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cipal enterprise. But there are to be added to them the Intercolonial Railway, which, for the next two years, will afford employment to a large number of labourers, and the Canada Pacific railway, to the completion of of both of which the faith of the Government of Canada stands pledged. These railways do not simply afford employment to labourers during the progress of their construction, they open up new districts, and make remote ones more accessible, as permanent homes for the labourers after their completion. Thus, in this new country, the railway and the settlement aid each other; the former giving comfort and wealth to the latter, and the latter affording traffic for the forLet any one travel through the splendid counties of North Wellington, North Huron and Bruce, counties opened up for settlement about the time the construction of the Grand Trunk and Great Western Railways invited the emigrant to Canada by affording him assurance of employment on his arrival, and he will find abundant proof of the fact that the navvy who works on the railway becomes ultimately the permanent settler in the country. Farmers by the score in those counties, with their well cultivated and well stocked farms, with their comfortable homesteads and well filled granaries, and some of them with investments in their own municipal securities, came to Canada twenty years ago to work on the railways, and carried the savings of their days' wages to the backwoods where they hewed out for themselves the competence which they now enjoy. Their lot, gratifying as it is, viewed simply as illustrative of the results of emigration, was a hard one compared with that of the emigrant of to-day and of the future. In spite of the splendid district in which they settled, they remained for nearly a score of years without the advantages of a railway are in fact only this year coming into the enjoyment of those advantages. We live fortunately in a different atmosphere. The

railway may now be said to be the pioneer of the settler; so that the navvy working upon it, can take up his lot within a few miles of a station, and start in his career with all the advantages which his less fortunate brother, the emigrant of twenty yearsago, had to wait many weary years to obtain. In the railways projected and under construction we have therefore at once the warrant for a vigorous policy for the encouragement. of immigration, and the assurance that the unofficial agency in the hands of the emigrant, will be used in our favour. And when to these is added the other public works which are projected by the Government, such as the enlargement of the canals, bringing with them employment for the labourer, and the greater development of every industry in the country, it is surely not too much to claim that, at this moment, if the Government will only organize a thorough system of internal agency and of labour registration, we have the justification for encouraging emigrants to come to our shores, and the ability to furnish them with employment and with assured prosperity when they arrive here.

There would be smaller grounds for encouragement in the labour of inducing emigration to Canada, but for the fact that the recent acquisition of the North-west territory opens up illimitable fields for settlement, and affords within our own territory the outlet for that inevitable hankering after western homes, which has done so much to build up the western states of America, far more than any special intrinsic advantages possessed by those states themselves. "great west" has been the practical difficulty for years in the way of a successful policy of emigration. In spite of the advantages which this country presented, in common with the neighbouring republic, and in spite of the political advantages, to British subjects in particular, which it offered in excess of those offered by the neighbour

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.196,080 | Michigan,

303,582

195,835 Minnesota,

.78,863

.154,307 Mississippi,

145,239

.38,549

Missouri,

.428,222

.676,250

Oregon,

30,474

455,719 Texas,

.224,345

376,081

Wisconsin, .250,410

82,562

73,722

Dist. of Columbia, 25,079
Territories, ...... 76,201

Alabama,
Arkansas,
California,
Florida,
Illinois,
Indiana,
Iowa,
Kansas,
Louisiana,
Six of these states have each received from
other states of the Union a larger, in some
cases a very much larger, number of per-
sons natives of other states, than the entire
number of British Americans resident in all
the states combined. In the analysis of the
emigration returns given by the American

Census Commissioners the entire number

from British America is stated at rather un

of course, not confined to native British Americans. It includes all who, after a residence of a few months or years in this country, emigrated to the States. Yet how

unfair is the use made of the fact of this

emigration will be apparent when it is remembered that seven states of the Union,

ing republic, undoubtedly many have emigrated to the west after a residence of a few years in Canada. Every such case has been cited as proof that the country possessed no inducements for settlers; and this argument has been made use of to our prejudice. In a debate which recently took place in the British House of Commons on the subject of emigration, Sir Charles Dilke, availing himself of the exaggerated reports of the efflux of people from Canada to the States, made the startling assertion that the emigration from Canada was annually greater than the emigration to it. To those who had read the young Baronet's "Greater Britain," the statement, coming from him, was possider a quarter of a million. This number is, bly not very surprising; but when challenged to the proof of his assertion afterwards, he was compelled to abandon the controversy. Still it is impossible to overestimate the mischief that has been done in consequence of the reports to which this emigration of Canadians to the States has given rise. An examination of the principle of emigration within the United States themselves is the best answer to the arguments which have been based upon the presence of British Americans among our American neighbours. The details of the census of 1870 have not yet been published in such detail as to enable us to examine them on this point; but those of 1860 are sufficient for the purpose. By them it appears that of the native born population, leaving out of account altogether the migrations of the population of foreign birth, who after a residence of a year or two in one state removed to another, no less than 5,774,443 persons had removed from the state in which they were born. The migrations were almost exclusively to the western states, as the following table will show, the states being those which had up to that time received a larger number of persons born in other states of the Union than they had lost of persons born within their own limits :

all of them having the reputation of being tolerably prosperous states, had up to 1860 lost a larger native population by emigration than British America had lost of native and foreign as well. The seven states were, Louisiana, 331,904; New York, 867,032; North Carolina, 272,606; Ohio, 593,043; Pennsylvania, 582,512; Tennessee, 344,765; Virginia, 399,700. With the exception of New York, all these states are greatly inferior in population to British America, so from them is much greater. Even the states that the proportion of persons emigrating which a few years ago were regarded as the far western states, the very paradise for the emigrant seeking a western home, have lost largely by migration to new states still further west. New York, in the short period of ten years, 1850 to 1860, lost no less than 332,750 of its native population, and Ohio in the same time 358,748. When the alleged emigration from Canada, even accepting the figures of American statists, is

contrasted with this internal emigration Britisher" will not be a ground of dislike

and opposition, but a ground of sympathy and respect. Thus, with an abundance of information circulated among the emigrating classes in the old world; with public works in progress affording employment to the hardhanded emigrant on his arrival; with local and central agencies giving to the new comer protection and advice; with a perfect system of labour registration which will supply the means of placing in employment the skilled mechanic, the artizan and the agricultural labourer; and finally, with a great west affording the outlet for those to whom the place of the setting sun has special claims; with these, and with free institutions honestly and fairly administered, we may look forward with confidence to our ability to secure a larger share of those whom straitened circumstances or a love of adventure prompt to seek homes on this continent.

If we

among the people of the United States themselves, the argument that it proves Canada an unfit country to live in, must surely vanish. It proves that we are not free from the spirit of unrest which is a special characteristic of the people of this continent; that our young men, like the young men of America generally, have imbibed the roving disposition, and are constantly looking out for the far off hills, which are proverbially the greenest. But it proves further that we have this spirit in a less developed state, and that Canada possesses a greater hold upon its population than does any one of the states of the neighbouring Republic. The mere statement of the emigration of Canadians to the United States makes us suffer in the estimation of the emigrating classes, because it points to a loss of nationality, and is therefore more marked. But this national tie has its restraining in- I have but one word more to add. fluence as well; and to it are we indebted would achieve success in the new work for the favourable contrast which emigration which saw its inauguration day on the 1st of from Canada presents when compared with July, 1867, we must cultivate a spirit of migration from any of the older states. self confidence and self reliance. The curse With a great west of our own, this emigra- of Canada has been the tone of depreciation tion will cease, and migration will take its in which its own sons have been too apt to place. Instead of the departure of young, speak of it. If we would have a nation vigorous blood being regarded with regret, worthy of the name, we want a national it will be hailed, as it is already in its incipi- spirit wherewith to build it up. Faith is ent stages being hailed, as evidence of greater wanted to create nations as well as to redevelopment and of increasing prosperity. move mountains. Let us have faith faith The emigrant from the United Kingdom in the country itself; faith in its resources; will find himself here, with every variety of faith in our power to develop them; faith in soil and every class of industry; among a the institutions we possess ; and faith in the people not alien, but kindred in blood and destiny that is before us. The Anglo-Saxon sympathy; owning allegiance to the same and Celtic races which have been planted great empire, and welcoming as a fellow sub- on this northern half of this great continent ject of that empire the new comer. He will have surely a destiny to work out. Let us escape, what many a British workman has be true to that destiny and we may look the had to suffer in the workshops of the United future in the face with the utmost confidence States, the taunts and jeers at the nationali- | in the blessings which it has in store for us ty on which he prides himself, and the as a people. allegiance he holds most dear. To be "a

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TECUMSETH.

BY CHARLES SANGSTER.

B

OAST of the old Virginian stock,

An untaught Cicero for ease,

And power to convince and please;
Born to command, to lead the way
In calm debate, in bloody fray;
The brother and the friend of BROCK,
The greatest of the Shawanese.

In Britain's earliest career,

Flushing her dawn of glory then,
There stood apart heroic men
That represent the race. Not he
Alone of princely memory,

The noble, mild, brave knight sincere,
King Arthur, pride of Spenser's pen.

But men of flesh and blood, whose arms
Were potent as the stroke of Fate-
Caractacus, the truly great,
And Caledonia's hero, brave
Galcagus, he who could not save
His country from the Roman swarms
That harassed and o'erran the State.

All great in arms, and, when subdued,
As great in exile or in chains.
But whether, Britons, Romans, Danes,
No chief that ever raised a spear,
TECUMSETH, but thou wert his peer,

In courage, mind, and fortitude;

Manhood ran rife through all thy veins.

The soul of honour, and the soul

Of feeling, too, though savage-bred.
The grateful heart, the thinking head,
In war, in Council, bold and wise,

As if from out the fabled skies

One of old Homer's heroes stole,

And the fierce tribe in triumph led.

Where was true Valour, if not there?
Where true integrity, if he,

Who left his hunting lodge to free
His dusky brother, had it not?
True valour without flaw or blot?
True to the end, this Champion rare,
This chief of rustic chivalry.

Well for the land for which he died
If in each senatorial breast

The same stern virtues had found rest
As those that rank his name so high,
'Mongst nature's own nobility,

That never lip was known to chide,

Or Council doubt his wise behest.

Well for the land if all her peers

Were such by nature or by blood;
If like this savage chief they stood
As far removed from common men
As eagles from the sparrow's ken!
Vainly they strive, the toiling years,
No greater on the scroll appears

Than this wise warrior of the wood.

OTTAWA.

THE

DINAH BLAKE'S REVENGE.

CHAPTER XVI.

OVERTAKEN BY THE TIDE.

BY MRS. J. V. NOEL.

HE sea shore was a favourite resort of Isabel Crofton's and, though it was more than a mile from Elm Lodge, she often walked there to wander along the beach, listening to the wild music of the waves as they came and went upon the yellow strand, or dashed up foaming against the rocks. Very often she met Max Butler in these lonely rambles, who invariably joined her and escorted her home through the mountain gorge leading to the Lodge.

One

evening late in the month of November, as she was returning home from visiting a sick. woman living near the shore, she was overtaken by a heavy shower of rain and obliged to seek shelter beneath some beetling cliffs which projected sufficiently over the path she was pursuing to keep her from getting wet by the pelting rain; but the delay this caused was followed by alarming consequences, for when the shower ceased and she pursued her way homeward she saw to her dismay that the rising tide was fast covering the broad belt of sand over which it lay. To retrace her steps would have

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