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Letters and Journals of James, Eighth Earl of Elgin by Eighth Earl of Elgin James
page 96 of 611 (15%)
national antipathies hearty and earnest enough. We suffer, too, from
the inconvenience of having to work a system which is not yet
thoroughly in gear. Reckless and unprincipled men take advantage of
these circumstances to work into a fever every transient heat that
affects the public mind. Nevertheless, I am confident I could carry
Canada unscathed through all these evils of transition, and place the
connection on a surer foundation than ever, if I could only tell the
people of the province that as regards the conditions of material
prosperity, they would be raised to a level with their neighbours. But
if this be not achieved, if free navigation and reciprocal trade with
the Union be not secured for us, the worst, I fear, will come, and
that at no distant day.

[Sidenote: Political discontent.]

Unfortunately, powerful interests in the one case, indifference and apathy
in the other, prevented these indispensable measures, as he always
maintained them to be, from being carried for many years; and in the
meantime a most serious fever of political discontent was in effect worked
up, out of a heat which ought to have been as transient as the cause of it
was intrinsically unimportant.

[Sidenote: Rebellion Losses Bill.]

Irritated by loss of office, groaning under the ruin of their trade,
outraged moreover (for so they represented it to themselves) in their best
and most patriotic feelings by seeing 'Rebels' in the seat of power, the
Ex-ministerial party were in a mood to resent every measure of the
Government, and especially every act of the Governor-General. When
Parliament met on January 18, he took advantage of the repeal of the law
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