acquaintances and the hospitality of the other inhabitants is also unbounded, for the winter suspends all business, and pleasure is conducted as if it were business. The amateurs have a theatre, and I wrote a piece for them, in which a Londoner, a Glasgow merchant, an Irish girl, a Yankee family and a Highlander were introduced. It was adapted entirely to the place, and in quiz of a very agreeable custom - of everybody calling on strangers. Dr. Dunlop performed the Highlander beyond anything I ever saw on the regular stage. The whole went off with more laughter than anything I have ever seen, for the jokes being local and personal (supplied by upwards of thirty contributors), every one told with the utmost effect."

"This farce, says Delta, composed at Quebec by J. Galt, and performed there before the Earl of Dalhousie (then Governor-General), was named "The Visitors, or a Trip to Quebec," and was meant as a good humoured satire on some of the particular usages of the place.

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