The Last Forty Years: Canada Since the Union of 1841, Volume 1G. Virtue, 1881 - Act of Union, 1841 |
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Page 14
... question of compromise ( on the subject of the Reform Bill ) . Lord Grey is always the object of his rage and impertinence , because he is the only person whom he dares attack . After dinner he made a violent sortie on Lord Grey ( it ...
... question of compromise ( on the subject of the Reform Bill ) . Lord Grey is always the object of his rage and impertinence , because he is the only person whom he dares attack . After dinner he made a violent sortie on Lord Grey ( it ...
Page 18
... inhabitants of both races . The first two of those questions were destined , for over half a century , to be the political plagues of Canada , and the chronic Ε It was to separate the two races , and to 18 The Last Forty Years .
... inhabitants of both races . The first two of those questions were destined , for over half a century , to be the political plagues of Canada , and the chronic Ε It was to separate the two races , and to 18 The Last Forty Years .
Page 19
... question is left to Time , the great alchemist who transmutes , in his slow , creative laboratory , the elements of doubt and danger of to - day into forces of safety in the hereafter . " - The Constitutional History of Canada , by ...
... question is left to Time , the great alchemist who transmutes , in his slow , creative laboratory , the elements of doubt and danger of to - day into forces of safety in the hereafter . " - The Constitutional History of Canada , by ...
Page 21
... question of Responsible Government . Long impunity , and the countenance of successive Governors , made the executive very bold , and in process of time the want of unison between the latter and the Assembly came to be regarded by those ...
... question of Responsible Government . Long impunity , and the countenance of successive Governors , made the executive very bold , and in process of time the want of unison between the latter and the Assembly came to be regarded by those ...
Page 22
... questions . The proportion of import duties to which each Province was justly entitled was a frequent bone of contention . At last the Assembly of Lower Canada resorted to the extreme measure of stopping the supplies . The ex- ample was ...
... questions . The proportion of import duties to which each Province was justly entitled was a frequent bone of contention . At last the Assembly of Lower Canada resorted to the extreme measure of stopping the supplies . The ex- ample was ...
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Common terms and phrases
Administration advisers affairs afterwards American Ashburton Attorney-General Baldwin Bill Britain British Canadian members Captain Higginson carried Colonel Colonial conduct confidence Conservative constitution Councillors course Crown Cuvillier Daly debate declared despatch Draper duty Edward Gibbon Wakefield election England Excellency Excellency's Executive Council expressed fact Family Compact favour felt French Canadian gentleman Governor Governor-General Hincks honourable Imperial important John Kingston known Lafontaine late Ministry Legislative Council Legislature letter Liberal Lord Durham Lord Metcalfe Lord Stanley Lord Sydenham Lower Canada Lower Province majority matter McLeod measure ment Ministers months Montreal Morin opinion opposed opposition Parliament Parliamentary persons political population present principles Quebec question rebellion Reform party represented resignation respect Responsible Government returned Robert Baldwin seat Secretary session Sir Allan MacNab Sir Charles Bagot Sir Charles Metcalfe Speaker Speech Sullivan tion Toronto Tory Treaty Union United Upper Canada Upper Province views Viger vote
Popular passages
Page 192 - St. Croix River to the highlands; along the said highlands which divide those rivers that empty themselves into the river St. Lawrence, from those which fall into the Atlantic Ocean, to the northwesternmost head of Connecticut River...
Page 83 - He made an administration so checkered and speckled, he put together a piece of joinery so crossly indented and whimsically dovetailed ; a cabinet so variously inlaid ; such a piece of diversified mosaic; such a tesselated pavement without cement ; here a bit of black stone and there a bit of white...
Page 144 - That in order to preserve, between the different branches of the provincial parliament, that harmony which is essential to the peace, welfare, and good government of the province, the chief advisers of the representative of the sovereign, constituting a provincial administration under him, ought to be men possessed of the confidence of the representatives of the people...
Page 123 - Either the governor is the sovereign or the minister. If the first, he may have ministers, but he cannot be responsible to the government at home, and all colonial government becomes impossible. He must therefore be the minister, in which case...
Page 149 - to speak out ; for, Sir, you are about to appear before a Judge who is no respecter of persons.
Page 122 - ... already done much to put it down in its inadmissible sense; namely, the demand that the council shall be responsible to the assembly, and that the governor shall take their advice, and be bound by it. In fact, this demand has been made much more for the people than by them. And I have not met with anyone who has not at once admitted the absurdity of claiming to put the council over the head of the governor.
Page 201 - Imagine my surprise on discovering that this line runs wholly south of the St. John, and between the head waters of that river and those of the Penobscot and Kennebec. In short, it is exactly the line now contended for by Great Britain, except that it concedes more than is claimed.
Page 31 - The Queen's Government have no desire to thwart the representative assemblies of British North America in their measures of reform and improvement. They have no wish to make those provinces the resource for patronage at home. They are earnestly intent on giving to the talent and character of leading persons in the colonies, advantages similar to those which talent and character, employed in the public service, obtain, in the United Kingdom. Her Majesty has no desire to maintain any system of policy...
Page 197 - The parties mutually stipulate that each shall prepare, equip, and maintain in service, on the coast of Africa, a sufficient and adequate squadron, or naval force of vessels, of suitable numbers and descriptions, to carry in all not less than eighty guns, to enforce, separately and respectively, the laws, rights, and obligations, of each of the two countries, for the suppression of the slave trade...
Page 35 - ... duties in the right discharge of which the character and policy of the Government are directly involved. They are intended to apply rather to the heads of departments than to persons serving as clerks or in similar capacities under them; neither do they extend to officers in the service of the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury.