[134] The royal assent to this Act was promulgated by a proclamation bearing date April 4th, 1825.
[135] Ante, p. 14.
[136] See Report on Petitions against Wild Lands Assessment Law, in Appendix to Journals of Assembly for 1828, p. 107 et seq.
[137] See The Split in the Legislative Council, by F. C. [? Francis Collins], p. 7.
[138] Ib., p. 8.
[139] The Split in the Legislative Council, ubi supra, p. 10.
[140] In 1849.
[141] Such, as far as I have been able to learn, was the conviction of all Mackenzie's contemporaries, even of those most favourably disposed, including those who were thrown into the most intimate relations with him, and were bound to him by close ties. One of the foremost of these, in a conversation with me a short time since, remarked: "Mackenzie generally meant well, but he was unpractical and unmanageable. I knew him intimately from his boyhood, and I am compelled to say that whenever he was in the least excited he acted like a spoiled child. He underwent no change in this respect, and was the same in youth, manhood and old age. A more unfit person to be entrusted with the management of any great enterprise, or with the control of his fellow-creatures, I can hardly conceive." I have abundant written testimony to the same effect.
[142] History of Canada, p. 370.
[143] Ante, p. 100.