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<h2> APPENDIX B </h2>
<h3> CANADA: A CONTRAST </h3>
<p>Introductory Chapter to the First Canadian Edition (1871)</p>
<p>In the year 1832 I landed with my husband, J.W. Dunbar Moodie, in Canada.
Mr. Moodie was the youngest son of Major Moodie, of Mellsetter, in the
Orkney Islands; he was a lieutenant in the 21st Regiment of Fusileers, and
had been severely wounded in the night-attack upon Bergen-op-Zoom, in
Holland.</p>
<p>Not being overgifted with the good things of this world—the younger
sons of old British families seldom are—he had, after mature
deliberation, determined to try his fortunes in Canada, and settle upon
the grant of 400 acres of land ceded by the Government to officers upon
half-pay.</p>
<p>Emigration, in most cases—and ours was no exception to the general
rule—is a matter of necessity, not of choice. It may, indeed,
generally be regarded as an act of duty performed at the expense of
personal enjoyment, and at the sacrifice of all those local attachments
which stamp the scenes in which our childhood grew in imperishable
characters upon the heart.</p>
<p>Nor is it, until adversity has pressed hard upon the wounded spirit of the
sons and daughters of old, but impoverished, families, that they can
subdue their proud and rebellious feelings, and submit to make the trial.</p>
<p>This was our case, and our motive for emigrating to one of the British
colonies can be summed up in a few words.</p>
<p>The emigrant's hope of bettering his condition, and securing a sufficient
competence to support his family, to free himself from the slighting
remarks too often hurled at the poor gentleman by the practical people of
the world, which is always galling to a proud man, but doubly so when he
knows that the want of wealth constitues the sole difference between him
and the more favoured offspring of the same parent stock.</p>
<p>In 1830 the tide of emigration flowed westward, and Canada became the
great landmark for the rich in hope and poor in purse. Public newspapers
and private letters teemed with the almost fabulous advantages to be
derived from a settlement in this highly favoured region. Men, who had
been doubtful of supporting their families in comfort at home, thought
that they had only to land in Canada to realize a fortune. The infection
became general. Thousands and tens of thousands from the middle ranks of
British society, for the space of three or four years, landed upon these
shores. A large majority of these emigrants were officers of the army and
navy, with their families: a class perfectly unfitted, by their previous
habits and standing in society, for contending with the stern realities of
emigrant life in the backwoods. A class formed mainly from the younger
scions of great families, naturally proud, and not only accustomed to
command, but to recieve implicit obedience from the people under them, are
not men adapted to the hard toil of the woodman's life. Nor will such
persons submit cheerfully to the saucy familiarity of servants, who,
republicans at heart, think themselves quite as good as their employers.</p>
<p>Too many of these brave and honest men took up their grants of wild land
in remote and unfavourable localities, far from churches, schools, and
markets, and fell an easy prey to the land speculators that swarmed in
every rising village on the borders of civilization.</p>
<p>It was to warn such settlers as these last mentioned, not to take up
grants and pitch their tents in the wilderness, and by so doing reduce
themselves and their families to hopeless poverty, that my work “Roughing
it in the Bush” was written.</p>
<p>I gave the experience of the first seven years we passed in the woods,
attempting to clear a bush farm, as a warning to others, and the number of
persons who have since told me, that my book “told the history” of their
own life in the woods, ought to be the best proof to every candid mind
that I spoke the truth. It is not by such feeble instruments as the above
that Providence works when it seeks to reclaim the waste places of the
earth, and make them subservient to the wants and happiness of its
creatures. The great Father of the souls and bodies of men knows the arm
which wholesome labour from the infancy has made strong, the nerves that
have become iron by patient endurance, and He chooses such to send forth
into the forest to hew out the rough paths for the advance of
civilization.</p>
<p>These men became wealthy and prosperous, and are the bones and sinews of a
great and rising country. Their labour is wealth, not exhaustion; it
produces content, not home-sickness and despair.</p>
<p>What the backwoods of Canada are to the industrious and
ever-to-be-honoured sons of honest poverty, and what they are to the
refined and polished gentleman, these sketches have endeavoured to show.</p>
<p>The poor man is in his native element; the poor gentleman totally
unfitted, by his previous habits and education, to be a hewer of the
forest and a tiller of the soil. What money he brought out with him is
lavishly expended during the first two years in paying for labour to clear
and fence lands which, from his ignorance of agricultural pursuits, will
never make him the least profitable return and barely find coarse food for
his family. Of clothing we say nothing. Bare feet and rags are too common
in the bush.</p>
<p>Now, had the same means and the same labour been employed in the
cultivation of a leased farm, or one purchased for a few hundred dollars,
near a village, how different would have been the results, not only to the
settler, but it would have added greatly to the wealth and social
improvement of the country.</p>
<p>I am well aware that a great and, I must think, a most unjust prejudice
has been felt against my book in Canada because I dared to give my opinion
freely on a subject which had engrossed a great deal of my attention; nor
do I believe that the account of our failure in the bush ever deterred a
single emigrant from coming to the country, as the only circulation it
ever had in the colony was chiefly through the volumes that often formed a
portion of their baggage. The many who have condemned the work without
reading it will be surprised to find that not one word has been said to
prejudice intending emigrants from making Canada their home. Unless,
indeed, they ascribe the regret expressed at having to leave my native
land, so natural in the painful home-sickness which, for several months,
preys upon the health and spirits of the dejected exile, to a deep-rooted
dislike to the country.</p>
<p>So far from this being the case, my love for the country has steadily
increased from year to year, and my attachment to Canada is now so strong
that I cannot imagine any inducement, short of absolute necessity, which
could induce me to leave the colony where as a wife and mother, some of
the happiest years of my life have been spent.</p>
<p>Contrasting the first years of my life in the bush with Canada as she now
is, my mind is filled with wonder and gratitude at the rapid strides she
has made towards the fulfilment of a great and glorious destiny.</p>
<p>What important events have been brought to pass within the narrow circle
of less than forty years! What a difference since <i>now</i> and <i>then</i>.
The country is the same only in name. Its aspect is wholly changed. The
rough has become smooth, the crooked has been made straight, the forests
have been converted into fruitful fields, the rude log cabin of the
woodsman has been replaced by the handsome, well-appointed homestead, and
large populous cities have pushed the small clap-boarded village into the
shade.</p>
<p>The solitary stroke of the axe that once broke the uniform silence of the
vast woods is only heard in remote districts, and is superseded by the
thundering tread of the iron horse and the ceaseless panting of the
steam-engine in our sawmills and factories.</p>
<p>Canada is no longer a child, sleeping in the arms of nature, dependant for
her very existence on the fostering care of her illustrious mother. She
has outstepped infancy, and is in the full enjoyment of a strong and
vigorous youth. What may not we hope for her maturity ere another forty
summers have glided down the stream of time! Already she holds in her hand
the crown of one of the mightiest empires that the world has seen, or is
yet to see.</p>
<p>Look at her vast resources—her fine healthy climate—her
fruitful soil—the inexhaustible wealth of her pine forests—the
untold treasures hidden in her unexplored mines. What other country
possesses such an internal navigation for transporting its products from
distant Manitoba to the sea, and from thence to every port in the world!</p>
<p>If an excellent Government, defended by wise laws, a loyal people, and a
free Church, can make people happy and proud of their country, surely we
have every reason to rejoice in our new Dominion.</p>
<p>When we first came to the country it was a mere struggle for bread to the
many, while all the offices of emolument and power were held by a favoured
few. The country was rent to pieces by political factions, and a fierce
hostility existed between the native born Canadians—the first
pioneers of the forest—and the British emigrants, who looked upon
each other as mutual enemies, who were seeking to appropriate the larger
share of the new country.</p>
<p>Those who had settled down in the woods were happily unconscious that
these quarrels threatened to destroy the peace of the colony.</p>
<p>The insurrection of 1837 came upon them like a thunder clap; they could
hardly believe such an incredible tale. Intensely loyal, the emigrant
officers rose to a man to defend the British flag and chastise the rebels
and their rash leader.</p>
<p>In their zeal to uphold British authority, they made no excuse for the
wrongs that the dominant party had heaped upon a clever and high-spirited
man. To them he was a traitor, and, as such, a public enemy. Yet the blow
struck by that injured man, weak as it was, without money, arms, or the
necessary munitions of war, and defeated and broken in its first effort,
gave freedom to Canada, and laid the foundation of the excellent
constitution that we now enjoy. It drew the attention of the Home
Government to the many abuses then practised in the colony, and made them
aware of its vast importance in a political point of view, and ultimately
led to all our great national improvements.</p>
<p>The settlement of the long-vexed clergy reserves question, and the
establishment of common schools was a great boon to the colony. The
opening up of new townships, the making of roads, the establishments of
municipal councils in all the old districts, leaving to the citizens the
free choice of their own members in the council for the management of
their affairs, followed in rapid succession.</p>
<p>These changes of course took some years to accomplish, and led to others
equally important. The Provincial Exhibitions have done much to improve
the agricultural interests, and have led to better and more productive
methods of cultivation than were formerly practiced in the Province. The
farmer gradually became a wealthy and intelligent landowner, proud of his
improved flocks and herds, of his fine horses and handsome homestead. He
was able to send his sons to college and his daughters to boarding school,
and not uncommonly became an honourable member of the Legislative Council.</p>
<p>While the sons of poor gentlemen have generally lost caste and sunk into
useless sots, the children of these honest tillers of the soil have
steadily risen to the highest class, and have given to Canada some of her
best and wisest legislators.</p>
<p>Men who rest satisfied with the mere accident of birth for their claims to
distinction, without energy and industry to maintain their position in
society, are sadly at discount in a country which amply rewards the
worker, but leaves the indolent loafer to die in indigence and obscurity.</p>
<p>Honest poverty is encouraged, not despised, in Canada. Few of her
prosperous men have risen from obscurity to affluence without going
through the mill, and therefore have a fellow-feeling for those who are
struggling to gain the first rung on the ladder.</p>
<p>Men are allowed in this country a freedom enjoyed by few of the more
polished countries in Europe—freedom in religion, politics, and
speech; freedom to select their own friends and to visit with whom they
please without consulting the Mrs. Grundys of society—and they can
lead a more independent social life than in the mother country, because
less restricted by the conventional prejudices that govern older
communities.</p>
<p>Few people who have lived many years in Canada and return to England to
spend the remainder of their days, accomplish the fact. They almost
invariably come back, and why? They feel more independent and happier
here; they have no idea what a blessed country it is to live in until they
go back and realize the want of social freedom. I have heard this from so
many educated people, persons of taste and refinement, that I cannot doubt
the truth of their statements.</p>
<p>Forty years has accomplished as great a change in the habits and tastes of
the Canadian people as it has in the architecture of their fine cities and
the appearance of the country. A young Canadian gentleman is as well
educated as any of his compeers across the big water, and contrasts very
favourably with them. Social and unaffected, he puts on no airs of
offensive superiority, but meets a stranger with the courtesy and
frankness best calculated to shorten the distance between them and to make
his guest feel perfectly at home.</p>
<p>Few countries possess a more beautiful female population. The women are
elegant in their tastes, graceful in their manners, and naturally kind and
affectionate in their dispositions. Good housekeepers, sociable
neighbours, and lively and active in speech and movement, they are capital
companions and make excellent wives and mothers. Of course there must be
exceptions to every rule; but cases of divorce, or desertion of their
homes, are so rare an occurrence that it speaks volumes for their domestic
worth. Numbers of British officers have chosen their wives in Canada, and
I never heard that they had cause to repent of their choice. In common
with our American neighbours, we find that the worst members of our
community are not Canadian born, but importations from other countries.</p>
<p>The Dominion and Local Governments are now doing much to open up the
resources of Canada by the Intercolonial and projected Pacific Railways
and other Public Works, which, in time, will make a vast tract of land
available for cultivation, and furnish homes for multitudes of the
starving populations of Europe.</p>
<p>And again, the Government of the flourishing Province of Ontario—of
which the Hon. J. Sandfield Macdonald is premier—has done wonders
during the last four years by means of its Immigration policy, which has
been most successfully carried out by the Hon. John Carling, the
Commissioner, and greatly tended to the development of the country. By
this policy liberal provision is made for free grants of land to actual
settlers, for general education, and for the encouragement of the
industrial Arts and Agriculture; by the construction of public roads and
the improvement of the internal navigable waters of the province; and by
the assistance now given to an economical system of railways connecting
these interior waters with the leading railroads and ports on the
frontier; and not only are free grants of land given in the districts
extending from the eastern to the western extremity of the Province, but
one of the best of the new townships has been selected in which the
Government is now making roads, and upon each lot is clearing five acres
and erecting thereon a small house, which will be granted to heads of
families, who, by six annual instalments, will be required to pay back to
the Government the cost of these improvements—not exceeding $200, or
40 pounds sterling—when a free patent (or deed) of the land will be
given, without any charge whatever, under a protective Homestead Act. This
wise and liberal policy would have astonished the Colonial Legislature of
1832, but will, no doubt, speedily give to the Province a noble and
progressive back country, and add much to its strength and prosperity.</p>
<p>Our busy factories and foundries—our copper, silver, and plumbago
mines—our salt and petroleum—the increasing exports of native
produce—speak volumes for the prosperity of the Dominion and for the
government of those who are at the head of affairs. It only requires the
loyal co-operation of an intelligent and enlightened people to render this
beautiful and free country the greatest and the happiest upon the face of
the earth.</p>
<p>When we contrast forest life in Canada forty years ago with the present
state of the country, my book will not be without interest and
significance. We may truly say, old things have passed away, all things
have become new.</p>
<p>What an advance in the arts and sciences and in the literature of the
country has been made during the last few years. Canada can boast of many
good and even distinguished authors, and the love of books and booklore is
daily increasing.</p>
<p>Institues and literary associations for the encouragement of learning are
now to be found in all the cities and large towns in the Dominion. We are
no longer dependent upon the States for the reproduction of the works of
celebrated authors; our own publishers, both in Toronto and Montreal, are
furnishing our handsome bookstores with volumes that rival, in cheapness
and typographical excellence, the best issues from the large printing
establishments in America. We have no lack of native talent or books, or
of intelligent readers to appreciate them.</p>
<p>Our print shops are full of the well-educated designs of native artists.
And the grand scenery of our lakes and forests, transferred to canvas,
adorns the homes of our wealthy citizens.</p>
<p>We must not omit in this slight sketch to refer to the number of fine
public buildings which meet us at every turn, most of which have been
designed and executed by native architects. Montreal can point to her
Victoria Bridge, and challenge the world to produce its equal. This
prodigy of mechanical skill should be a sufficient inducement to strangers
from other lands to visit our shores, and though designed by the son of
the immortal George Stephenson, it was Canadian hands that helped him to
execute his great project—to raise that glorious monument to his
fame, which we hope, will outlast a thousand years.</p>
<p>Our new Houses of Parliment, our churches, banks, public halls, asylums
for the insane, the blind, and the deaf and dumb are buildings which must
attract the attention of every intelligent traveller; and when we consider
the few brief years that have elapsed since the Upper Province was
reclaimed from the wilderness, our progress in mechanical arts, and all
the comforts which pertain to modern civilization, is unprecedented in the
history of older nations.</p>
<p>If the Canadian people will honestly unite in carrying out measures
proposed by the Government for the good of the country, irrespective of
self-interest and party prejudices, they must, before the close of the
present century, become a great and prosperous nationality. May the
blessing of God rest upon Canada and the Canadian people!</p>
<p>Susanna Moodie</p>
<p>Belleville, 1871</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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