the canadian dominion-第2节
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white man; so far as is known; had set foot on the shores of what is now British Columbia。
Two immediate problems were bequeathed to the British Government by the Treaty of Paris: what was to be done with the unsettled lands between the Alleghanies and the Mississippi; and how were the seventy thousand French subjects in the valley of the St。 Lawrence to be dealt with? The first difficulty was not solved。 It was merely postponed。 The whole back country of the English colonies was proclaimed an Indian reserve where the King's white subjects might trade but might not acquire land。 This policy was not devised in order to set bounds to the expansion of the older colonies; that was an afterthought。 The policy had its root in an honest desire to protect the Indians from the frauds of unscrupulous traders and from the encroachments of settlers on their hunting grounds。 The need of a conciliatory; if firm; policy in regard to the great interior was made evident by the Pontiac rising in 1763; the aftermath of the defeat of the French; who had done all they could to inspire the Indians with hatred for the advancing English。
How to deal with Canada was a more thorny problem。 The colony had not been sought by its conquerors for itself。 It was counted of little worth。 The verdict of its late possessors; as recorded in Voltaire's light farewell to 〃a few arpents of snow;〃 might be discounted as an instance of sour grapes; but the estimate of its new possessors was evidently little higher; since they debated long and dubiously whether in the peace settlement they should retain Canada or the little sugar island of Guadeloupe; a mere pin point on the map。 Canada had been conquered not for the good it might bring but for the harm it was doing as a base for French attack upon the English colonies〃the wasps〃 nest must be smoked out。〃 But once it had been taken; it had to be dealt with for itself。
The policy first adopted was a simple one; natural enough for eighteenth…century Englishmen。 They decided to make Canada* over in the image of the old colonies; to turn the 〃new subjects;〃 as they were called; in good time into Englishmen and Protestants。 A generation or two would suffice; in the phrase of Francis Masereshimself a descendant of a Huguenot refugee but now wholly an Englishmanfor 〃melting down the French nation into the English in point of language; affections; religion; and laws。〃 Immigration was to be encouraged from Britain and from the other American colonies; which; in the view of the Lords of Trade; were already overstocked and in danger of being forced by the scarcity or monopoly of land to take up manufactures which would compete with English wares。 And since it would greatly contribute to speedy settlement; so the Royal Proclamation of 1763 declared; that the King's subjects should be informed of his paternal care for the security of their liberties and properties; it was promised that; as soon as circumstances would permit; a General Assembly would be summoned; as in the older colonies。 The laws of England; civil and criminal; as near as might be; were to prevail。 The Roman Catholic subjects were to be free to profess their own religion; 〃so far as the laws of Great Britain permit;〃 but they were to be shown a better way。 To the first Governor instructions were issued 〃that all possible Encouragement shall be given to the erecting Protestant Schools in the said Districts; Townships and Precincts; by settling and appointing and allotting proper Quantities of Land for that Purpose and also for a Glebe and Maintenance for a Protestant minister and Protestant schoolmasters。〃 Thus in the fullness of time; like Acadia; but without any Evangelise of Grand Pre; without any drastic policy of expulsion; impossible with seventy thousand people scattered over a wide area; even Canada would become a good English land; a newer New England。
* The Royal Proclamation of 1763 set the bounds of the new colony。 They were surprisingly narrow; a mere strip along both sides of the St。 Lawrence from a short distance beyond the Ottawa on the west; to the end of the Gasps peninsula on the east。 The land to the northeast was put under the jurisdiction of the Governor of Newfoundland; and the Great Lakes region was included in the territory reserved for the Indians。
It is questionable whether this policy could ever have achieved success even if it had been followed for generations without rest or turning。 But it was not destined to be given a long trial。 From the very beginning the men on the spot; the soldier Governors of Canada; urged an entirely contrary policy on the Home Government; and the pressure of events soon brought His Majesty's Ministers to concur。
As the first civil Governor of Canada; the British authorities chose General Murray; one of Wolfe's ablest lieutenants; who since 1760 had served as military Governor of the Quebec district。 He was to be aided in his task by a council composed of the Lieutenant Governors of Montreal and Three Rivers; the Chief Justice; the head of the customs; and eight citizens to be named by the Governor from 〃the most considerable of the persons of property〃 in the province。
The new Governor was a blunt; soldierly man; upright and just according to his lights; but deeply influenced by his military and aristocratic leanings。 Statesmen thousands of miles away might plan to encourage English settlers and English political ways and to put down all that was French。 To the man on the spot English settlers meant 〃the four hundred and fifty contemptible sutlers and traders〃 who had come in the wake of the army from New England and New York; with no proper respect for their betters; and vulgarly and annoyingly insistent upon what they claimed to be their rights。 The French might be alien in speech and creed; but at least the seigneurs and the higher clergy were gentlemen; with a due respect for authority; the King's and their own; and the habitants were docile; the best of soldier stuff。 〃Little; very little;〃 Murray wrote in 1764 to the Lords of Trade; 〃will content the New Subjects; but nothing will satisfy the Licentious Fanaticks Trading here; but the expulsion of the Canadians; who are perhaps the bravest and best race upon the Globe; a Race; who cou'd they be indulged with a few priviledges wch the Laws of England deny to Roman Catholicks at home; wou'd soon get the better of every National Antipathy to their Conquerors and become the most faithful and most useful set of Men in this American Empire。〃*
* This quotation and those following in this chapter are from official documents most conveniently assembled in Shorn and Doughty; 〃Documents relating to the Constitutional History of Canada; 1759…1791〃; and Doughty and McArthur; 〃Documents relating to the Constitutional History of Canada; 1791…1818〃。
Certainly there was much in the immediate situation to justify Murray's attitude。 It was preposterous to set up a legislature in which only the four hundred Protestants might sit and from which the seventy thousand Catholics would be barred。 It would have been difficult in any case to change suddenly the system of laws governing the most intimate transactions of everyday life。 But when; as happened; the Administration was entrusted in large part to newly created justices of the peace; men with 〃little French and less honour;〃 〃to whom it is only possible to speak with guineas in one's hand;〃 the change became flatly impossible。 Such an alteration; if still insisted upon; must come more slowly than the impatient traders in Montreal and Quebec desired。
The British Government; however; was not yet ready to abandon its policy。 The Quebec traders petitioned for Murray's recall; alleging that the measures required to encourage settlement had not been adopted; that the Governor was encouraging factions by his partiality to the French; that he treated the traders with 〃a Rage and Rudeness of Language and Demeanor〃 anda fair thrust in return for his reference to them as 〃the most immoral collection of men I ever knew〃as 〃discountenancing the Protestant Religion by almost a Total Neglect of Attendance upon the Service of the Church。〃 When the London business correspondents of the traders backed up this petition; the Government gave heed。 In 1766 Murray was recalled to England and; though he was acquitted of the charges against him; he did not return to his post in Canada。
The triumph of the English merchants was short。 They had jumped from the frying pan into the fire。 General Guy Carleton; Murray's successor and brother officer under Wolfe; was an even abler man; and he was still less in sympathy with democracy of the New England pattern。 Moreover; a new factor had come in to reenforce the soldier's instinctive preference for gentlemen over shopkeepers。 The first rumblings of the American Revolution had reached Quebec。 It was no time; in Carleton's view; to set up another sucking republic。 Rather; he believed; the utmost should be made of the opportunity Canada afforded as a barrier against the advance of democracy; a curb upon colonial insolence。 The need of cultivating the new subjects was the greater; Carleton contended; because the plan of settlement by Englishmen gave no sign of succeeding: 〃barring a