The Canadian Commonwealth
E-text prepared by Al Haines
Author of Lords of the North, Pathfinders of the West, Hudson's Bay Company, etc.
Indianapolis The Bobbs-Merrill Company Publishers Copyright 1915 The Bobbs-Merrill Company
An empire the size of Europe setting out on her career of world history is a phenomenon of vast and deep enough import to stir to national consciousness the slumbering spirit of any people. Yet when you come to trace when and where national consciousness awakened, it is like following a river back from the ocean to its mountain springs. From the silt borne down on the flood-tide you can guess the fertile plains watered and far above the fertile plains, regions of eternal snow and glacial torrent warring turbulently through the adamantine rocks. You can guess the eternal striving, the forward rush and the throwback that have carved a way through the solid rocks; but until you have followed the river to its source and tried to stem its current you can not know.
So of peoples and nations.
Fifty years ago, as far as world affairs were concerned, Japan did not exist. Came national consciousness, and Japan rose like a star dominating the Orient. A hundred years ago Germany did not exist. Came national consciousness welding chaotic principalities into unity, and the mailed fist of the empire became a menace before which Europe quailed. So of China with the ferment of freedom leavening the whole. So of the United States with the Civil War blending into a union the diversities of a continent. When you come to consider the birth of national consciousness in Canada, you do not find the germ of an ambition to dominate, as in Japan and Germany. Nor do you find a fight for freedom. Canada has always been free—free as the birds of passage that winged above the canoe of the first voyageur who pointed his craft up the St. Lawrence for the Pacific; but what you do find from the very first is a fight for national existence; and when the fight was won, Canada arose like a wrestler with consciousness of strength for new destiny.
Agnes C. Laut
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THE CANADIAN COMMONWEALTH
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
THE CANADIAN COMMONWEALTH
CHAPTER I
II
III
IV
V
CHAPTER II
II
III
IV
V
VI
CHAPTER III
II
III
IV
V
VI
CHAPTER IV
II
III
CHAPTER V
II
III
IV
CHAPTER VI
II
III
IV
V
CHAPTER VII
II
III
IV
V
CHAPTER VIII
II
III
IV
CHAPTER IX
II
III
IV
CHAPTER X
II
III
IV
V
CHAPTER XI
II
III
IV
V
CHAPTER XII
II
III
IV
CHAPTER XIII
II
III
IV
CHAPTER XIV
II
III
IV
V
VI
CHAPTER XV
II
III
IV
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
II
III
IV
V
CHAPTER XVIII
II
RAILWAY COMMISSION, 192.