the canadian dominion-第10节
按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
the provinces must now be recorded。
In Upper Canada party struggles did not take shape until well after the War of 1812。 At the founding of the colony the people had been very much of one temper and one condition。 In time; however; divergences appeared and gradually hardened into political divisions。 A governing class; or rather clique; was the first to become differentiated。 Its emergence was slower than in New Brunswick; for instance; since Upper Canada had received few of the Loyalists who were distinguished by social position or political experience。 In time a group was formed by the accident of occupation; early settlement; residence in the little town of York; the capital after 1794; the holding of office; or by some advantage in wealth or education or capacity which in time became cumulative。 The group came to be known as the Family Compact。 There had been; in fact; no intermarriage among its members beyond what was natural in a small and isolated community; but the phrase had a certain appositeness。 They were closely linked by loyalty to Church and King; by enmity to republics and republicans; by the memory of the sacrifice and peril they or their fathers had shared; and by the conviction that the province owed them the best living it could bestow。 This living they succeeded in collecting。 〃The bench; the magistracy; the high officials of the established church; and a great part of the legal profession;〃 declared Lord Durham in 1839; 〃are filled by the adherents of this party; by grant or purchase they have acquired nearly the whole of the waste lands of the province; they are all powerful in the chartered banks; and till lately shared among themselves almost exclusively all offices of trust and profit。〃 Fortunately the last absurdity of creating Dukes of Toronto and Barons of Niagara Falls was never carried through; or rather was postponed a full century; but this touch was scarcely needed to give the clique its cachet。 The ten…year governorship of Sir Peregrine Maitland (1818…28); a most punctilious person; gave the finishing touches to this backwoods aristocracy。
The great majority of the group; men of the Scott and Boulton; Sherwood and Hagerman and Allan MacNab types; had nothing but their prejudices to distinguish them; but two of their number were of outstanding capacity。 John Beverley Robinson; Attorney General from 1819 to 1829 and thereafter for over thirty years Chief Justice; was a true aristocrat; distrustful of the rabble; but as honest and highminded as he was able; seeking his country's gain; as he saw it; not his own。 A more rugged and domineering character; equally certain of his right to rule and less squeamish about the means; was John Strachan; afterwards Bishop of Toronto。 Educated a Presbyterian; he had come to Canada from Aberdeen as a dominie but had remained as an Anglican clergyman in a capacity promising more advancement。 His abounding vigor and persistence soon made him the dominant force in the Church; and with a convert's zeal he labored to give it exclusive place and power。 The opposition to the Family Compact was of a more motley hue; as is the way with oppositions。 Opposition became potential when new settlers poured into the province from the United States or overseas; marked out from their Loyalist forerunners not merely by differences of political background and experience but by differences in religion。 The Church of England had been dominant among the Loyalists; but the newcomers were chiefly Methodist and Presbyterian。 Opposition became actual with the rise of concrete and acute grievances and with the appearance of leaders who voiced the growing discontent。
The political exclusiveness of the Family Compact did not rouse resentment half as deep as did。 their religious; or at least denominational; pretensions。 The refusal of the Compact to permit Methodist ministers to perform the marriage ceremony was not soon forgotten。 There were scores of settlements where no clergyman of the Established Church of England or of Scotland resided; and marriages here had been of necessity performed by other ministers。 A bill passed the Assembly in 1824 legalizing such marriages in the past and giving the required authority for the future; and when it was rejected by the Legislative Council; resentment flamed high。 An attempt of Strachan to indict the loyalty of practically all but the Anglican clergy intensified this feeling; and the critics went on to call in question the claims of his Church to establishment and landed endowment。
The land question was the most serious that faced the province。 The administration of those in power was condemned on three distinct counts。 The granting of land to individuals had been lavish; it had been lax; and it had been marked by gross favoritism。 By 1824; when the population was only 150;000; some 11;000;000 acres had been granted; ninety years later; when the population was 2;700;000; the total amount of improved land was only 13;000;000 acres。 Moreover the attempt to use vast areas of the Crown Lands to endow solely the Anglican Church roused bitter jealousies。 Yet even these grievances paled in actual hardship beside the results of holding the vast waste areas unimproved。 What with Crown Reserves; Clergy Reserves; grants to those who had served the state; and holdings picked up by speculators from soldiers or poorer Loyalists for a few pounds or a few gallons of whisky; millions of acres were held untenanted and unimproved; waiting for a rise in value as a consequence of the toil of settlers on neighboring farms。 Not one…tenth of the lands granted were occupied by the persons to whom they had been assigned。 The province had given away almost all its vast heritage; and more than nine…tenths of it was still in wilderness。 These speculative holdings made immensely more difficult every common neighborhood task。 At best the machinery and the money for building roads; bridges; and schools were scanty; but with these unimproved reserves thrust in between the scattered shacks; the task was disheartening。 〃The reserve of two…sevenths of the land for the Crown and clergy;〃 declared the township of Sandwich in 1817; 〃must for a long time keep the country a wilderness; a harbour for wolves; a hindrance to a compact and good neighborhood。〃
A further source of discontent developed in the disabilities affecting recent American settlers。 A court decision in 1824 held that no one who had resided in the United States after 1783 could possess or transmit British citizenship; with which went the right to inherit real estate。 This decision bore heavily upon thousands of 〃late Loyalists〃 and more recent incomers。 Under the instructions of the Colonial Office; a remedial bill was introduced in the Legislative Council in 1827; but it was a grudging; halfway measure which the Assembly refused to accept。 After several sessions of quarreling; the Assembly had its way; but in the meantime the men affected had been driven into permanent and active opposition。
The leaders of the movement of resistance which now began to gather force included all sorts and conditions of men。 The fiercest and most aggressive were two Scotchmen; Robert Gourlay and William Lyon Mackenzie。 Gourlay; one of those restless and indispensable cranks who make the world turn round; active; obstinate; imprudent; uncompromisingly devoted to the common good as he saw it; came to Canada in 1817 on settlement and colonization bent。 Innocent inquiries which he sent broadcast as to the condition of the province gave the settlers an opportunity for voicing their pent…up discontent; and soon Gourlay was launched upon the sea of politics。 Mackenzie; who came to Canada three years later; was a born agitator; fearless; untiring; a good hater; master of avitriolic vocabulary; and absolutely unpurchasable。 He found his vein in weekly journalism; and for nearly forty years was the stormy petrel of Canadian politics。 From England there came; among others; Dr。 John Rolph; shrewd and politic; and Captain John Matthews; a half…pay artillery officer。 Peter Perry; downright and rugged and of a homely eloquence; represented the Loyalists of the Bay of Quinte; which was the center of Canadian Methodism。 Among the newer comers from the United States; the foremost were Barnabas Bidwell; who had been Attorney General of Massachusetts but had fled to Canada in 1810 when accused of misappropriating public money; and his son; Marshall Spring Bidwell; one of the ablest and most single…minded men who ever entered Canadian public life。 From Ireland came Dr。 William Warren Baldwin; whose son Robert; born in Canada; was less surpassingly able than the younger Bidwell but equally moderate and equally beyond suspicion of faction or self…seeking。
How were these men to bring about the reform which they desired? Their first aim was obviously to secure a majority in the Assembly; and by the election of 1828 they attained this first object。 But the limits of the power of the Assembly they soon discovered。 Without definite leadership; with no control over the Administration; and with even legislative power divided; it could effect little。 It was in part disappointment at the failure of the Assembly that accounted for the defeat of the Reformers