Emigrants and Immigration.
Very surprising it seems to assert
that the Mother Country knows very little about the
finest colony which she possesses and that
an enlightened people emigrate from sober, speculative
England, sedate and calculating Scotland, and trusting,
unreflective Ireland, absolutely and wholly ignorant
of the total change of life to which they must necessarily
submit in their adopted home.
I recollect an old story, that an
old gunner, in an old-fashioned, three-cornered cocked
hat, who was my favourite playfellow as a child, used
to tell about the way in which recruits were obtained
for the Royal Artillery.
The recruiting sergeant was in those
days dressed much finer than any field-marshal of
this degenerate, railway era; in fact, the Horse Guards
always turned out to the sergeant-major of the Royal
Military Academy of Woolwich, when that functionary
went periodically to the Golden Cross, Charing Cross,
to receive and escort the young gentlemen cadets from
Marlow College, who were abandoning the red coat and
drill of the foot-soldier to become neophytes in the
art and mystery of great gunnery and sapping.
“The way they recruited was
thus,” said the bombadier. “The gallant
sergeant, bedizened in copper lace from the crown of
his head to the sole of his foot, and with a swagger
which no modern drum-major has ever presumed to attempt,
addressed a crowd of country bumpkins.
“’Don’t listen to
those gentlemen in red; their sarvice is one which
no man who has brains will ever think of footing
it over the univarsal world; they have usually been
called by us the flatfoots. They uses the musquet
only, and have hands like feet, and feet like fireshovels.
“’Mind me, gentlemen,
the royal regiment of the Royal Artillery is a sarvice
which no gentleman need be ashamed of.
“’We fights with real
powder and ball, the flatfoots fights with bird-shot.
We knows the perry-ferry of the circumference of a
round shot. Did you ever see a mortar? Did
you ever see a shell? I will answer for it you
never did, except the poticary’s mortar, and
the shell that mortar so often renders necessary.
“’Now, gentlemen, at the
imperial city of Woolwich, in the Royal Arsenal, you
may, if you join the Royal Artillery, you may see shells
in earnest. Did you ever see a balloon?
Yes! Then the shells there are bigger than balloons,
and are the largest hollow shot ever made the
French has nothing like them.
“’And the way we uses
them! We fires them out of the mortars into the
enemy’s towns, and stuffs them full of red sogers.
Well, they bursts, and out comes the flatfoots, opens
the gates, and lets the Royal Artillery in; and then
every man fills his sack with silver, and gold, and
precious stones, after a leetle scrimmaging.
“’Come along with me,
my boys, and every one of you shall have a coat like
mine, which was made out of the plunder; and you shall
have a horse to ride, and a carriage behind it; and
you shall see the glorious city of Woolwich, where
the streets are paved with penny loaves, and drink
is to be had for asking.’”
So it is with nine-tenths of the emigrants
to Canada in these enlightened days; so it is with
the emigrants from old England, and from troubled
Ireland, to the free and astonishing Union of the States
of America and Texas, that conjoint luminary of the
new go-ahead world of the West.
Dissatisfied with home, with visionary
ideas of El Dorados, or starving amidst plenty, the
poorer classes obtain no correct information.
Beset generally with agents of companies, with agents
of private enterprise, with reckless adventurers,
with ignorant priests, or missionaries of the lowest
stamp, with political agitators, and with miserable
traitors to the land of their birth and breeding,
the poor emigrant starts from the interior, where
his ideas have never expanded beyond the weaver’s
loom or factory labour, the plough or the spade, the
hod, the plane, or the trowel, and hastens with his
wife and children to the nearest sea-port.
There he finds no friend to receive
and guide him, but rapacious agents ready to take
every advantage of his ignorance, with an eye to his
scanty purse. A host of captains, mates, and sailors,
eager to make up so many heads for the voyage, pack
them aboard like sheep, and cross the Atlantic, either
to New York or to Quebec, just as they have been able
to entice a cargo to either port. Then come the
horrors of a long voyage and short provisions, and
high prices for stale salt junk and biscuit; and,
at the end, if illness has been on board, the quarantine,
that most dreadful visitation of all for
hope deferred maketh the heart sick.
From the first discovery of America,
there has been a tendency to exaggeration about the
resources and capabilities of that country a
magniloquence on its natural productions, which can
be best exemplified by referring the reader to the
fac-simile of the one in Sir Walter Raleigh’s
work on Guiana, now in the British Museum.
Shakespeare had, no doubt, read Raleigh’s fanciful
description of “the men whose heads do grow
beneath their shoulders,” &c.; for he was thirty-four
years of age when this print was published, only seventeen
years before his death.
So expansive a mind as Raleigh’s
undoubtedly was, was not free from that universal
credulity which still reigns in the breasts of all
men respecting matters with which they are not personally
acquainted; and the glowing descriptions of Columbus
and his followers respecting the rich Cathay and the
Spice Islands of the Indies have had so permanent a
hold upon the imagination, that even the best educated
amongst us have, in their youth, galloped over Pampas,
in search of visionary Uspallatas. Nor
is it yet quite clear that the golden city of El Dorado
is wholly fabulous, the region in which it was said
to exist not having yet been penetrated by Science;
but it soon will be, for a steamboat is to ply up
the Marañón, and Peru and Europe are to be brought
in contact, although the voyage down that mighty flood
has hitherto been a labour of several months.
The poor emigrant, for we must return
to him, lands at New York. Sharks beset him in
every direction, boarding-houses and grogshops open
their doors, and he is frequently obliged, from the
loss of all his hard-earned money, to work out his
existence either in that exclusively mercantile emporium,
or to labour on any canal or railroad to which his
kind new friends may think proper, or most advantageous
to themselves, to send him. If he escapes all
these snares for the unwary, the chances are that,
fancying himself now as great a man as the Duke of
Leinster, O’Connell, the Lord Mayor of London,
or the Provost of Edinburgh, free and unshackled,
gloriously free, he becomes entangled with a host of
land-jobbers, and walks off to the weary West, there
to encounter a life of unremitting toil in the solitary
forests, with an occasional visit from the ague, or
the milk-fever, which so debilitates his frame, that,
during the remainder of his wretched existence, he
can expect but little enjoyment of the manorial rights
appendant to a hundred acres of wild land.
Let no emigrant embark for the United
States unless he has a kind friend to guide and receive
him there, and to point out to him the good and the
evil; for the native race look upon all foreigners
with a jealous eye, and particularly upon the Irish.
The Germans make the best settlers
in that country, perhaps because, not speaking English,
they cannot be so easily imposed upon by the crimps,
and also because they seldom emigrate before they have
arranged with their friends in America respecting
the lands which they are to occupy.
A society of British philanthropists
has been established at New York to direct British
emigrants in their ultimate views; but it may well
be imagined that these gentlemen, who are chiefly
engaged in trade, cannot descend to understand fully,
or are constant witnesses of, the low tricks which
are practised to seduce the unwary ones.
The emigrant to Canada is somewhat differently situated.
The Irish come out in shiploads every
season, and generally very indifferently provided
and without any definite object; nay, to such an extent
is this carried, that hundreds of young females venture
out every year by themselves, to better their condition,
which betterment usually ends in their reaching as
far inland as Toronto, where, or at other ports on
the lakes, they engage themselves as domestics.
When we consider that nearly 25,000
emigrants leave the Mother Country every year for
Canada alone, how important is it that they should
be informed of every particular likely to increase
their comforts and to conduce to their well-being!
This kind of service can be but partially rendered
by the present publication, which, being intended for
the general reader, cannot be given in a form likely
to reach the class of emigrants who usually proceed
to America otherwise than through the advice which
the reader may, whenever it is in his power, kindly
bestow upon them. But it will, I am persuaded,
be extensively useful in that way, and also to the
settler with a small capital who can afford to consult
it.
Learned dissertations upon colonization
are useful only to the politician, and so much venality
has prevailed among those who have thrust themselves
forward in the cause of Canadian settlement, that the
public become a little alarmed when they hear of a
work expressly designed for the emigrant.
The very best informed at home, and
the haute noblesse, have been repeatedly taken
in. Dinnerings and lionizing have been the order
of the day for persons, who, in the colony, cut a
very inferior figure. But this is natural, and
in the end usually does no harm. It is natural
that the colonist, who is a rara avis in England,
should be considered a very extraordinary personage
among men who seek for novelty in any shape; because
those who lavish favours upon him at one time and eschew
his presence afterwards are usually ignorant of the
very history of which he is the type. It is like
the standing joke of sending out water-casks for the
men-of-war built on the fresh-water seas of Canada,
for there are plenty of rich folks at home who want
only to be filled.
The different sorts of people who
emigrate from home to the United States or
Canada, may be classed under several heads, like the
travellers of Sterne.
First, the inquisitive and restless,
who leave a goodly inheritance or occupation behind
them, because they have heard that Tom Smith or Mister
Mac Grogan, very ordinary folks anywhere, have made
a rapid fortune, which is indeed sometimes the case
in the United States, though rather rare there for
old countrymen, and is still more rare and unlikely
in Canada, where large fortunes may be said to be
unknown quantities.
Settlers of this class usually fall
to the ground very soon if they settle
in Canada, they become Radicals; if they return from
the States, they become Tories.
The next class are your would-be aristocratic
settlers, younger sons of younger sons, cousins of
cousins, Union Barons, nephews’ nephews of a
Lord Mayor, or unprovided heirs in posse.
These fancy they confer a sort of
honour by selecting the colony as their final resting-place,
and that a governor and his ministers have nothing
in the world to think about but how they can provide
for such important units. Hence they frequently
end by placing themselves in direct opposition to
the powers that be, or take very unwillingly to the
labours of a farmer’s life. Many of them,
when they find that pretension is laughed at, particularly
if no talents accompany it, which is rarely or ever
the case, for talent is modest and retiring in its
essential nature, turn out violent Republicans or
Radicals of the most furious calibre; but the more
modest portion work heartily at their farms, and frequently
succeed.
Another class is your private gentlemen’s
sons and decent young farmers from England, Ireland,
or Scotland, who think before they leap, have connexions
already established in Canada, and small capitals to
commence with. These are the really valuable settlers:
they go to Canada for land and living; and eschew
the land and liberty system of the neighbouring nation.
Wherever they settle, the country flourishes and becomes
a second Britain in appearance, as may be observed
in the London and western districts.
It does not require a very lengthened
acquaintance with Canada to form observations upon
the characters of the immigrants, as the Webster
style of Dr. Johnson will have the word to be.
The English franklin and the English
peasant who come here usually weigh their allegiance
a little before they make up their minds; but, if they
have been persuaded that Queen Victoria’s reign
is a “baneful domination,” they
either go to the United States at once, or to those
portions of Canada where sympathy with the Stars and
Stripes is the order of the day.
If they be Scotch Radicals, the most
uncompromising and the most bitter of all politicians,
they seek Canada only with the ultimate hope of revolutionizing
it.
But the latter are more than balanced
by the respectable Scotch, who emigrate occasionally
upon the same principles which actuate the respectable
portion of the English emigrants, and by the hardy
Highlanders already settled in various parts of the
colony, whose proverbial loyalty is proof against
the arts of the demagogue.
The great mass of emigrants may however
be said to come from Ireland, and to consist of mechanics
of the most inferior class, and of labourers.
These are all impressed with the most absurd notions
of the riches of America, and on landing at Quebec
often refuse high wages with contempt, to seek the
Cathay of their excited imaginations westward.
If they be Orangemen, they defy the
Pope and the devil as heartily in Canada as in Londonderry,
and are loyal to the backbone.
If they are Repealers, they come here
sure of immediate wealth, to kick up a deuce of a
row, for two shillings and sixpence currency is paid
for a day’s labour, which two shillings and
sixpence was a hopeless week’s fortune in Ireland;
and yet the Catholic Irish who have been long settled
in the country are by no means the worst subjects in
this Trans-Atlantic realm, as I can personally
testify, having had the command of large bodies of
them during the border troubles of 1837-8. They
are all loyal and true.
In the event of a war, the Catholic
Irish, to a man and what a formidable body
it is in Canada and the United States! will
be on the side of England. O’Connell has
prophesied rightly there, for it is not in human nature
to forget the wrongs which the Catholics have suffered
for the past ten years in a country professing universal
freedom and toleration.
The Americans of the better classes
with whom I have conversed admit this, but their dislike
of the Irish is rooted and general among all the native
race; and they fear as well as mistrust them, because,
in many of the largest cities, New York for one, the
Irish predominate.
The Americans say, and so do the Canadians,
that, for some years back, since the repeal agitation
at home, a few very ignorant and very turbulent priests,
of the lowest grade, have found their way across the
Atlantic. I have travelled all over Canada, and
lived many years in the country, and have been thrown
among all classes, from my having been connected with
the militia. I never saw but one specimen of Irish
hedge-priest, and therefore do not credit the assertion;
this one came out last year, and a more furious bigot
or a more republican ultra I never met with, at the
same time that he was as ignorant as could be conceived.
Such has not hitherto been the case
with the Catholic priesthood of the Cañadas.
The French Canadian clergy are a body of pious, exemplary
men, not perhaps shining in the galaxy of science,
but unobtrusive, gentlemanly, and an honour to the
soutane and chasuble.
The priests from Ireland are not numerous,
for the Irish chapels were, till very lately, generally
presided over by Scotch missionaries; and I can safely
say that, whether Irish or Scotch, the Catholic priesthood
of Western Canada will not yield the palm to their
Franco-Canadian brethren of the cross, and that loyalty
is deeply inculcated by them. I have long and
personally known and admired the late Bishop Mac Donell;
a worthier or a better man never existed. The
highest and the lowest alike loved him.
I saw him bending under the weight
of years, passed in his ministry and in the defence
of his adopted country, just before he left Canada,
to lay his bones in his natal soil, preside over the
ceremony of placing the first stone of the Catholic
seminary, for which he had given the ground and funds
to the utmost of his ability.
He was a large, venerable-looking
man, unwieldy from the infirmities of age and a life
of toil and trouble; and the affecting and touching
portion of the scene before us was to see him supported
on his right and left by the arms of a Presbyterian
colonel and a colonel of the Church of England.
This is true Christianity, true charity peace
be to his soul!
His successor was a Canadian, equally
free from pretension and bigotry; and he was succeeded
by an Irishman, whose mission is to heal the wounds
of party and strife. He is living and in office;
I cannot, therefore, speak of him; but, differing
as an Englishman so widely as I do in religious tenets
from his, I can freely assert that, if clergymen of
every denomination pursued the same course of brotherly
love that he does, we should hear no more of the fierce
and undying contention about subjects which should
be covered with the veil of benevolence and humility.
You cannot force a man to think as
you do, to draw him into what you conceive to be the
true path; mildness and conciliation are much more
likely to effect your object than the Emperor of China’s
yellow stick. The days of the Inquisition, of
Judge Jefferies, and of Claverhouse, are happily gone
by; and the artillery of man’s wrath now vents
its harmless thunders much in the same way as the
thunders of the Vatican, or the recent fulmination
of the Archbishop of Paris against the author of the
Wandering Jew; that is to say, with a great deal of
noise, but without much damnifying any one, as the
public soon formed a true judgment of M. Sue and of
the tendency of his works.
On the other hand, how horrible it
is, and what a fearful view of frail human nature
is opened for a searching mind to observe that a man,
who professes to have abandoned the pleasures of existence,
to have broken through the very first law of nature,
to have separated himself from his kind, and to have
assumed perfection and infallibility, the attributes
of his Creator, devoting the altar at which he serves
to the wicked purposes of arraying man against man,
and of embruing the hands held up before him at prayer
in the blood of his fellow-mortals!
But such is the inevitable tendency
of the system of “I am better than thou,”
whether it be practised by a Catholic priest of the
hedge-school, by a fanatic bawler about new light,
or by a fierce and uncompromising churchman.
Faith, hope, and charity, are alike misinterpreted
and misunderstood. Faith with these consists
in blind or hypocritical devotion to their peculiar
opinions and dogmas; hope is limited to the narrowest
circle of ideas; and charity, Divine charity, exists
not; for even the very relics, the mouldering bones
of the defunct, are not allowed to rest side by side;
and as to those differing in the slightest degree
from them, to them charity extends not, however pious,
however sincere, or however excellent they may be.
The people of England are very little
aware how widely Roman Catholicism extends in the
United States and in Canada. From accurate returns,
it has been ascertained that in the United States
there were last year 1,500,000, with 21 bishops, 675
churches, 592 mission stations, and 572 priests otherwise
employed in teaching and travelling; 22 colleges or
ecclesiastical establishments, 23 literary institutions,
53 female schools or convents for instruction, 84
charitable hospitals and institutions, and 220 young
students, preparing for the ministry; whilst we learn,
from the Annals of the Propaganda, that 1,130,000 francs
were appropriated, in May 1845, to the missions of
America, or about L47,000 annually, of which the share
for the United States, including Texas, was 771,164
francs, or about L32,000 in round numbers.
Then again, the greater portion of
the Indian tribes in the north-west and west, excepting
near the Rocky Mountains or beyond them, are Roman
Catholics; and their numbers are very great, and all
in deep hatred, dislike, and enmity, to the Big Knives.
More than half a million of the Lower
Canadians are also of the same persuasion, and their
church in Upper Canada is large and increasing by
every shipload from Ireland. Even in Oregon, a
Catholic bishop has just been appointed.
It is more than probable, that in
and around the United States three millions of Roman
Catholic men are ever ready to advance the standard
of their faith; whilst Mexico, weak as it is, offers
another Catholic barrier to exclusive tenets of liberty,
both of conscience and of person.
It is surprising how very easily the
emigrants are misled, and how simply they fancy that,
once on the shores of the New World, Fortune must
smile upon them.
There is a British society, as I have
already stated, for mutual protection, established
at New York; and the government have agents of the
first respectability at Quebec, at Montreal, and at
Kingston. But the poorer classes, as well as
those whose knowledge of life has been limited, are
sadly defrauded and deluded.
At a recent meeting of the Welsh Society
at New York, facts were stated, showing the depravity
and audacity of the crimps at Liverpool and New York.
The President of the Society said that, owing to the
nefarious practices against emigrants, the Germans
first, then the Irish, after that the Welsh, and lastly
the English residents of the city had taken the matter
in hand by the formation of Protective Societies.
The president of the Friendly Sons
of St. Patrick observed that in Liverpool the poor
emigrants were fleeced without mercy; and he gave as
one instance a fact that, by the representations of
a packet agent, a large number of emigrants were induced
to embark on board a packet without the necessary
supply of provisions, being assured that for their
passage-money they would be supplied by the captain an
arrangement of which the captain was wholly ignorant.
The president of the Welsh Society
exhibited sixty dollars of trash in bills of the Globe
Bank, that had been palmed off upon an unsuspecting
Welshman by some rascal in Liverpool, in exchange for
his hoarded gold, and declared that this was only
one of a series of like villanies constantly occurring.
The ex-president of the St. George’s
Society, Mr. Fowler, mentioned a curious circumstance
connected with the history of New York. He said
that he remembered the city when it contained only
fifty thousand inhabitants, and not one paved side
walk, excepting in Dock Street. Now it had a
population of nearly 400,000, and had so changed, that
he could no longer identify the localities of his
youthful days.
Who, he asked, had done this?
The emigrant! and it was protection they needed, not
charity. He should have added, that the great
mass of the emigrants who have made New York the mighty
city it now is, were Irish, and that the native Americans
have banded themselves in another form of protection
against their increasing influence.
The republican notions which the greater
portion of the lower classes emigrating from the old
country have been drilled into, lead them to believe
that in the United States all men are equal, and that
thus they have a splendid vault to make from poverty
to wealth, an easy spring from a state of dependency
to one of vast importance and consideration.
The simple axiom of republicanism, that a ploughman
is as good as a president, or a quarryman as an emperor,
is taken firm hold of in any other sense than the
right one. What sensible man ever doubted that
we were all created in the same mould, and after the
same image; but is there a well educated sane mind
in America, believing that a perfect equality in all
things, in goods and chattels, in agrarian rights and
in education, is, or ever will be, practicable in
this naughty world?
Has nature formed all men with the
same capacities, and can they be so exactly educated
that all shall be equally fit to govern?
The converse is true. Nature
makes genius, and not genius nature. How rarely
she yields a Shakespeare! There has been
but one Homer, one Virgil, since the creation.
There was never a second Moses, nor have Solomon’s
wisdom and glory ever again been attainable.
Look at the rulers of the earth, from
the patriarchs to the present day, how few have been
pre-eminent! Even in the earliest periods, when
the age of man reached to ten times its present span,
the wonderful sacred writ records Tubal-Cain, the
first artificer, and Jubal, the lyrist, as most extraordinary
men; and with what care are Aholiab and Bezabel, cunning
in all sorts of craft, and Hiram, the artificer of
Tyre, recorded! Hiram, the king, great as he
undoubtedly was, was secondary in Solomon’s
eyes to the widow’s son.
These men, says the holy record, were
gifted expressly for their peculiar mission; and so
are all men, to whom the Inscrutable has been pleased
to assign extraordinary talent.
Cæsar, the conqueror, Napoleon, his
imitator, and Nelson, and Wellington, are they on
a par with the rabble of New York? Procul,
O, procul este profani!
Pure democracy is an utter and unattainable
impossibility; nature has effectually barred against
it. The only thing in the course of a life of
more than half a century that has ever puzzled me about
it is, that the Catholic clergy should, in so many
parts of the world, have lent it a helping hand.
The ministers of a creed essentially aristocratic,
essentially the pillars of the divine right of kings,
have they ever been in earnest about the matter?
Perhaps not!
If that giant of modern Ireland, the
pacificator citizen king, succeeded in separating
the island from Great Britain, would he, on attaining
the throne, or the dictatorship, or the presidency,
or whatever it might be, for the nonce, desire pure
democracy? Je crois que non, because, if he
did, he would reign about one clear week afterwards.
Look at the United States, see how
each successive president is bowed down before the
Moloch altar; he must worship the democratic Baal,
if he desires to be elected, or re-elected. It
is not the intellect, or the wealth of the Union that
rules. Already they seriously canvass in the
Empire State perfect equality in worldly substance,
and the division of the lands into small portions,
sufficient to afford the means of respectable existence
to every citizen. It is, perhaps, fortunate that
very few of the office-holders have much substance
to spare under these circumstances; but, if the President,
Vice-President, and the Secretaries of State, are
to live upon an acre or two of land for the rest of
their lives, Spartan broth will be indeed a rich diet
to theirs.
When the sympathizers invaded Canada,
in 1838-1839, the lands of the Canadians were thus
parcelled out amongst them, as the reward of their
extremely patriotic services, but in slices of one
hundred, instead of one or two, acres.
But, notwithstanding all this ultra-democracy,
there is at present a sufficient counterbalance in
the sense of the people, to prevent any very serious
consequences; and the Irish, from having had their
religion trampled upon, and themselves despised, would
be very likely to run counter to native feeling.
If any country in the whole civilized
world exhibits the inequality of classes more forcibly
than another, it is the country which has lately annexed
Texas, and which aims at annexing all the New World.
There is a more marked line drawn
between wealth and pretension on the one hand, poverty
and impertinent assumption on the other, than in the
dominions of the Czar. Birth, place, power, are
all duly honoured, and that sometimes to a degree
which would astonish a British nobleman, accustomed
all his life to high society. I remember once
travelling in a canal boat, the most abominable of
all conveyances, resembling Noah’s ark in more
particulars than its shape, that I was accosted, in
the Northern States too, and near the borders, where
equality and liberty reign paramount, by a long slab-sided
fellow-passenger, who, I thought, was going to ask
me to pay his passage, his appearance was so shabby,
with the following questions:
“Where are you from? are you
a Livingstone?” I told him, for I like to converse
with characters, that I was from Canada. “What’s
your name?” he asked. I satisfied him.
He examined me from head to foot with attention, and,
as he was an elderly man, I stood the gaze most valiantly.
“Well,” he said, “I thought you
were a Livingstone; you have got small ears, and small
feet and hands, and that, all the world over, is the
sign of gentle blood.”
He was afterwards very civil; and,
upon inquiring of the skipper of the boat who he was,
I found that my friend was a man of large fortune,
who lived somewhere near Utica, on an estate of his
own.
This was before the sympathy troubles,
and I can back it with another story or two to amuse
the reader.
Some years ago, when it was the fashion
in Canada for British officers always to travel in
uniform, I went to Buffalo, the great city of Buffalo
on lake Erie, in the Thames steamer, commanded by my
good friend, Captain Van Allen, and the first British
Canadian steamboat that ever entered that harbour.
We went in gallantly, with the flag flying that “has
braved a thousand years the battle and the breeze.”
I think the majority of the population must have lined
the wharfs to see us come in. They rent the welkin
with welcomes, and, among other demonstrations, cast
up their caps, and cried with might and main “Long
live George the Third!” Our gracious
monarch had for years before bid this world good night,
but that was nothing; the good folks of Buffalo had
not perhaps quite forgotten that they were once, long
before their city was a city, subjects of King George.
I and another officer in uniform were
received with all honours, and escorted to the Eagle
hotel, where we were treated sumptuously, and had
to run the gauntlet of handshaking to great extent.
A respectable gentleman, about forty, some seven years
older than myself, stuck close to me all the while.
I thought he admired the British undress uniform,
but he only wanted to ask questions, and, after sundry
answers, he inquired my name, which being courteously
communicated, he said, “Well, I am glad, that’s
a fact, that I have seen you, for many is the whipping
I have had for your book of Algebra.” Now
I never was capable of committing such an unheard-of
enormity as being the cause of flagellation to any
man by simple or quadratic equations; and it must
have been the binomial theorem which had tickled his
catastrophe, for it was my father’s treatise
which had penetrated into the new world of Buffalonian
education.
It is a pity, is it not, gentle reader,
that such feelings do not now exist?
Nevertheless, even now, the designation
of a British officer is a passport in any part of
the United States. The custom-house receives it
with courtesy and good-will; society is gratified by
attentions received from a British officer; and it
is coupled with the feelings which the habits and
conduct of a gentleman engender throughout Christendom.
At New York, I visited every place
worth seeing; and, although disliking gambling, races,
and debating societies, a outrance, I was determined
to judge for myself of New York, of life in New York.
On one occasion, I was at a meeting
of the turf in an hotel after the races, where violent
discussions and heavy champagning were going on.
I was then (it was in 1837) a major in the army, and
was introduced to one or two prominent men in the
room as a British officer who had been to see the
racecourse; this caused a general stir, and the champagne
flew about like I am at a loss
for a simile; and the health of Queen Victoria was
drunk with three times three.
On board a packet returning from England,
we had several of the leading characters of the United
States as passengers. A very silly and troublesome
democrat, of the Loco-foco school, from Philadelphia,
made himself conspicuous always after dinner, when
we sat, according to English fashion, at a dessert,
by his vitupérations against monarchy and an
exhibition of his excessive love for everything American.
The gentlemen above alluded to, men who had travelled
over Europe, whose education and manners made them
that which a true gentleman is all over the world,
were disgusted, and, to punish his impertinence, proposed
that a weekly paper should be written by the cabin
passengers, in which the occurrences of each day should
be noted and commented upon, and that poetry, tales,
and essays, should form part of its matter.
They agreed to discuss the relative
points and bearings of monarchy and democracy; they
to depute one of their number to be the champion of
monarchy; and we to chuse the champion of democracy
from amongst the English passengers.
Two drawings were fixed up at each
end of the table after dinner; one, representing a
crowned Plum-pudding; and the other, Liberty and Equality,
by the well-known sign. The blustering animal
was soon effectually silenced; a host of first-rate
talent levelled a constant battery at his rude and
uncultivated mind.
I shall never forget this voyage,
and I hope the talent-gifted Canadian lawyer who threw
down the gauntlet of Republicanism, and who has since
risen to the highest honours of his profession which
the Queen can bestow, has preserved copies of the
Saturday’s Gazette of The Mediator American
Packet-ship.
The mention of this vessel puts me
in mind of one more American anecdote, and I must
tell it, for I have a good deal of dry work before
me.
Crossing the Atlantic once in an American
vessel, we met another American ship, of the same
size, and passed very close. Our captain displayed
the stars and stripes in true ship-shape cordial greeting.
Brother Jonathan took no notice of this sea civility,
and passed on; upon which the skipper, after taking
a long look at him with his spy-glass, broke out in
a passion, “What!” said he, “you
won’t show your b d bunting, your
old stripy rag? Now, I guess, if he had been a
Britisher, instead of a d d Yankee, he would
not have been ashamed of his flag; he would have acted
like a gentleman. Phew!” and he whistled,
and then chewed his cigar viciously, quite unconscious
that I was enjoying the scene.
But, if it be possible that one peculiar
portion of the old countrymen are more disliked or
despised than another in any country under the sun,
connected by such ties as the United States are with
Britain, there can be no doubt that the condition
of the Jews under King John, as far as hatred and
unexpressed contumelious feeling goes, was preferable
to the feeling which native Americans, of the ultra
Loco-foco or ultra-federal breed, entertain
towards the labouring Catholic Irish, and would, if
they could with safety, vent upon them in dreadful
visitation. They would exterminate them, if they
dared.
To account for such a feeling, it
must be observed that a large portion of these ignorant
and misguided men have brought much of this animosity
upon themselves; for, continuing in the New World that
barbarous tendency to demolish all systems and all
laws opposed to their limited notions of right and
wrong, and, whilst their senseless feuds among themselves
harass society, they eagerly seek occasions for that
restless political excitement to which they are accustomed
in their own unhappy and regretted country.
A body of these hewers of wood and
drawers of water, who, when not excited, are the most
innocent and harmless people in the world easily
led, but never to be driven get employed
on a canal or great public work; and, no sooner do
they settle down upon wages which must appear like
a dream to them, than some old feud between Cork and
Connaught, some ancient quarrel of the Capulets
and Montagues of low life, is recollected, or a chant
of the Boyne water is heard, and to it they go pell-mell,
cracking one another’s heads and disturbing a
peaceful neighbourhood with their insane broils.
Or, should a devil, in the shape of
an adviser, appear among them, and persuade these
excitable folks that they may obtain higher wages by
forcing their own terms, bludgeons and bullets are
resorted to, in order to compel compliance, and incendiarism
and murder follow, until a military force is called
out to quell the riots.
The scenes of this kind in Canada,
where vast sums are annually expended on the public
works, have been frightful; and such has been the terror
which these lawless hordes have inspired, that timid
people have quitted their properties and fled out
of the reach of the moral pestilence; nay, it has
been carried so far, that a Scotch regiment has been
marked on account of its having been accidentally
on duty in putting down a canal riot; and, wherever
its station has afterwards been cast, the vengeance
of these people has followed it.
At Montreal, the elections have been
disgraced by bodies of these canallers having been
employed to intimidate and overawe voters; and, were
it not that a large military force is always at hand
there, no election could be made of a member, whose
seat would be the unbiassed and free choice of his
constituents.
It is, however, very fortunate for
Canada that these canallers are not usually inclined
to settle, but wander about from work to work, and
generally, in the end, go to the United States.
The Irish who settle are fortunately a different people;
and, as they go chiefly into the backwoods, lead a
peaceful and industrious life.
But it is, nevertheless, very amusing,
and affords much insight into the workings of frail
human nature to observe the conduct of that portion
of the Irish emigrants who find that they have neither
the means of obtaining land, nor of quitting some
large town at which they may arrive. Their first
notion then is to go out to service, which they had
left Ireland to avoid altogether. The father usually
becomes a day-labourer, the sons farm-servants or
household servants in the towns, the daughters cooks,
nursery-maids, &c.
When they come to the mistress of
a family to hire, they generally sit down on the nearest
chair to the door in the room, and assume a manner
of perfect familiarity, assuring the lady of the house
that they never expected to go out to service in America,
but that some family misfortune has rendered such
a step necessary. The lady then, of course, asks
them what branch of household service they can undertake;
to which the invariable reply is, anything cook
or housemaid, child’s-maid or housekeeper, and
that indeed they lived in better places at home than
they expect to get in America, such as Lord So-and-so’s,
or Squire So-and-so’s.
The end of this is obvious; and a
lady told me, the other day, she hired a professed
cook, who was very shortly put to the test by a dinner-party
occurring a day or two after she joined the household.
Her mistress ordered dinner; and one joint, or piece
de resistance, was a fine fillet of veal.
The professed cook, it appeared, laboured under a little
manque d’usage on two delicate points,
for she very unexpectedly burst into her lady’s
boudoir just as she was dressing for dinner, and exclaimed,
“Mistress, dear, what’ll I do with the
vail?” “The veil?” said
the dame, in horror; “what veil?” “Why,
the vail in the pot, marm; I biled it, and it swelled
out so, the divil a get it out can I git it.”
So with the farm-servants, they can
all do everything; and an Irish gentleman told me
that he lately hired a young man, an emigrant, to
plough for him; and, on asking him if he understood
ploughing, the good-natured Paddy answered, offhand,
“Ploughing, is it? I’m the boy for
ploughing.” “Very well, I’m
glad of it,” said the gentleman, “for you
are a fine, likely young fellow, so I shall hire you.”
He hired him accordingly at high wages ten
dollars a month and provisions and lodging found.
The first day he was to work, my friend told him to
go and yoke the oxen. Paddy stared with all his
eyes, but said nothing, and went away. He staid
some time, and then returned with a pair of oxen,
which he was driving before him. “Here’s
the oxen, master!” “Where are
the yokes, Paddy?” “The yokes!
by the powers, is that what they call beef in Canady?”
Poor Paddy had been a weaver all his live-long days.
The Irish are almost exclusively the
servants in most parts of the northern states and
throughout Canada, excepting the French Canadians,
and very attached, faithful servants they frequently
are; but notions of liberty and equality get possession
of their phrenological developments, and they are
almost always on the move to better their condition,
which rarely happens as they desire.
Then another crying evil in Canada
and in the States is the rage for dress. An Irish
girl no sooner gets a modicum of wages than all her
thoughts are to go to chapel or church as fine or finer
than her mistress. Nearly every servant-girl
in the large towns has a ridicule (that must
be the proper way of spelling it), a bustle, a parasol,
an expensive shawl, and a silk gown, and fine bonnet,
gloves, and a white pocket-handkerchief. The
men are not so aspiring, and usually don on Sundays
a blue coat and brass buttons, white pantaloons, white
gloves, and a good fur cap in winter, or a neat straw
hat or brilliant beaver in summer. The waistcoat
is nondescript, but the boots are irreproachable.
A cigar has nearly replaced the pipe in the streets.
I will defy a short-sighted person
to distinguish her nursery-maid from her own sister
at a little distance; and, being somewhat afflicted
that way myself, I frequently nod to a well-dressed
soubrette, thinking she is at least a leading member
of the aristocracy of the town; and this is the more
amusing, as in all colonial towns and in the haute
société of the Republic very considerable magnificence
is affected, and a rage for rank and pseudo-importance
is not a little the order of the day. “Nothing,”
says a distinguished writer upon that most frivolous
of all threadbare subjects, etiquette, “nothing
is more decidedly the sign of a vulgar-born or a vulgar-bred
person than to be ready to practise the art of cutting.”
I therefore bow to the well-dressed grisettes,
upon the principle of avoiding to be thought vulgar
in mixed society by cutting a lady of tremendous rank;
as I would rather take a cook for a Countess, or a
chambermaid for an Honourable, than be guilty of so
much rudeness.
You must not smile, gentle reader,
and say cooks are often handsomer than Countesses,
or chambermaids prettier than Honourables; I am like
the old man of the Bubbles of Brunnen, insensible
to anything but the beauties of nature. Neither
must you think we have no Countesses nor Honourables
in Canada. The former are in truth rarae aves,
but the latter why, every change of ministry
creates a batch of them.