Canada And The States Recollections 1851 To 1886 By Sir E. W. Watkin

























































































































































 -  Oh! if you fellows would only now and
then dine and drink with us fellows, we would make a great - Page 15
Canada And The States Recollections 1851 To 1886 By Sir E. W. Watkin - Page 15 of 259 - First - Home

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Oh! If You Fellows Would Only Now And Then Dine And Drink With Us Fellows, We Would Make A Great Partnership Directly." And The Great Partnership Has Been Made, Save Only That Newfoundland Still Remains Separate.

In Canada the divisions between the Upper and Lower Provinces were, in 1861, serious, and often acrimonious; for they were religious as well as political.

The rapid growth of Upper Canada, overtopping that of the French-speaking and Catholic Lower Province, led to demands to upset the great settlement of 1839, and to substitute for an equal representation, such a redistribution of seats as would have followed the numerical progression of the country. "Representation by population" - shortly called "Rep. by Pop." - was the great cry of the ardent Liberal or "Grit" party, at whose head was George Brown, of the "Toronto Globe" - powerful, obstinate, Scotch, and Protestant, and with Yankee leanings. In fact, the same principles were in difference as those which evolved themselves in blood in the contest between the North and South between 1861 and 1865. The minority desired to preserve the power and independence which an equal share in parliamentary government had given them. The majority, mainly English and Scotch, and largely Protestant and Presbyterian, chafed under what they deemed to be the yoke of a non-progressive people; a people content to live in modest comfort, to follow old customs, and obey old laws; to defer to clerical authority, and to preserve their separate national identity under the secure protection of a strong Empire. Indeed, it is difficult, in 1886, to realise the heat, or to estimate the danger, of the discussion of this question; and more than one "Grit" politician, whom I could name, would be startled if we reminded him of his opinion in 1861, - that the question would be "settled by a civil war" if it "could not be settled peaceably," but that "settled it must be - and soon."

The cure for this dangerous disease was to provide, for all, a bigger country - a country large enough to breed large ideas. There is a career open in the boundless resources of a varied land for every reasonable ambition, and the young men of Canada, which possesses an excellent educational machinery, may now look forward to as noble, if not more noble, an inheritance than their Republican neighbours - an inheritance where there is room for 100,000,000 of people to live in freedom, comfort, and happiness. While progress will have its periodical checks, and periodical inflations, there is no reason to doubt that before the next century ends the "Dominion," if still part of the Empire, will - in numbers - outstrip the present population of the British Islands.

Now, in 1886, all this past antagonism of "Rep. by Pop." is forgotten. Past and gone. A vast country, rapidly augmenting in population and wealth, free from any serious sectional controversy, free, especially, from any idea of separation, bound together under one governing authority, with one tariff and one system of general taxation, has exhibited a capacity for united action, and for self-government and mutual defence, admirable to behold.

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