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MEMOIR
OF
fit Mxtutm fcUtatoii,
LATE CHIEF JUSTICE
OF THE
PROVINCE OF" NOVA SCOTIA.
BY REV. G. W. HILL, M. A.
HALIFAX :
PRINTED BY JAMES BOWES & SONS.
1864.
297387B
PREFACE.
The following Memoir was written several years ago,
and was on the eve of being published by the committee
of a public institution, in behalf of whose funds a lecture
on the "Life and Times of the late Sir Brenton Hallibur-
ton" had been delivered by the author. Circumstances
delayed the publication of this little work, of which the
lecture was an abridgement, and in the end caused it to
be abandoned. The manuscript was thrown aside and
almost forgotten, when the present publishers — the
Messrs. Bowes — after the lapse of two or three years,
made a proposal to publish it wholly at their own risk.
Their request was acceded to, and the manuscript placed
at once in their* hands. The author does not wish to
- disarm criticism by apologies, based on want of time
L and press of other duties, knowing that however true,
they are rarely believed.
With many acknowledged faults, the book is pre-
sented to the public as a very small contribution to our
provincial literature.
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
CHAPTER I
The history of Sir Brenton Halliburton claims the
attention of his countrymen. The prominence of his
position, the order of his talents, the excellence of his
character, and the extraordinary length of his career as
a public man, may give an interest to the following
memoir of his busy and useful life, which extended
over a period of more than fifty years. His early asso-
ciates had passed away ; of the long list of prominent
men, with whom he had mingled in public and private,
the name of not more than one still living could be
pronounced when his life closed. They had dropped
off one by one, while he continued to bear the burden
of public affairs. As memory recalled the past, or he
gazed upon the present, he stood almost alone — the last
of that band with whom he had started on the race.
It cannot be an unprofitable labor to review the part
wrhich he took in the affairs of the Province, social,
legal, ecclesiastical, or political ; to bring back to memo-
ry the times in which he lived, and the great share
which he had in moulding the most valuable institutions
in the colony; to recall the graces and virtues which
adorned him in private, and, above all, to observe tho>e
1
2 SIR BRBNTON HALLIBURTON.
principles of religion which increasing in strength with
his advancing years, rendered him in the evening: of
life an eminent Christian. In him may be found an
encouraging example of what time well spent, and
talents faithfully occupied, will enable a man to ac-
complish even within the narrow limits of a colonial
sphere.
The late Chief Justice started upon life on the eve of
troublesome times. The year previous to that which
ushered in the Revolution of the American Colonies, bv
the formal Declaration of Independence, was the year of
his birth, which took place in Newport, Rhode Island,
December 3rd, 1775. In his name, Brenton Halliburton,
we have those of the united families from which he
sprang. His mother's ancestors had settled in New
England more than two centuries ago, — some fourteen
years after the landing of the Pilgrim Fathers at
Plymouth.
William Rrenton, the founder of the family, left
Hammersmith, England, and landed in Boston, in 1634.
He took with him a commission from Charles I., which
bore the date of 1683. It was termed a grant, and gave
him authority to take so many acres to a mile of all the
lands which he should survey in the New England
Colonies. His office gave him a position. Soon after
his arrival he was made a freeman of the colony of
Massachusetts, and the year after, representative or
deputy of the General Court of Boston. In 1638 he
removed with his wife to Newport, Rhode Island, and
took an active and prominent part in forming the
township. Eventually appointed Deputy Governor, and
then (1666) Governor of Rhode Island, he became more
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 3
and more settled in the country. In 1665 his son
Jahleel was born, who was the father of that Jahleel
Brenton who was the head of the family in the middle
of the last century. In the lapse of a hundred years
the successive generations had accumulated a valuable
property, and an influential character. They stood high
in the estimation of their fellow-countrymen.
In the year 1T50 the town was visited by a frigate
commanded by Lord Colville. On board, acting as
surgeon of the ship, was Dr. John Halliburton ; he was
the son of a Presbyterian clergyman, who was in charge
of the church at Haddington, Scotland. Whilst the
ship rode at anchor in the harbour of Newport, this
gentleman became acquainted with the family of the
Hon. Jahleel Brenton, whose son was so well known in
the British Navy as Admiral Sir J. Brenton. Doctor
Halliburton became attached to one of Mr. Brenton's
daughters, and, after completing his stipulated term of
service as naval surgeon, returned to Rhode Island, and
was married to Susannah Brenton, on the 4th of
January, in the year 17(57. This alliance caused him
to adopt the colony of Rhode Island as his home, and
follow his profession among his newly-found friends
and acquaintances. As a physician he was skillful and
attentive, and these qualifications soon produced their
most favourable results ; his practice was extensive, and
he acquired property. Circumstances, however, made
his residence in the Island of short duration. What-
ever may have been his visions of a permanent abode.
and the founding of a comfortable homestead for future
generations, they were rudely dispelled by the diffi-
culties which arose, between the Parent Kingdom and
4 SIR BRKNTON HALLIBURTON.
the Colonies. From all his earliest associations, the
nature of his education, the society with which he had
most mingled, the position which he had occupied as
the servant of the Government, in one of his Majesty's
ships of war — his feelings of loyalty were deeplv
rooted.
When those unhappy disputes arose, which event-
ually resulted in sundering from its centre so large a
portion of the British empire, as now constitutes the
American Republic, Dr. Halliburton, as was most natu-
ral, espoused and warmly supported the Royalist party.
The consequence of his openly expressed opinions, and
unconcealed acts, was soon felt. In the month of July,
1776, he was banished, together with several other
loyalists, for refusing to subscribe the test ordered by
an act of the Revolutionary Assembly. The place of
his banishment was Hopkinton, and there he remained
until September of that year, when it was voted that
he and Dr. William Hunter, " have leave to return to
Newport, until the October session of the Assembly."
This privilege was granted, however, not out of consid-
eration to themselves, but because their services as
physicians were much needed by the inhabitants. The
forbearance thus shown lasted but a short time, and he
was finally compelled to sacrifice all the property which
ability and application had enabled him to accumulate,
and escape from the town. Nor was it, by any means,
a trifling surrender which he was compelled to make.
t The loss incurred by firm adhesion to his political prin-
ciples was very great. The abandonment of property,
the resignation of a lucrative practice, the dismember-
SIR BRENT0X HALLIBURTON. 5
ment of social ties and domestic arrangements, formed,
in their combination, a very serious sacrifice.
His residence was one of the most valuable in the
town of Newport, and furnished with the appliances of
comfort and convenience then at command. For this
reason, doubtless, it was selected as a suitable abode fox
the Due de Lauzun, who accompanied the French army
sent to assist the revolting colonists. Whilst this
nobleman was billeted upon Dr. Halliburton, he mani-
fested great anxiety to relieve his host of all unneces-
sary trouble and inconvenience. The military necessity
was counterbalanced by sincerity of manner and kind-
liness of feeling. When, in deference to his rank, and
considerable thoughtfulness of his accustomed comforts
and habits at home, the best rooms in the house were of-
fered to the Due, for his use, he declined accepting them,
lest he should needlessly disturb the existing arrange-
ments of the family. This freedom from selfishness,
and manifestation of respect, continued to the very close
of his compulsory visit ; and when the friendly, though
uninvited, guest parted with his hospitable entertainer,
he addressed him in these words : " I respect you, sir,
for your fidelity to your Sovereign, under the most
adverse circumstances."
The exciting events which transpired, and their con-
stant discussion in his hearing, made an impression upon
his son Brenton, child as he was. That he under-
stood or appreciated the loyal principles which ani-
mated his father, cannot be supposed; but, placed in the
way of constantly hearing the opinions expressed re-
garding the disaffection which prevailed, it was not
unnatural that he should, at least, have learned to echo
6 SIR BRENTOX HALLIBURTON.
the sentiments which he incessantly heard. His friends
were on the king's side, and as his friends must be right,
so of course was he. On one occasion, he independ-
ently gave vent to his patriotism in a manner so con-
spicuous and unmistakeable that he involved himself in
trouble. At the time of the surrender of Lord Corn-
wallis at Yorktown, in 1781, Brenton Halliburton was
about six years of age. He had heard the critical situ-
ation of the British army frequently discussed in his
father's house, and well knew the anxiety which was
felt. Coming out of school one day he heard the peo-
ple calling through the streets, "Good news!" "Glo-
rious news !" Asking the cause of the cry, he was
informed of the surrender of the Royalist troops,
whereupon he raised the counter cry, as he ran along,
" Bad news !" " Bad news !" An old Quaker, who
lived opposite to Dr. Halliburton, and bitterly disliked
him for his loyalty, hearing these boyish shouts, bustled
out and enquired who cried " Bad news .'" Seeing
and hearing the little loyalist in the act, so exasperated
we're his feelings that he actually save him in charge to
some militia men who were passing at the time, and
directed them to carry him to the iail. They obeyed
orders, and led off their dangerous prisoner in triumph.
He was not, however, long detained within the walls.
Whatever fears may have been awakened in his mind
as he passed through the prison gate, they were soon
allayed. The jailor's Avife happened to have been an
old servant in his father's family, and entertained for
them great respect. Instead, therefore, of consigning
her young charge to cell and iron bolts, she patted his
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. I
brow with motherly tenderness, gave him some tea and
cake, and sent him home.
Although the Quaker had permitted his irritable
temper to get the better of his judgment, and had aeted
with such petty and childish haste on this occasion, he
liked the little boy for his lively disposition, and not
unfrequentlv called him in from the street, and endea-
voured to persuade him by a bribe of cake, to drink the
President's health. Brenton, however, having obtained
the cake, invariably changed the toast, " to the health
of the king," and made the best of his way out, know-
ing that the old Quaker, though lame and unable to
catch him, would, at least, throw his crutch at him.
The time when it became necessarv for Dr. Hallibur-
ton to leave Newport, arrived, and though that crisis
was reached by an interesting circumstance, it need not
be related here, as it refers more to the father than the
son. It became unsafe for the loyalist to remain any
longer, and he, therefore, resolved to leave the town-
ship as soon as possible. Upon his return from Hop-
kinton he had been in the habit of following his pro-
fession, as usual, and making visits to his patients at
some distance from his home ; and, one night deter-
mined to take advantage of this self- alio wed liberty.
In his latter days Sir Brenton could recall how his
father had in the evening put on his hat and coat, to
see, as he supposed, some sick patient on the main
land ; and yet, how strange and unaccountable to him.
was the display of feeling manifested by his mother
and the older members of the family upon bidding hi in
" o-ood niffht !" He had been accustomed to the Doctor s
leaving the house, and lie saw no reason for more than
8 SIR B KENTON HALLIBURTON.
ordinary regret. The morning, however, to some
extent, revealed the mystery : his father had not
returned.
That night Dr. Halliburton left the town in a barsre
from Castle Hill, (the estate of the Hon. J. Brenton,)
and landed safely at Long Island, where the British
army was stationed. On his arrival at Head Quarters
he presented himself to Sir Henry Clinton, who (as
some small recognition of his services) offered him the
headship of the Naval Medical Department in that
city, or in Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia. After
due deliberation he wisely chose the latter, no doubt
deeming it likely to be a more permanent office than
the other. He sailed in a British ship of war from
New York soon after, and arrived at his destination in
1782 : his wife and family followed him in the succeed-
ing spring. A brother of Mrs. Halliburton's undertook
the conducting of them to their new home. Having
obtained a white flag, he embarked with his sister and
all her children, consisting of John, who died in youth.
— Mary, who married Captain Beckwith, — Elizabeth,
who married Judge Stewart, — the youngest daughter.
who married Admiral Murray, — and Brenton, who was
the youngest of the family, — and their aunt, Mehitabel
Brenton. During their vovage to Halifax a high wind
compelled them to put into LaHave, a river flowing
through the south-western part of Nova Scotia. Mr.
Brenton went on shore, and took his little nephew with
him. On entering a small dwelling they found a sick
man, who was in great destitution : the sight affected
the child so much, that he pressed his uncle to give him
some assistance. ". Brenton, my boy," said he, "I have
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 9
"but little money with, me, I want more myself."
e< Uncle," he replied, " you are well, and have good
clothes, hut look, just look at him." Of course his appeal
succeeded. Thus early did that prominent feature of his
character which distinguished him through a long life
manifest its presence and its power. If we are able to
follow him to the close of his career, we shall note its
permanent continuance and its growth. This little inci-
dent occurring on his first touching the soil of Nova
Scotia is a type of thousands during almost eighty suc-
cessive years. " The blessing of the poor rested on
him."
In addition to his official duties Dr. Halliburton
entered into general practice, and became, as at his
former place of residence, a leader in his profession, and
an influential member of the community. Some five
years after his settling in the town, he was elevated to
a seat at the old Council Board : his appointment is
dated June 7, 1787. It was in the same year, about
two months after (August 11,) that his Majesty, by
letters patent, created the Province of Nova Scotia
an episcopal See, and appointed as the first Bishop of a
British Colony the Reverend Charles Inglis, formerly
Hector of Trinity Church, New York, with whose
family that of Dr. Halliburton was to be one day closely
connected.
It was about this time that the Doctor crossed the
Atlantic for the purpose of bringing home his eldest son
John, whom he had sent to Scotland for his education.
As the means of instruction in the colonv were exceed-
at
ingly poor, he resolved that Brenton should accompany
him, and occupy his brother's place. The first part of
2*
10 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
this resolution he carried into effect ; the last he did
not. Brenton accompanied his father on the voyage,
but when they reached Scotland, the Doctor drew a
comparison between that country and England, as a
place of education for his younger son, which resulted in
favor of the latter. Accordingly, he took his child to
England, and selected a school established at Enfield,
and conducted by the Rev. Mr. Shaw. There Brenton
remained until the death of his brother John, in 1791,
when he was brought out to Halifax. During his child-
hood he was animated and cheerful. Several stories still
current among his relatives indicate the buoyancy of his
spirit, and the fertility of his imagination in devising
for himself amusement. But such anecdotes miedit be
related of thousands of children, and they are only
valuable, not because peculiar to the talented, or sure
prognostics of future pre-eminence, but simply because
they prove the identity of the boy with the man, and,
in this case, manifest that the liveliness of disposition
and even cheerfulness of temperament which distin-
guished him through his long life, were innate.
Upon his arrival at Halifax he commenced the study
of the Law, in the office of the Hon. James Stewart,
who, at that time, was practising at the Bar, but was
afterward elevated to the Bench. Whilst he was
prosecuting those studies, for the pursuit of which the
sequel of his life proved him to be so eminently quali-
fied, a great national event took place, which suddenly
brought them to a close.
On the 18th of April, 1793, Governor Wentworth,
afterward preferred to the dignity of a Baronet of Nova
Scotia, received instructions from Mr. Dundas (Secre-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 11
tary of State) that France had declared war against
England the preceding 1st of February, and that his
Excellency was authorised to raise a provincial corps, of
which he should be Colonel. It was no very difficult
task to evoke from the colonists — many of whom were
loyalist refugees — a feeling of patriotism sufficiently
strong to be manifested in military devotion. Nor was
it entirely new to the inhabitants of the Province to be
thus enrolled for active service. Some years before,
on the outbreak of the revolutionary struggle in Ame-
rica, companies of infantry had been raised from the
militia in various parts of the Province, and ordered to
be in readiness for duty on the shortest notice. In
accordance with this, on the 28th September, 1775,
four hundred militia from Lunenburg, two companies
from King's county, and one hundred Acadians from
Clare and Yarmouth, received a command to march to
Halifax, for its protection. So important was an orga-
nization of coloj$al troops then deemed, that a month
afterward Lord Suffolk ordered the Governor to raise.
in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland, a regiment of one
thousand men, with the promise of the same pay and
allowance as regulars, but no half-pay upon retirement
or in case of being disbanded During the disturbed
period which followed, until the peace of 1783, these
soldiers were very useful, being constantly sent to such
places as were exposed to. the attacks of those roving-
plunderers whom Avar invariably produces, and who
take advantage of excitement to prosecute their own
designs.
When the war was brought to a termination the
regiment dwindled down, and was finally disbanded.
But the material, to a great extent was left. Moreover,
12 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON".
not only was the population vastly increased, but a
peculiar element was introduced in the twenty thou-
sand refugees, from the revolted colonics, who had
found an asylum in the Province. When, therefore, the
order from England arrived, Governor Wentworth
easily resuscitated the military body, and formed them
into a regiment, which was called " The Nova Scotia
Provincials." Owing to its geographical position, and
the capaciousness of its harbour, Halifax became as in
the time of the old French war, the great station for
the British Army and Navy. The town was thronged
with officers ; the public service was in the ascendant.
Then, as now, young men were attracted by the profes-
sion of arms : Mr. Halliburton was one of them. He
closed Blackstone, and girded on a sword. This step
was in harmony with his character. Animated and
fond of society, the Army presented a more fascinating
field than the Barrister's office. Upon receiving his
commission, which bears date A.D. 1103, he assumed
his new duties with the same cheerfulness and vivacity
that had characterised him as a child.
When H. R. H. Prince Edward arrived at Halifax, in
the month of October, 1795, from the West Indian
Islands, where he had served as Major-General, under
Sir Charles Grey, in the reduction of Martinique and
Guadaloupe, Mr. Halliburton was one of the subalterns
of the "guard of honor" that received him at the "king's
-wharf." Sir J. Wentworth was then Governor of Nova
: Scotia, and continued to hold that high office during the
whole period of time that the Prince remained in
Halifax. As Mr. Halliburton afterward became very
intimately connected in his military capacity with the
Prince,.it.may -not be inappropriate to recall the fact that
SIR B REN TON HALLIBURTON. 13
his Eoyal Highness was in command of the 7th Hoy a]
Fusileers, and Commander of the Forces in the Province
of Nova Scotia at the time of his arrival. This rank
and office he enjoyed until the month of October, 1793,
when he returned to England, in consequence of a fall
from his horse in Hollis street, at the north-west corner
of the present " Province Building," as he was going-
home from a garrison Field-day. For the benefit of sur-
gical advice he went to England. This, however,
was not his final departure. On the 17th of May of
the following year, 1799, he was appointed successor to
General Prescott, as Commander-in-Chief of the Forces
in British North America, and, returning in July, assum-
ed his duties. He remained in Halifax until a severe
bilious attack, followed by alarming symptoms, rendered
it necessary that he should obtain immediate leave of
absence, and return forthwith to England, which he did
in July, 1800. During this period, Mr. Halliburton
was associated with the Prince, at first as a subaltern in
the before-mentioned regiment, but afterward more inti-
mately as a Lieutenant, and then as Captain in his own
7th Fusileers. It was but a short time after his Royal
Highness' arrival that he especially noticed the young
officer whom he often met in the society of the day,
and offered him a commission in his own regiment.
Mr. Halliburton gladly accepted the exchange, which
was effected in 1795. The Nova Scotia Provincials
were of modern date and stationary ; the 7th Fusileers
were of old standing and moved about the world ; he,
therefore, preferred the latter. His new position
brought him into a closer contact with the Prince,
whose esteem and confidence he secured by his promp-
14 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
titude, resolution, and even course of conduct. Impor-
tant duties were assigned him, which were so well and
faithfully discharged that he soon became a busy and
prominent man in the garrison.
On one occasion the officer in charge of the men at
York Redoubt — a fort erected upon a promontory
which forms one side of the mouth of Halifax harbour
— was unable to maintain discipline. Inattention to
duty, together with all its concomitants, had so increas-
ed, that it became necessary to adopt strong means for
putting a stop to these irregularities ; — a resolute will,
and wisdom to guide that will, were required. Mr.
Halliburton was selected for the purpose. The officer
in charge was recalled, and he assumed the duty ; — a
change took place at once. He began with a firm
hand : he issued his orders, and saw that thev were
promptly obeyed : he kept the men employed, and left
them no opportunity to spend their time in gambling and
drunkenness. Notwithstanding a great love of society.
O O <i J
and the ample opportunity of gratifying it by the fact
of so many friends and relatives living in the town,
not more than two miles distant, he stedfastly resisted
all temptation to leave his post. Such conduct was
not lost upon the strict disciplinarian in command.
During his stay at the Fort, that sad catastrophe
occurred — the wreck of the ship of war " La Tribune."
As this story has been sometimes erroneously narrated,
it may be well to state the circumstances which actually
occurred, as often related by Mr. Halliburton, who was
an eye witness of much that transpired, and himself
shared in the attempt to rescue the noble vessel from
her perilous position. An interesting account of the har-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 15
rowing event was published in the Halifax Journal, a
few days afterward, which, together with some state-
ments not heretofore made public, will place the matter
in its true light. Early in the morning of November
23rd, 1787^ Mr. Halliburton was standing on the top /V
of the abrupt elevation upon which the fort is built,
looking out eastwardly toward the sea. It was a dark
autumnal day : the sky was covered with dull grey
clouds, the water was black, except where crested by
the foam of a broken wave : the rising wind blew
freshly from the E. S. E. Above and beneath were the
signs of a coming storm. Gazing upon this cheerless
scene there also stood a sergeant of the company, named
McCormack (who for many years afterward served the
Government as porter at the Engineer yard.) He
addressed Mr. Halliburton, as they were both noticing
a ship bearing down upon them : " If that ship does not
alter her course, sir, she will be ashore within a
quarter of an hour." His prediction was too truly
fulfilled ; within five minutes she was stranded upon
Thrum Cap Shoals. It is generally supposed that the
wind at this time was blowing violently, and that a
heavy sea was raging. This, however, was not the case.
Every thing portended a storm ; but it had not yet
arisen. There was the prospect of a gloomy evening,
and still more of a tempestuous night ; but the gale was
in its infancy. It was the self-satisfied opinion of " the
master" that caused the stranding of the ship. As early
as eight o'clock she had made the harbor, and running
before a fair wind was rapidly nearing it. The
Captain, whose name was Barker, had suggested to the
sailing master the propriety of engaging a harbour Pilot
16 SIR BRENTOX HALLIBURTON.
to conduct the vessel in ; but that officer replied that
there was no necessity, as he knew the harbor well,
and having once taken in a forty-four gun ship against a
head wind, he would have no difficulty with a fair one.
This " a fortiori" argument prevailed, and the captain
— fully confiding in the master's skill and knowledge —
went below to arrange some papers which he wished,
upon landing, to hand to Admiral Murray, who was
then in naval command of the station. Now it so
occurred that there was a negro on board, named John
Casey, who had formerly belonged to Halifax : to
this man the master looked for assistance in piloting the
vessel safely to her anchorage ; but he misplaced his trust.
About nine o'clock the ship approached so near Thrum
Cap Shoals, that the master himself became alarmed and
sent for Mr. Galvin, a naval officer holding the rank of
" master's mate," who was simply a passenger on board
the Tribune. This gentleman, who knew the harbor
well, had offered to pilot the ship, but his offer had
been refused ; and, not being well, he had retired to the
cabin. On being suddenly summoned, however, he
hastened to the deck ; his opinion was asked, but before
he could form it, the noble ship was stranded on the
shoal. Capt. Barker rushed from below, and in his
impetuosity asked Mr. Galvin how he could look on
and see the master run the ship ashore. This charge
was easily refuted.
Signals of distress were immediately made to the
military posts and the ships in harbour. Mr Halli-
burton, whose station was the nearest, instantly manned
his boat and proceeded to the scene of the disaster.
He reached the ship, and stepping on board, ordered
SIR BREXTOX HALLIBURTON. 17
his men to row a short distance off until he was ready
to return, when he would make a signal for them.
Presenting himself to the captain, he inquired what aid
he could render. The captain replied, " The only thing
you can do is to signal to the Dockyard for help." As
promptly as he went, so promptly he returned. Indeed.,
so anxious was he to telegraph the news that he did not
remain on board more than five minutes. Calling to his
boat's crew to come alongside, he embarked and crossed
to the fort. The signal staff instantly repeated the facts
and the danger. The message was acknowledged, and
every thing apparently put in fair train for meeting the
emergency. Boats were manned both at the Dockyard
and the Engineer Yard, while others proceeded from
several of the military posts near at hand. Whilst
these were making their way to the shoal, the crew
of the Tribune threw overboard all the guns except
one which was retained for making signals of distress.
In the hurry and confusion which prevailed, they took
the easiest method of lightening the ship, and un-
happily threw their cannons over to leeward. As the
wind grew stronger, and the tide arose, the ill-fated
vessel surged and beat upon these iron breakers for
many an hour.
While she lay rocking to and fro, the large and heavy
boats sent from the Dockvard were making slow
progress against the storm. One of them reached her,
under the guidance of Mr. Kockmer, who was a boat-
swain at the Xaval Yard. Several of those dispatched
from the Engineer Yard, having two miles less distance
to row, had accomplished their aim a lit'tle earlier.
Beside these, one or two, as already mentioned, had put
18 SIR BREXTON HALLIBURTON.
off from the military posts in sight of the disaster.* In
these were three officers, two of whom, Lieutenants
North and Campbell, belonged to the 7th Royal
Fusileers ; one, Lt. James, belonged to the Royal Nova
Scotia Regiment. While these gentlemen were on
board it grew dark.
Capt. Barker, fretting under the probable disgrace
which awaited him for the stranding of his ship, grew
imperious and dogmatical. It appears that a short time
previous, a brother officer in command of a ship, had
been cashiered for abandoning her when in a similar peril,
though he saved the lives of his crew and passengers ;
and this, it is supposed, influenced Captain Barker
to refuse permission to any one on board to leave the
Tribune. Whether he ^ave the tyrannical order that
none should disembark is now doubtful ; but circum-
stances seem to bear out the tradition. He probably
feared that all might take alarm if any were allowed to
go ; and that his ship and his prospects would alike be
ruined.
Between live and six o'clock P. M. the rudder was
unshipped and lost. At half-past eight, the tide had
so risen that the Tribune began to heave violently, and
in half an hour she was afloat. But no sooner was she
fairly free from the shoals than they discovered seven
feet of water in the hold. She had been beaten in and
shattered by her incessant rolling upon the guns which
had been so injudiciously thrown to the leeward side.
* An officer of the Army, who probably had come by one of these earliest
arrivals, advised Captain Barker to land his men and save their lives. But
he replied, " Ah ! sir, I wish that your coat was blue instead of red," as had
that been the case it would have justified him at the time in taking the
advice ; though had he done so, and the ship floated, the step would have
been fatal to him professionally.
SIR BREXTON HALLIBURTON. 19
Captain Barker who had been very indignant that no
officer of higher naval rank had been sent to his
assistance than the boatswain, now took his advice, and
let go the best bow anchor. This failed, however, to
bring up the drifting ship. Two sails were hoisted, by
which they endeavoured to steer, and the cable was cut.
Bat the ship was unmanageable, and she drifted to the
western shore — a fearful coast of precipitous rock —
against which the surf broke with terrific fury. As a
last hope, they let go the small anchor in thirteen
fathoms water. It held ; and then the mizen was cut
awTay. It was now 10 o'clock, and, at this juncture
Lieutenants North and Campbell left the ship in their
own boat, one of them having jumped out of the port
hole into the water. But Lt. James unhappily could
not be found at the moment. They had not gone
half an hour when the ship gave a sudden roll, and?
then righting again in the twinkling of an eye, sunk
with her masts erect. " Then rose from sea to sky the
wild farewell." Two hundred and forty men, women,
and children floated for a few seconds on the boiling
waves ; some were dashed to pieces against the rocks :
forty reached the two remaining masts that still stood
some feet above the water, and clung with the energy oi
despair to the yards and ropes.
As the night advanced, the main top gave way, and
all who were trusting to it were once more plunged into
the sea. Dunlop, one of the survivors, described their
cries and shrill shrieks as sounding fearfully through the
moan of wind and waves. On the last topmast remained
by morning light only eight of the large number who had
clung to it. The cries of these were heard all through
20 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
the night by watchers on the shore ; but so fearful and
terrific had the storm become that they were either cowed
or paralysed, and made no effort to rescue the unhappy
people.
Nor was it until eleven o'clock of the following morn-
ing, that a noble deed was performed by a mere child,
which, had it been done in a country better known,
would have ranked him among heroes. This boy, who
had scarce attained his 14th year, boldly pushed out in
a little skiff, and braving the howl of winds, and surging
of the ocean, made an effort to save the survivors who
still clung to the mast. Bravely he buffeted the adverse
tempest, as his little boat rose to sight, and then sank
from view. He reached the ship, backed in his boat,
took in the two most exhausted, landed them safely on
shore amid the cheers of his friends, and took them to
his father's house, where they were kindly cared for.
Returning once more he plunged with his frail barque
into the still boisterous sea ; but his exhausted strength
was unequal to the task, and after contending with the
raging elements for some time, he was obliged to give up
the contest, and seek safety for himself on shore. His
humanity, however, struck a chord in other hearts.
Strong men were ashamed any longer to stand and look
idly on ; they manned their larger boats and succeeded
in bringing to shore the remaining six. Thus ended the
question of life ancl death — of two hundred and forty-six,
eleven only lived to tell and retell the tale of this awful
catastrophe.*
*The courageous boy was brought up to town, and placed as a midshipman
on board the Flagship ; but he was so unhappy, and felt so out of his ele-
ment that he could not bear the change, and voluntarily returned to his
former mode of life.
SIR BREXTON HALLIBURTON. 21
It is no wonder that this anecdote made a deep and
permanent impression upon the minds of the community.
It was calculated to excite sympathy and grief in a
colony just springing into life, where the inhabitants
were few, and each event was noted and discussed for a
longer time, and with more earnestness, than when such
scenes are more frequently witnessed, and a new disaster
drives the preceding out. Hence the loss of the Frigate
"LaTribune" has been a landmark in the history of Hali-
fax, and is still referred to by the older inhabitants as a
well known epoch. Such an interest did it awaken in the
mind of the Duke of Kent, that he caused a tombstone
to be «vected in the church-yard of St. Paul's, with the
following epitaph, which may yet be read by the curious :
"This stone, sacred to the memory of Lieutenant B.
James, of his Majesty's Royal Nova Scotia Regiment
who lost his life in the attempt to render assistance to
the ' La Tribune' Frigate, on the 22d of November,
1797, aged 29 years — is placed as a testimony of the
high sense entertained of his spirited and humane exer-
tions on that melancholy occasion, by Lieutenant-General
H. R. H. Prince Edward, commanding the District."
The Duke of Kent highly appreciated the services of
Mr. Halliburton, who was always prepared to receive,
and able to execute his orders ; and when, at one time,
he was promoted to a company in the 81st Regt. the
Prince found means of retaining him in his own regiment.
His Royal Highness gave him a letter to the Commander-
in-Chief, requesting that he might be reappointed to the
Fusileers. While in England, whither he went to join
his new regiment, Captain Halliburton himself effected
an exchange with a brother officer, and in three months
22 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
he was on his way back to Nova Scotia, and took his
place as a Captain in the 7th. Among other services
which he performed, was that of establishing a system
of telegraphic communication between the Provinces
of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. In effecting:
this, it became necessary to cross the Bay of Fundy,
from the North shore to Cane Chicmecto. The means
J. o
of transit was a small flat-bottomed boat ; certainly, a
dangerous enterprize, as those will testify who have ever
sailed upon these waters, or know the strength of the
tide. From the entrance of the Bay to the strait formed
by Partridge Island and Bloinidon, the velocity of the
current increases in proportion as it advances, while
within it the tide rises higher than in any part of
America. From Cape Sable, the flood passes through
the Seal Islands and Bald Tuskets towards the North-
west at the rate of two or three knots ; obstructed by
these islands, its rate is increased to four or five, then
taking the course of the shore, it flows past Cape St.
Mary's, and then towards Brier Island. As the Bay
becomes narrower, this vast body of water rushes for-
ward with fearful rapidity, and fills the Basin of Minas
and Chignecto Channel with tremendous impetuosity.
In the latter place, it must attain the speed of seven
miles per hour, and in the spring tides rises as high as
seventy feet.* On these uncertain and treacherous waters
he launched in a frail and easily overturned boat. He
safely, however, reached the Cape on which a few High-
landers resided, though at some distance from the shore.
As he did not find his party he proposed to return im-
mediately by the same way as he came ; and having been
informed that the navigation was dangerous, he intended
* Haliburton's Hist, of Nova Scotia.
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 23
to give the Cape a wide berth ; but as he was stepping
into the boat, in the early dawn of a May morning, one
of the settlers, and it is said, almost the only one who
could speak English, came to the shore, and warned
him that his safety lay in keeping as close to the shore
as possible, or the skiff would be overwhelmed by the
furious tide. This was the very opposite of his purpose,
and thus, in all human probability he was saved from a
premature death. While on this telegraphic service,
he suowsted to General Smith, at that time Quarter
Master General in Nova Scotia, that system of tele-
graphing which was subsequently adopted and for a long
time used, though whether entirely from his suggestion
or not cannot be said. Amongst the families with whom
he most intimately mingled was that of a loyalist, who,
like his own father, had been obliged to seek refuge in this
colony. This was the lit. llev. Charles Inglis, already
mentioned, who for many years had been Rector of Tri-
nity Church, New York, and who, during the Revolu-
tionary Wars, had not only witnessed, but himself been
a prominent actor in some strange scenes. During a
time of srreat excitement in New York the church war-
dens requested him to omit the prayers for the King and
Royal Family ; but he told them that if they thought
the times too disturbed to open the church, they had the
power to close it, but if the church was opened, and he
performed the duty, he would do it according to the
prescribed form. Public service was held at the appoint-
ed time, and a party of soldiers were sent to the church
during the time of divine service, with fixed bayonets,
to intimidate him. Although he saw them in the church,
and knew their purpose, he read on as usual the collects
24 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
for the King and the Royal Family. What the pre-
cise orders of this band of soldiers were, it is impossi-
ble now to tell. If they were told to prevent his
uttering these petitions at all hazards, they failed in.
the discharge of their duty ; for they permitted the
courageous man to go on in the performance of what he
believed a conscientious obligation. He was a subject
of the king, and for the king he prayed.
The families had much in common — similar send*
ments, similar circumstances, and similar social training.
It was not strange that with this family Capt. Hallibur-
ton should form a matrimonial alliance. In 1799 he
married Margaret, the Bishop's eldest daughter. He
went with his bride to live in Hollis street, and the fol-
lowing year his eldest daughter, now deceased, was born.
After his marriage, he continued for various reasons but
a short time in the Army. At the peace of Amiens he
determined to resume his study of the Law, and resigned
his commission ; his " friend and patron," the Duke of
Kent, had left Halifax on the 30th of July, 1800.
Thus ends his military history. Nor did he in old age
forget his early profession, nor the friends of his youth,
as may be seen from the following lines taken from a
poem written by him when fourscore years of age, and
printed for circulation among his private friends : —
" Daughter of Edward ! such the warm desire
Of one who knew and loved thy Royal Sire !
What though his martial discipline was stern,
Himself submitted to each rule in turn.
But, when from his stern duties he sought rest,
No kinder heart e'er beat in human breast :
No tale of woe was poured in Edward's ear,
But ever found a ready listener there :
Witness, when down his manly cheek the tear
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 25
Flowed freely, Thomas, on thy mournful bier ;
Witness, when that sad catalogue of grief,
Which overpowered thee, Goldsmith, sought relief —
How readily he did relief extend,
And to thy dying hour remain thy friend.
Long were the tale to tell of all the good,
Which from that royal hand so freely flowed.
Tho' fourscore years have cooled my youthful blood.
Thanks to the gracious Giver of all good,
I still, in age, His mercies can enjoy, —
Still in His service would my hours employ ;
With friends, and family, and with plenty blest,
And waiting calmly, till I sink to rest
In those kind arms, where sinners seek repose,
When all life's anxious cares in death shall close.
Oft on my early years does memory dwell,
Reminding me of one I loved so well :
Thy faults, thy virtues, rising to my mind,
Nor to the one, nor to the other, blind ;
I brinjy this tribute from the shrine of truth.
To thee, the friend and patron of my youth 1"
3
CHAPTER II.
Halifax has been in existence but little more tiian a
hundred years. During that period of time it has
undergone a great change ; it has risen from a small and
dependent settlement, to the size and rank of a city of
no mean importance. It has developed from a rude
village, defended by palisades and block-houses, into a
well-planned town, adorned with many public and
private structures of admirable design and excellent
workmanship, and protected from assault by numerous
towers and forts. It has expanded from the contracted
encampment of a few thousand settlers, governed by
laws imposed upon them from abroad, and sustained
by provisions bestowed as a gratuity, into a city
spreading over a wide area, containing a large and
intelligent population, framing its own code of regula-
tions ; and many of its inhabitants possessing much
wealth, and conducting commercial business with almost
every part of the world. In some respects the progress
has been slow and inconsiderable, in others, rapid and
great. Compared with many cities in the Western
States of America the capital of Nova Scotia may boast
of its antiquity, but should be silent on the subject of
its growth. Within the compass of ten or twenty
vears from the felling of the first tree on a chosen
site, towns have sprung up in the forests of the corn-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 21
growing country of the far west, and on the borders
of the great lakes, which have quickly rivalled and
then surpassed in extent, in magnificence, in riches, and
in traffic the old cities of the Union, and the leading
cities of the British North American Colonies.
Many circumstances have contributed to this magic
change. An enormous population, growing daily by
natural increase, and continually augmented by almost
ceaseless streams of immigration — flowing chiefly from
Ireland and Germany — have crowded the sea-ports,
towns and villages of the Eastern States, and constantly
pressed out the surplus from their confines. Those
who have thus been driven awav from overthronred
places, being partly natives and partly immigrants,
have combined the necessary elements of knowledge of
the country, and a willingness to labor, and so have
soon formed homes in the wilderness. The soil has
speedily repaid them for their venture and their toil,
and by their skill and perseverance its riches have
transformed themselves into dwellings, warehouses, and
factories.
The rise and progress of the metropolis of the small
Province of Nova Scotia, has been as nothing compared
with these. It has possessed certain advantages which
ought to have resulted in a marked material progress.
It is situated most favourably for expansion ; having an
extensive area for building, with miles of water lots for
wharves and docks, surrounding it ; and thus is fitted for
the conduct of an unlimited business with the interior
of a mighty continent, a large portion of which belongs
to the same countrv as the Province itself, acknowledges
the same sovereign as its Head, the same common law as
28 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
its rule, and is identified with it in all its great
interests. With a harbour sufficiently capacious for the
navies of the world, accessible at all seasons of the year,
and shut in from the storms that may rage in the
Atlantic by an island several miles in length, lying
across its mouth ; nearer to the British isles than any
other possession of the crown in America, except New-
foundland ; and connected with New Brunswick and
the Canadas by a broad isthmus for its highway, Halifax
enjoys some at least of those inherent advantages which
contribute towards the formation of large and influential
cities in a new country. A result equal to these
advantages, however, has not been attained : it has
reached no such anibitious summit as to its extent or its
dignity.
The confusion which has existed in the minds of the
inhabitants of Great Britain and Ireland, in reference to
the Province of Nova Scotia, by their commingling it
with Canada ; the general impression — early made and
difficult to efface — that the climate is severe, and the
soil sterile ; the culpable neglect of those whose duty it
was to make efforts for creating a flow of immigration,
such as imparting information to those in the old
world, and providing for such instruction to intending
purchasers and settlers of land on the moment of their
arrival, as would make their design easy of accomplish-
ment ; the too great want of self-dependence on the
part of Halifax from its very inception ; its too constant
reliance upon the mother country for support of every
kind ; the fact of its being looked upon by the world
simply as a garrison town, and a station for the West
Indian fleet : these causes, combined with the effect
SIR BREN'TON HALLIBURTON. 29
produced by the presence and expenditure of a large
army and navy, who kept up a circulation of money
just sufficient to support a limited business, and unhap-
pily just sufficient also to prevent a spirit of enterprise,
have no doubt exercised a great influence in retarding
the growth of the city.
Into a proof of these statements it is not my intention
to enter. But having freely admitted that in comparison
with some cities and in view of the advantageous posi-
tion which Halifax geographically holds, it has not
advanced with equal pace, it will be my purpose, in this
chapter, to show that the town has made substantial
progress — perhaps slow, but certainly sure.
That I may show of what material the community
was formed, into which the subject of this memoir was
thrown, and what were the influences which moulded it,
I shall attempt to draw a picture of Halifax as it was
during the first fifty years of its existence, — that is, from
its settlement under the Honorable Edward Cornwallis.
A. D. 1749, until A. D. 1800. This period will com-
prise nearly half of its history, and enable the reader
who is familiar with the present aspect and affairs of the
city, to draw a contrast for himself between Halifax as
it then was and as it is to-day. So marked, indeed, is
the change wrought in the town, both material and
moral, in the size, in the public buildings, the private
dwellings, the ships, the warehouses, the streets, the
vehicles, the equipages, the furniture, the manners, the
customs, the dress, the conversation, the business, and
the laws, that if one of the old habitues of the town in
those early days could return, he would become bcwil-
30 sir brenton Halliburton.
dered with the new state of society and the altered
scenes, and be scarce able to recognize the neighborhood
in which once he lived. A knowledge of the real ele-
ments of daily life, the social customs, the domestic
habits, and the material stage on which different parts
in the drama were played, will give us a clearer insight
into the history of the past, than a bare acquaintance
with the dates of certain events, and the precise periods
of the occurrence of political changes. While these
epochs form the basis of all history, and the results ari-
sing from them for good or evil to a community, consti-
tute the true ground-work for philosophical enquiry,
argument, and conclusion, they do not afford the neces-
sary matter for becoming accurately acquainted with the
real condition of society in its personal relations and in
the elements most influential in creating and moulding
thought and habits. A man who would rightly estimate
the progress of Halifax should certainly be informed as
to its condition in all those particulars named above :
they are essential to his forming a correct judgment.
A walk through Granville street, Hollis street, Bar-
rington, Brunswick, or Water streets, as they now are,
would astonish a townsman of the times of Governors
Lawrence, Hopson, and Belcher. He would look in
rain for the house in which the representative of royalty
held his mimic court, the old balconied market, in
which he was wont to spend his afternoon of a sunny day
in snrin^, or of a rainy day in summer, and those re-
nowned hotels, at which gathered the officers of the
army and navy, so many of them in those stirring times
on field and flood distinguished by their valor and by
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. SI
their noble descent, where Loudon and Colville, where
Amherst and Wolfe dined and supped. These have
long since fallen to decay and been replaced by other
and better buildings.
In those davs of old, the limits of the town were nar-
row. At first, but not for long, the harbor on the east,
Salter street on the south, Jacob street on the north,
and the citadel on the west, were the original bounda-
ries ; the whole being enclosed with a strong palisade of
pickets, with block houses, or forts, built of hewn logs,
placed at intervals along the different lines.* When
the Indians, against whose midnight attacks it was found
necessary to erect these barricades, forbore, by means of
treaties and diminishing numbers, to assault the town,
these limits were not so strictly observed, and the pali-
sades were allowed to fall gradually into decay or to be
removed. They appear, however, to have been still
standing in 1760, inasmuch as a record remains of the
ceremonial of proclaiming King George III., in the
month of December, which states that it was performed,
among other places, at the north and south gates. All
immediately outside of these limits was considered as
forming the suburbs of the town. The Dockyard,
which was first established in 1758, extended and im-
proved in 1769, and its present wall built, as the
inscription over the gate informs the passing public, in
1770, was then considered as an establishment quite
unconnected with, and at some distance from, Halifax
* I may say, once for all, that I am indebted to a valuable and most inter-
esting pamphlet, published by T. B. Akins, Esq., for a very great part of
the information contained in this sketch, especially in reference to the streets
and public buildings. Much of the other matter has boon gained from vari-
ous sources, such as papers, almanacks, and letters. Bat without the aid of
the above-named pamphlet, the sketch could not have been drawn
•ifv SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
proper. Certain sailors, for instance, who met with a
serious accident on board of one of his Majesty's ships,
are spoken of in the newspapers of the day as "being
brought up to the town from the Naval Yard."
The small German settlement, originally composed of
some fifteen families of Protestant Germans from the
Palatinate, who preferred remaining in Halifax to ac-
companying their fellow emigrants to Merliguesh Bay,
the present Lunenburg, had fixed their residence in the
north suburbs, which had been laid out bv the Govern-
ment Surveyor and Engineer. So completely detached
was this little settlement from the town, both by position
and nationality, that a place of worship was erected in
1761 for the use of the German families, and a town lot,
on which originally stood one of the block houses,
granted as the site for the parsonage of the German
pastor. Two or three years afterwards the inhabitants
applied to the Governor and Council to officially name
their town Gottingen ; the request was acceeded to ; but
though used for a few years as the designation of the
whole district, it eventuallv was confined to one of the
streets running through it ; which, within the memory
of persons living but a few years ago, had only one
house on its long line. In true devotion to the memory
of fatherland, Brunswick was applied to another street,
which early became the main thoroughfare, and most
thickly built portion of this suburb, where some of the
old houses with single stories and roofs of double pitch,
still stand. The remaining street, beside that which ran
along the water's edge, seems to have been named in
honor of an early settler, whose death and burial, which
occurred in 1779, is mentioned as having taken place in
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 33
this separated district. " On Friday last, died L. Lock-
man, Esq., 73, and his remains are (sic) on Thursday
evening last interred in the German church at Gottingen*
near this town." There was a long space between this
German town and Halifax, and between the Dockyard
and Halifax, so that the act of passing from either one of
these to the town proper, was viewed as quite a matter
of business. The intermediate road lay between fields,
gardens, trees, and a few isolated houses, with their
gables towards the streets, if going from the town to
Gottingen ; or between these on the one side and the
water on the other, if going to the Naval Yard.
The streets of the town continued for a long time in a
very rough condition, and not unfrequently so filled with
stumps of trees and jutting rocks, as to render the pas-
sage of carts and carriages an intricate and dangerous
task. Though this was the case, there were indications
of progress connected with these highways, for as early
as 1768 to 1777 the Government went to the expense of
lighting the town by placing lamp-posts at all the prin-
cipal corners. An irregular street ran along the water
side, following the windings of the shore ; on the upper
or town side were built shops and stores, while the
owners of the water-lots built wharves and slips. Here
was transacted the mercantile business ; the name, how-
ever, was not Water street, as now, but all the adver-
tisements mentioned the various sales as taking place on
" the Beach." This road, as it may be termed, begin-
ning at the Dockyard, ran in a southerly direction along
the water side, through the Royal Engineer Yard, until it
reached Point Pleasant, the site first chosen by Governor
Cornwallis on which to build the town, but abandoned
34 SIR BREXTOX HALLIBURTON.
in consequence of the shoal water in its immediate front.
Traces of this way are even yet discernible in spots a
little to the north and south of Steele's Pond. It early
became a favorite walk for ladies and gentlemen, who
had leisure to spend the afternoon in seeking health or
amusement, and was kept in such excellent condition
that Governor Fanning found it not inconvenient to
make his residence in a house just below the '*' Tower.''
Another road, leading to the northern suburbs, also
became a fashionable resort. This was made under the
auspices of the Governor, Sir Andrew Snape Hammond,
and formed part of the highway to Windsor. The fact
of his residing on the road, in a house erected on the
western boundary of the Governor's Farm, (near the
*/ v.
head of the present road leading from the Richmond
Railway station,) tended greatly towards rendering it a
favorite walk. Near his Excellency's dwelling stood
another, which became famed for breakfasts and suppers
during the summer season. Not only did gentlemen
walk out in the afternoon and order an early dinner, but
it was a common, and one of the most popular modes of
spending a holiday, for ladies and gentlemen to form a
party, and start early in the morning that they might
breakfast, dine, and sup, at one or other of the " tea-
houses," as they were called, which were kept in various
parts of the peninsula.
For lack of other amusements, a very rational and
useful one was early substituted : while it provided
recreation, it was a practical and substantial benefit.
Public gardens were established and largely patronized.
Not far distant from the site of the present Horticultural
Society's Garden, and hard by the Artillery Park, was
SIR BREXT0N HALLIBURTON. 35
one containing a pavilion, in which grew a great variety
of fruit trees and shrubs. Another was situated near
the old burial-ground of St. Paul's or the English
churchyard, as it was sometimes termed ; while a third
was kept by a provincial gardener, to whom the House
of Assembly voted a salary. If the romantic pictures
drawn by De Mont and Pontrincourt of the fertility of
•> 'mi
the soil and genial nature of the climate — who wrote of
grapes growing on the banks of rivers, and dining in the
cornfields under the warm rays of the sun in the month
of January — were found bv the horticulturists to be
fiction rather than fact, they, at least, contributed to the
welfare of the community, and as they cultivated their
gardens, also cultivated a taste for a useful occupation in
a young settlement.
Within the town, the Parade was a srreat land-mark,
and although no buildings were erected upon it, save the
Artillery Barrack, the common phraseology of the day,
when speaking of a shop or dwelling situated at either
side of it, was that such were " on the Parade." The
names of the various streets were seldom used for many
years, and the habit of designating a place of business or
a private residence by its proximity to well-known pub-
lic places, almost entirely obtained.
Immediately around the town were numerous fields,
gardens and swamps. On the southern side of Spring
Garden Road, leading to the North- West Arm, were pas-
ture lands and meadows, which in the spring formed good
shooting ground, where many a plover and snipe were
bagged; and in the autumn, filling by the rain, became
a sheet of water, which, a little later, turned into skating
ponds for the boys. The Common was likewise a
36 SIR B REN TON HALLIBURTON.
marshy place, to which birds and sportsmen betook
themselves in the season ; and as here and there were
spots on which alder bushes and low shrubs grew, i^
was not unusual for wood-cock to find a cover. The
Eastern Shore of the North-West Arm was owned by
a few individuals, who took but little interest in their
property, and deemed it an unprofitable speculation to
attempt converting the many acres of which for trifling-
sums they became possessed, into farms. Towards the
mouth of these beautiful waters, and about midway be-
tween it and their head, were several residences, around
which the land was cultivated, but the remainder stood
for a long period of time as it stood when the first fleet
arrived in the bav.
On either side of many of the streets the trees had
been permitted to stand, or, if removed, others were
planted in their place. This was particularly the case
in the southern portion of the town, adding very much
to its appearance, when seen from the water, or looked
upon from the citadel, and affording comfort to the in-
abitants, by sheltering them from the Sun in summer,
and breaking the force of the winds in autumn. Here I
cannot forbear quoting the impression made upon, a re-
fugee from Kennebec, the Reverend Jacob Bailey, who
arrived in Halifax in the summer of 1779. and was
kindly taken care of by Dr. Breynton, the Rector of St.
Paul's. " The house," says Mr. Bailey in his journal,
"which the Doctor had procured, belonged to Mr.
Justice Wenman , keeper of the Orphan house, and stood
on the east side of Pleasant street, which runs straight
from the Grand Parade, near the church, to the water,
and is almost a mile in length. This is the most ele-
SIR BKENTON HALLIBURTON. 37
gant street in the town, and is much frequented by
gentlemen and ladies for an evening walk in fine weather
After tea we perceive one gay company after another,
in perpetual succession, dressed in their finest apparel,
which affords a fine and cheerful appearance. At the
gate we have an extensive prospect of the harbor and
the adjacent ocean, which is closed by the southern hori-
zon, and can discover everv sail cominsf from the west-
ward the moment it proceeds round Chebucto Head.
To the northward, the street extends, adorned with the
Grand Provo, Assembly House, Church, and private
buildings, to a vast distance, and is limited by a cross
street, three quarters of a mile from hence. To the
west arise beautiful ranges of green fields, interspersed
with several remarkable structures, as Fort Massey, the
Governor's Summer House, the Work House: and be-
yond them the Citadel Hill, with all its fortifications
and warlike apparatus, towers aloft in majestic grandeur,
and overlooks both the town and the adjacent country.
We enter through a spacious gate into a decent yard,
with an avenue to the house, bounded on each side bv a
little grove of English hawthorns, in this season, in all
their blooming glory. The house consisted of a con*
venient kitchen, a tight cellar, a chamber, and an elegant
parlor, papered, and containing two closets. Before the
door was a little porch with a seat. From the two
eastern windows we had a most charming prospect of
Mr. Newman's garden, in which were planted such a
profusion of aviIIows, hawthorns, and fruit trees of
various kinds, that they formed a perfect wilderness,
extremely pleasant to the sight and grateful to the smell.
And indeed, when we looked out of these windows, we
38 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
rather fancied ourselves in the midst of a wooded
country than in the midst of a populous town." Such
were the impressions made upon the mind of this loyal-
ist, who had reached Halifax under the most adverse
circumstances, and though his idea of the vast extent of
the town, and the grandeur of the edifices, provokes a
smile, it conveys to us a picture of what he actually saw.
The public buildings were numerous, as might be
expected in a town commenced and chiefly sustained by
Government. Amongst the first erected, besides those
alluded to, were the churches — St. Paul's, for the
United Church of England and Ireland ; St. Matthew's
for the Protestant Dissenting congregation. The site
for St. Paul's was selected immediately after the arrival
of the first settlers, and as there was not a sufficient
number of skilled artisans anions; them to undertake so
large a work, orders were dispatched to Boston for the
frame and materials necessary to a building of the pro-
posed size. In the course of a short time these were
brought to Halifax, and the erection of St. Paul's pro-
ceeded forthwith. On the 2d September, 1750, the
sacred structure was opened for public worship, and
though not completely finished, was viewed with great
admiration by the town. The most flourishing accounts
as to its size, appearance, and substantial workmanship,
were sent to England by those most interested in it.
The population consisting for the most part of members
or adherents of the Church of England, there was no
jealousy excited when the House of Assembly, a few
years afterward, voted a sum of £1200 sterling towards
finishing the Parish church, and the Members joined in a
subscription towards a fund for the purchase of an organ;
SIR BREXTON HALLIBURTON. 39
indeed it was the custom, during the greater part of the
half-century, for the House of Assembly, in its official
capacity, annually to attend divine service in St. Paul's,
and hear a sermon from one of the clergy. The organ
was not purchased at once, but while waiting for either
an increase to the sum collected, or for some good oppor-
tunity to send to England for it, a Spanish ship, on her
way to South America, was brought into harbor as a
prize. On board, amongst many other valuable articles,
was an organ, with a solid mahogany frame, of plain, but
chaste design, on its way to a Roman Catholic chapel.
The organ was sold, and the churchwardens of St. Paul's
became its purchasers. The instrument was many years
after replaced by another, but the case still stands un *
changed.
Owing to many circumstances, but chiefly to the natu-
ral ascendancy of the Established Church, St. Paul's
became and continued for fifty years to be the centre of
much of the history of Halifax. Not only did the
House of Assembly make it their yearly resort -with
much ceremonial, but all the magnates of the land, and
those distinguished military and naval men, who so often
were their guests, were wont to assemble within its walls
on different state occasions. It was once the scene of a
somewhat strange but important transaction between the
native Indian tribe and the new possessors of the land.
In a political point of view it was a matter of much
moment, occurring at a time when the Micmacs were
really formidable foes, difficult as it may be for us who
are acquainted with their miserable remnant, to imagine
them ever to have been such. They had resolved to
b* at peace with England, and in order to testify their
40 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
sincerity, they determined to invest their act of enter*
ing into treaty, with the sanctity of religion. For this
purpose they met in Halifax, and after due arrange-
ment, they marched up in a body to St. Paul's, in order
that they might publicly proclaim before God and man,
their firm resolve to live and die as British subjects.
The representative of the Sovereign was in his accus-
tomed place, the commanding officers of the army and
fleet were present, the members of Government and the
principal gentlemen of the town surrounded them, and
the inhabitants, of all ranks and ages crowded the
church. At the hour appointed for divine service, the
Indians rose from their seats and sung an anthem in
their own wild and plaintive strains. When the low
wail of the chant had died away, an influential chief
stepped forward, and as the representative of that once
dreaded people, he knelt down, and in the Micmac
dialect, prayed for a blessing on his Majesty King
George III., and for prosperity to his Majesty's Pro-
vine*. This prayer concluded, he arose, and Rev. Mr*
Wood, who with praiseworthy zeal had mastered their
language, interpreted it to the Governor in the hearing
of all the congregation. The solemn contract thus made
in the house of God, was then officially acknowledged
by his Excellency turning and bowing to the whole tribe
of Indians. Divine service, in English, then commen-
ced, and at its conclusion, the Indians closed the wor-
ship by again singing in their own language another
anthem.
Upon the death of any leading personage, whether
civil, military, or naval, St. Paul's became the scene on
which great interest was centred, for the funeral obse-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 41
f^uies of such were conducted with great pomp and cere-
monial. When that popular and respected man, Governor
Lawrence died, the whole town assembled to attend his
funeral, and witness the sepulture in the vault beneath
the church ; and when, still later, one of his successors,
Governor Parr died, the church was once more thronged
to witness the burial of the chief personage in the town.
During those troublous times which elapsed between the
death of these men in high places, St. Paul's was fre-
quently the centre of attraction for all the populace.
Many an able officer of the army and navy was brought
to Halifax to die of his wounds, or already killed, to be
interred with the burial-rites of the Church. Their
names and heroic deeds are graven with the sculptor's
chisel on their tomb-stones. Of several, the record of
their lives and actions may be read on the mural tablets
which adorn the walls of the sacred edifice ; of others,
there remain memorials in the escutcheons which hansr
upon the pilasters. One of these was placed in the gallery
as the temporary remembrancer of the Baron de Seiltz,
the last of his line, who, according to an ancient feudal
custom of Germany, when the honors and titles of a
house become extinct, was buried with all his parapher-
nalia, in full uniform, and with his weapons beside him.
Presiding over the parish and church for well nigh forty
years, was a man of ability, indomitable energy, and the
most kindly, generous heart. This was the venerable
Dr. Breynton, to whom Halifax was most deeply
indebted, not only for the anxious care with which he
attended to his charge in spiritual things, but for his
wisdom, prudence, and humanity during the trying
scenes incident upon the American Revolution, when the
4
42 SIR BREMTON HALLIBURTON,
town was taxed to its utmost power by the influx of the
poor and distressed who found refuge among its loyal
people.
In December of the year 1749, a lot was granted by
Governor Cornwallis for the site of a church to the
" Protestant Dissenting Congregation." The frame of
the building was probably imported from Boston for the
same reasons as that of St. Paul's. Like the latter, it
was soon erected, and when finished, was called " Ma-
ther church |" no doubt, in compliment to the distin-
guished divine, Cotton Mather; for a large proportion
of the congregation were originally composed of settlers
from New England. The name " Saint Matthew,"
appears to be a corruption of the word Mather, and to
have been insensibly introduced : the Scotch prefixing
the title Saint, according to the custom which has pre-
vailed from time immemorial in the old country. The
name of the first minister was Aaron Cleaveland, as
appears from inscriptions in the books of the congrega-
tional library ; but the early church records were
destroyed by a fire, and the members of the church are
thus left without the information which now would be
full of interest.
In the middle of the square now occupied by the
Province Building, stood the first Government House,
which was put up immediately upon the town being laid
out. Like the churches, so the frame and materials of
this were brought from Boston ; but the work of com-
pleting it was far sooner effected ; for in the autumn the
Governor took up his residence in it, and on the 14th of
October he held a Council there. It is described " as a
low building of one story, surrounded by hogsheads of
§IR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 43
gravel and sand, on which small pieces of ordnance were
mounted for its defence." As the house was small and
inconvenient, it was removed by Governor Lawrence
eight years after, who replaced it by a more spacious
and convenient residence ; and this continued to be the
Government House until the administration of that able
man, Sir George Prevost, who caused it to be taken
away, and the present noble building erected in its stead,
while at the same time he settled on a new site for
Government House, and not long afterward that now in
use was built.
The House of Assembly, first convened by Governor
Lawrence, and its business commenced by an opening
speech on the 2d October, 1758, held its sittings for
some time in a house erected at a very early period,
and now used and known as the " Halifax Grammar
School." As public property, this was one of the best
known houses in Halifax, for it did duty for various
official bodies, being at one time used as a Court House,
at another, as a Guard House. Its position becoming
familiar to the inhabitants in consequence of the various
uses to which it was put, it was one of the grand land-
marks or sign-posts by which inquirers were directed in
their search for shops or dwellings.
One of the most noted buildings was the old Market
House, which occupied the site of the present Police
Establishment. A piazza or balcony ran along its front,
and here gentlemen of all professions and business, offi-
cials and strangers, loiterers and newsmongers, were
accustomed to assemble, for an hour or two of the day,
to promenade, to hear and tell the news, chiefly to talk
over the last information received from England. The
44 SIR BEENTON HALLIBURTON.
old French war, the American Revolution, and the great
Revolution of '89, furnished topics of discussion always
new and always stirring, and as may be gathered alike
from papers, letters, and journals, these were the sub-
jects which most occupied the thoughts and absorbed
the conversation of those who thought and talked on any
thing beyond their personal wants.
Next in importance came the famous hotels ; and first
in order ranked " The Great Pontac." This was a
large building of three stories in height, and in its zenith
kept by a noted host, whose name was Willis. A creek
ran up from the harbor close to the hotel, and as there
were neither houses nor stores on the lower side of the
irregular and rough street which skirted the beach, a fine
view of the harbor was seen from the windows. Here
were held, on a grand scale, the assemblies, balls, and all
species of public entertainment. At several different
periods of time, varying in length, the town was throng-
ed with officers of the army and navy. The loyal
colonists treated them with great hospitality, and they,
in turn, marked their appreciation of the attention by
entertaining them again with the most sumptuous din-
gers and expensive suppers. Such were the frequency
and extent of these hospitalities, that the host of the
" Great Pontac" was glad to receive assistance in his
culinary department, from the cooks of the ships of war,
and in his waiting department, from the officers' ser-
vants. The smoking dishes were brought in boats,
rowed by strong crews, while other sailors, dressed in
white, stood ranged along the creek to receive the cooked
meats, and carry them with all speed to the great
dining room. All through the summer season of manv
SIR BEENTON HALLIBURTON. 45
years there was no busier scene in Halifax than the
neighborhood of this once famous hotel. The constant
presence of a large number of the army and navy,
created this gaiety : and no sooner had one body of
troops, and one portion of the fleet, received and return-
ed hospitalities, than others arrived, and the same series
of expensive receptions and returns were passed through
a^ain.
Some eight years after the settlement was commenced,
Lord Howe arrived at Halifax with a fleet and armv, on
their way to make an attack on Louisburg. While his
fleet rode at anchor in the harbor, Lord Loudon joined
him, having under his command six thousand Provin-
cial soldiers from New York. The attempt proving un-
successful, some of the ships of war and some of the
transports returned to Halifax for winter quarters, while
the others sailed for England. Scarcely had the town
settled into repose, when, early in the following spring,
General Amherst arrived, with not less than twelve
thousand men, partly provincials, enlisted in the New
England States, and partly regulars, and in a few days
more, the signal was made for the fleet under Admiral
Boscawen. The whole armament, consisting of one hun-
dred and fifty-seven sail, and fourteen thousand men,
did not leave Halifax until near the end of the month of
May. Amongst those who had enjoyed the hospitable
attentions of the town and sailed for the siege, was that
illustrious man, General Wolfe. Of him and General
Amherst, Lieutenant Green, who was present at the cap-
ture of Louisburg, and was afterward the first Sheriff of
Halifax, was wont to relate the anecdote so creditable to
the bravery of Wolfe, and yet more creditable to the
46 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
humanity of Amherst : " Give me fifteen hundred men,
General," said Wolfe, " and I will take the place in two
weeks, with the loss of not over three hundred."
" Thank you, sir," was the reply, " I will take it in six
weeks, without the loss of one."
Upon the termination of this spirited and successful
assault upon the stronghold of the French, the fleet and
army returned to Halifax, and remained for some time,
in order to refit. But ^reat as the stir which was made
by this enormous inundation of strangers upon the town,
much as it was enriched by the rapidly obtained and as
rapidly spent spoils taken from the captured city, and
gay as it was rendered by the triumphant victors, this
was but one of many such stirring epochs through which
Halifax was destined to pass, nor always for its good,
either in a social or business aspect. In the very next
year, General Wolfe arrived with another powerful fleet
and army. This time he was on his way to the siege of
Quebec. Though he returned not, having fallen in the
hour of victory on the plains of Abraham, the ships and
troops returned to their rendezvous, and from this date
the harbor was constantly visited, for four years, by the
squadrons commanded by Lord Colville and by cruisers,
coming into port for orders and supplies. A lull, both
in the business and gaieties of the town, now set in,
which continued almost unbroken, until the breaking
out of that spirit which resulted in the American Revo-
tion. Then once more the old and familiar customs
revived, consequent upon the return of a large military
and naval force. The presence of so many men, a large
number of whom were possessed of ample means, and
freely spent them, together with the frequent distribution
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 47
■
of prize-money, paid in specie, by the Halifax depart-
ment of the Commissariat, tended greatly towards the
promotion of that lavish expenditure and those frequent
entertainments which were less conducive to the perma-
nent well-being of the town, than to the transient plea-
sure of its inhabitants. But all this supported the
" Great Pontac," and rendered it so noted an hotel.
Such, indeed, was its fame, that no doubt, in order to
draw custom, the conductor of a new and rival establish-
ment copied the charmed name, yet presuming not to
put it on a par, he called it the " Little Pontac." Be-
side these were two others, both situated between the
Dockyard and the town ; the one was the " Crown
Coffee House," in those days frequented chiefly by
country people ; the other, the il Jerusalem Coffee
House," known even in modern times, but at first a sort
of halfway-house, between the Dockyard and Market,
whereat wearied gentlemen were supposed to refresh
themselves on the long walk between these two points.
In the middle of the enclosure now occupied by Govern-
ment House, with its adjacent grounds, there stood a
wooden building which was used as a residence for the
Field Officers, and occasionally devoted to other military
purposes ; while a little further north, on the site of the
u Freemason's Flail," was another ordinary wooden
structure, occupied at first by French prisoners brought
from Annapolis, and afterward by the Main Guard,
during the period of the Revolutionary war. These,
and the buildings erected at the expense of Government
at the Royal Engineer Yard, the Ordnance Yard, and
the King's Wharf, and the Jail House, were the most
noted for public purposes.
48 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
The private dwellings were usually small, covering a
very limited area, and seldom more than one story in
height, finished above with an attic. Although the
town was laid out in squares, each containing sixteen
lots, of forty feet in width and sixty feet in depth, each
individual obtained, if he could, except in the central
part, more lots than one. Thus the residences of many
were quite detached, and ample scope afforded for gar-
dens, which were assiduously cultivated by the proprie-
tors. Great value was set upon these pieces of ground,
for necessity laid it upon each one to be his own market
gardener, notwithstanding the existence of the public
gardens ; and being deprived of many other luxuries
which could be obtained in older countries, the inhabi-
tants diligently cultivated vegetables and fruit-trees, in
order that they might have some variety on their tables.
Not a few planted trees before their doors, under the
shade of which the dairy cow loved to ruminate during
the hot days of summer, and to lie down at night, to the
inconvenience and danger of the pedestrian.
The furniture in the dwellings of those who possessed
means, was of a far more substantial character than that
now used by persons of the same class, and was consi-
derably more expensive. The householder, however^
was content with a far less quantity than is deemed
necessary at the present day. It was usually majie of a
mahogany wood, of a rich, dark color ; the dining-room
table was plain, but massive, supported by heavy legs,
often ornamented at the feet with the carved resem-
blance of a lion's claw ; the side-board was high, rather
narrow and inelegant ; the secretary, or covered writing
desk, was hound with numberless brass plates at the
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 49
edges, coiners, and sides ; the cellaret, standing in the
corner, which held the wines and liquors brought up
from the cellar for the day's consumption, was also
bound elaborately with plates of burnished brass ; the
chairs cumbrous, straight-backed, with their cushions
covered with black horse-hair cloth, were as uncomfort-
able as they were heavy ; the sofa, though not common,
was unadorned but roomy ; the great arm-chair deserved
its title, for it was wide enough and deep enough to
contain not only the master of the household, but, if he
pleased, several of his children beside. These for the
most part comprised the furniture of the dining-rooms
of the upper classes. That contained in the bed-room
was built of the same wood, and of a corresponding
style. The bedsteads were those still known as four-
posted, invariably curtained, and with a canopy over-
head, not only shutting out air, but involving serious
expense and labour to the matron, as at the approach of
winter and summer the curtains were always changed.
The chests of drawers and the ladies' wardrobes were
covered with the ubiquitous brazen plates, and being-
kept bright, gave the room an air of comfort and clean-
liness. In almost every hall stood a clock, encased by
a frame of great size ; a custom introduced by the Ger-
mans, from whose native land they seem to have been
imported in great numbers. The mistress of such an
establishment had no sinecure, in keeping such furniture
in order ; and it was not an unfounded complaint which
they preferred, that the time of one servant was wholly
engrossed with the daily routine of burnishing the metal
on the furniture and doors, and polishing the wood.
For common use, rough tables were made by the me-
50 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
chanics of the town ; and chairs, with rush-bottomed
seats, were manufactured in an old establishment in Hol-
lis street, conducted by one of the early settlers. It was
necessary, however, to speak some months before the
chairs were actually needed ; and if the good man hap-
pened to be out of rushes, the intending purchaser was
obliged to wait until the rushes grew, were cut down,
and dried.
The kitchen department, in those early times, was of
the greatest importance. The day's labor began at early
morning with the often unsuccessful attempt to produce
fire from flint and steel ; baking and brewing, as well as
ordinary cooking, were, for the most part, attended to at
home, and all was done, for many years, at the open
hearth, on which hard wood was burned as fuel. For
twenty years the purchase of wood took place without
any special measurement ; but as it then began to grow
more scarce, cord-word surveyors were appointed by
Government, to protect alike the buyer and seller. The
coal brought to market from the Sydney Mines, after
this period, brought the same price as now before the
end of the century, being advertised for thirty shillings
per chaldron. Those who did not wish to consume fuel
in baking, or were not skilful in the art, bought their
bread at the bake-houses kept in Grafton and Pleasant
streets.
It was the habit to dine at an early hour, and take
supper between eight and nine o'clock. The fashionable
dinner hour was three o'clock, and on some state occa-
sions it was made as late as four. As a consequence of
this custom, business ceased to be transacted, at least by
the public ofhces, soon after mid-day. It was too late
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 51
to return, when the somewhat lengthened meal was over.
In the ordinary course, a custom prevailed of walking
on a fine day, after dinner, sometimes towards the Point,
sometimes to the North, and, in less favorable weather,
to the Market, for a promenade beneath the balcony.
On returning home, those whose resources in themselves
were small, usually played cards until supper was laid ;
while among the more intellectual it was the admirable
custom that the gentlemen should read aloud while the
ladies worked at embroidery. The standard English
authors were their text-books on these occasions ; they
had but few, but these were the works of the ablest his-
torians and the most distinguished poets. Few are
aware how well-informed, in spite of many disadvan-
tages, were the upper classes of society in those early
times. There was much to hinder and very little to
promote education ; the habits and occupations tended
to withdraw the mind from the duty and pleasure of
self-culture, and the opportunities of instruction were
few and far between ; yet no mean amount of informa-
tion was stored up by those whose libraries indeed were
small, but contained the productions of the masters in
literature. It is true that much noxious sentiment on
religious subjects was introduced, subsequent to the
French Revolution, and as a consequence, sacred matters
were freely and flippantly discussed in the colonies as
well as in the British isles. But even then, there were
families in which divine truth was received with deepest
reverence, and, as topic for unholy handling, was not
allowed. The full and accurate acquaintance of many
ladies with History, ancient and modern, with Milton
and Shakspeare, with Pope and Dryden, and with others
52 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
of equal fame, may yet be traced through a few of their
daughters, who still survive — themselves old ladies now
— to adorn their native land. The fact was, that they
had few books, but these they read diligently and mas-
tered thoroughly. Many of them learned the French
language, and both wrote and spoke it fluently and well.
So necessary a part of the good education of a young
lady was it considered, that the friends of one, not find-
ing a good teacher in Halifax, sent her to Lunenburg for
the special purpose of being instructed by Rev. Jean
Baptiste Moreau, who resided there.
For the public and private entertainments so often
alluded to, there was no great variety of food. The
market was supplied in a very different degree from
that which is enjoyed at present. When the troops and
fleet, on some of the occasions mentioned, invaded the
town by thousands, their consumption almost created a
famine in the land ; on one occasion beef rose to two
shillings and sixpence per pound, and butter to five.
Except in these extreme cases, the absolute necessaries of
life were abundant. Corned beef, pork, and salted
codfish, far more frequently formed the dishes of all
classes than fresh meat. For delicacies and variety
anxious housekeepers were driven to ingenious devices
in cooking. The same species of meat was dressed in
many ways ; and preserved fruits took a high rank at
the table, especially during the winter season. Poultry
early came into fashion ; and for game a porcupine was
considered as the right thing. For vegetables each man
was either dependent upon the produce of his own gar-
den, or if he should live in the middle of the town,
where gardens could not be, he might purchase from the
SIH TiRENTON HALLIBURTON. 53
public gardener, if he had any disposable produce.
When, after a few years, these public gardens were
abandoned, the want of vegetables was very seriously*
felt, and it was then viewed not only as an enterprise on
the part of the proprietor, but as highly conducive to
the public welfare, when on Saturdays he sent one
wheelbarrow filled with " greens" and vegetables from
a well-kept garden near Fresh- Water-Bridge. All the
ungardened gentlemen kept watch for the passage of this
valuably laden train, and followed it down to the
market, that they might get their share. The butchers'
meat was carried round to the customer in the ordinary
tray b^ boys, or on small carts drawn by dogs : as was
also the bread baked at the two chief bakeries.
Thus were the original settlers supplied with food.
Unfortunately for themselves there was no lack of that
which they might drink. Pure water, indeed, was
abundant, and pumps were placed at the most conve-
nient spots, at which the public could fill their pails
when they pleased. This was a sad annoyance to the
immediate neighborhood, for there was no cessation of
the noise of the pump-handle, and to an almost inces-
sant wrangling between the lads and half-grown girls
who were sent for the morning and evening supply.
But the appetite of Halifax was not satisfied by such
simple liquid. It was too easily obtained to be held of
much value, and a craving for stimulants early became
the crying evil of the town. Wines and strong liquors
were brought in great abundance to the market, and
found a ready sale. It was an unhappy circumstance,
and exercised its baneful influence, to a very large
extent, upon men of all ages and ranks. On this it is
54 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
alike needless and useless now to descant. The bare
fact is enough.
Carriages were owned by but a few of the inhabi-
tants, even till towards the close of the century.
There were some of different forms and styles intro-
duced at a very early stage of the history, indeed quite
enough, within eighteen or twenty years, to constitute a
source of revenue to the Government, since at the end
of that time all persons " having wheel carriages were
called to pay tax at the excise office in Halifax.'' It
seems, however, that amongst those who were strictly
civilians, only one was the envied owner of a covered
carriage, and, perhaps, this was owing to the fact of his
having twice administered the Government as senior
Councillor, when he may have thought it necessary
to his dignity and position sometimes to drive instead
of walk. On all grand occasions he was expected to
send his equipage to the whole round of ladies who
might be invited to an entertainment. If the ladies
gained comfort in one way, they lost it in another.
True they all drove, but the first on the list was obliged
to be in readiness an hour before, certainly as awkward
for her host as tiresome for herself. It was even worse
with the gentlemen, as to the tax upon their patience.
The fashion of the times was to wear the hair powder-
ed, with a cue. This was a long and tedious process.
As the hair dressers were few, they were compelled, in
order to get through their task, previous to the hour
appointed for a festivity, to begin it early in the
morning. He was an unfortunate man whose turn came
first, for he was obliged to sit the whole day in idleness,
or move with slow and measured step, lest he should
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 55
disarrange the handiwork ; sleep he dare not, for one
unlucky nod would spoil it all, and so he was forced
patiently to wait until the time came, and then with
cautious, wary step, proceed slowly to his host's. On
such occasions the full dress consisted of knee-breeches,
silk stockings, shoes and silver buckles, white necker-
chief, of amazing thickness, straight collared coats orna-
mented with large buttons, a colored waistcoat, and
hanging at the side, a sword or rapier ; this last addi-
tion to the costume, which was more like a long dagger
than a sword, as may be seen by those which are stilj
preserved in a number of houses in Halifax, was looked
upon as the distinguishing badge of one who was
entitled to be considered as an esquire or gentleman .
And this species of court dress was frequently called
into use. The custom of constantly calling together the
leading men, for consultation on topics of importance to
the colony, resolved itself, as time passed, into the
holding of levees. In the course of some years these
official gatherings were held no less than nine times,
and on all these occasions the streets leading to Govern-
ment House were filled with the gentlemen of the
powdered hair, the silk stockings, and the silver-hilted
sword.
It is quite indicative of the general ease, and lack of
urgent business in the community, that even as late as
1796, when Mr. Bulkely was still Secretary of the
Province, as he had been for many years, that there
were no less than twenty-four holidays, during which
the public offices were closed.
Although not very common, it was sometimes the case
that the gentry were served by slaves. That they were
56 SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON*
owned and dealt with as goods and chattels by the
townspeople, is sufficiently clear, but there does not
seem much proof that they were generally employed as
domestic servants. As early as 1769, an advertisement
appears in the newspaper, which states that " on Satur-
day next, at 12 o'clock, will be sold, on the Beach, 2
hogsheads of rum, 3 of sugar, and two well-grown negro
girls, aged 14 and 12, to the highest bidder." Again,
as late as August 17, 1790, another advertisement
appears, which, in some respects, reminds one of modern
days, in other lands. The subscriber offers forty shil-
lings reward for the capture of a negro boy slave, named
Dick, whom he describes as to size, gait, and clothing,
and winds up with saying, " Whoever will secure the
negro slave in any of his Majesty's gaols, and give
immediate notice thereof, shall receive the above reward,
and if delivered to his master, shall be allowed all rea-
sonable expenses." There are not wanting the record
of curious bestowals, by will, of slave property, but the
information is sufficient, without adding any of these.
It should be added, not merely as a set-off to this custom
in a British colony, at so late a date, but as putting the
matter in its true light, that so soon as the matter was
seriously brought up, it was settled in a court of law that
slavery could not obtain, and so was no longer tolerated.
In all matters relating to the government of the town,
the machinery was far from complicated. Certain taxes
and fines imposed by the magistrates in session, went
towards the few public works that were deemed neces-
sary,— the constructing of drains, repairing of streets,
making of gutters, and such other positively needful
acts. But the general business of keeping the citizens in
SIR BKENTOJ? HALLIBURTON. 57
order, was the duty imposed upon a very small force.
Two or three constables, under the direction of a Chief
Magistrate, constituted the staff which was to keep in
awe the turbulent, and bring offenders to punishment.
Yet they were not often too feeble for the duties assigned
them, for the military and naval power took ward and
watch over their own transgressors, and thus lightened
materially the task of the civil officers. When, how-
ever, any special excitement arose, or danger threatened
from housebreakers and thieves, the townsmen turned
out and patrolled the streets for a few nights, until the
cloud passed away. The punishments resorted to, for
minor offences, were similar to those in use in older
countries : the stocks for drunkenness, and whipping at
the public post for theft. We find it noticed that two
"were lately tried, convicted, and sentenced to receive
twenty- five lashes at the public post for theft, for steal-
ing sundry articles, * * * * and on Saturday last
they received their punishment accordingly."
At a very early period a newspaper was published.
It was in the month of January, 1789. that the first
number of the first paper, called " The Nova Scotia
Chronicle and Weekly Gazette," was printed and pub-
lished by Anthony Henry, and edited by Capt. Bulkley,
Secretary of the Province. In later years, and before
the close of the century, others were published, by dif-
ferent proprietors and editors. They were modelled
very much after the same pattern, the peculiar feature
beincr that of a verv full selection from the English and
American newspapers From the advertisements, which,
generally occupied either a quarter or two-fifths of the
whole, it is possible to glean with tolerable accuracy the
5
58 SIR BRENT03 HALLIBURTON.
state of business, the situation of the chief houses, and
the names of the prominent and most enterprising men,
beside many other matters of interest as affecting the
condition or the progress of the town. The shops, as
we now term them, were rather receptacles for all man-
ner of saleable articles. Each man, no doubt, had his
speciality, but he rarely, if ever, confined himself to this,
generally adding some stock of a wholly different genus,
the sale of which more properly belonged to his neigh-
bor. During the half-century the subdivision of labor
was little recognized as a principle, nor was it needful ;
the town was probably far better served by the general
importation of goods to each one's place of business.
Men in trade sent to England for any and every thing
which they thought it likely their customers would buy,
without regard to the fact that they were nominally
hardware, dry-goods merchants, or grocers. Hence the
ordinary shops bore a strong resemblance to those very
useful and lucrative places of business, in our country
towns and villages, known under the very appropriate
title of "stores."
Editorials were few and brief. Often the papers came
out without any observations from their conductors.
There was no attempt to influence or to reflect public
opinion, except on rare occasions. The space devoted to
local news, even including the shipping lists, and notices
of deaths and marriages, seldom exceeded half a column.
Reports of the debates in the House of Assembly were
very meagre, and in comparison with the portion of the
page occupied by the grand questions discussed in the
British Parliament, they held no place. If the press
met the wants of the public mind, it is clear that the in-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 59
tellectual appetite desired " Old country" information,
in preference to " New." When a " leader" did appear,
within the first thirty years, it was not always couched
in the language " best understood of the people." It may
not he amiss to quote from one of them, perhaps the most
remarkable, the aim of which is sufficiently intelligible,
though the terms in which it is expressed are rather
high sounding. The writer, no doubt, meant to say,
that much damage was done in the harbor, the mouth
of which opens toward the south-east, in consequence of
a storm from that point of the compass taking place at a
time of spring-tide ; but the wording is at least curious
in a paper not specially devoted to science : '* The vast
damage done to the wharves during this storm must be
attributed to the extraordinary height of the tide and
force of the winds, acting in conjunction with one
another ; for it must be observed that neither wind nor
tide of itself could have occasioned such damage to the
wharves. Therefore, if we allow the tide to be either
primary or secondary, in the cause, we had little less to
expect, when we found to what degree the wind arose;
for the moon being full and near her perigeum, the
earth far advanced in its perihelion, and the wind at
S. E., it would be absurd to suppose the contrary of an
extraordinary tide, while every influence thereon con-
spired to increase it." The selections from the English
newspapers were made with admirable judgment, and
afforded a most comprehensive history of passing events.
Although they improved in many respects, such as ap-
pearance, type, execution, and wider range in selection,
they continued in a remarkable degree to be counter-
GO SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
parts of the first in the matter published and in its ma-
nagement.
The communication with England was uncertain, and
at some periods, infrequent. There was either a con-
stant succession of arrivals and departures, or an almost
total absence of them. At those seasons when war, or
the anticipation of war, brought His Majesty's ships to
Halifax, there was no lack of mails, either coming or
going, and those gentlemen' who were anxious to cross
the Atlantic, often found a passage on board. When
they were not fortunate enough to do this, their accom-
modation was not of the best kind ; a schooner was most
frequently the style of vessel in which they were com-
pelled to sail, and oftentimes the passage in one of these
pent-up craft was painfully tedious ; and even when the
"Falmouth line of packets was established, the transit,
though more agreeable in its mode, was not more rapid.
The number of ships entering and clearing, bears a
really marvellous contrast with the present list. It was
often the case, except in the great national excitements
already spoken of, that not more than two vessels arrived
or sailed during a week. This, indeed, never occurred
during the spring and autumn, for at these periods the
importations insured a steady flow, for several weeks, of
craft of various size ; but then followed a period of stag-
nation in the harbor and around the wharves.
To pass on to the number of the population and give
anything like an accurate statement of it, during this era,
would be almost impossible. It fluctuated in a most
extraordinary manner, varying from four thousand to
twenty thousand ; now rapidly increasing from immi-
SIR BRENTQN HALLIBURTON. 61
gration and the settling of some of the officers and men
of both army and navy, then as quickly diminishing.
At one time, owing to the great influx of military and
naval forces, the town would suddenly rise to momen-
tary energy, and manifest enterprize and prosperity ; in
•a little while the fervor would pass away, and it would
appear to be following in the wake of some of the old
colonial settlements, and destined to fall into ruin and
decay like its short-lived rival, Shelburne, on the west-
ern shore. The letters written to England often allude
to the changing numbers, and ascribe the decrease, not
infrequently, to the fact of some going into the country,
and others to the coves where fishing-stations had been
formed. Many, no doubt, were disappointed, and
either returned home, or found their way to the New
England States, and thence scattered to others of the old
colonies ; while on two different occasions the tide
turned, and brought to these shores a vast number of
people from the continent : the first, upon the procla-
mation of Governor Lawrence, subsequent to the expul-
sion of the Acadians, the second upon the outbreak and
conclusion of the American Revolution. On the former
occasion, only an indirect influence was exerted upon
Halifax, for those responding to the appeal, were for the
most part farmers, who went to the different counties in
which the unfortunate Acadians had resided, and enter-
ing into other men's labors, took possession of houses
which thev built not, and wells disced which thev dig-
ged not, vineyards and trees which they planted not.
But their arrival in the Province exercised a beneficial
influence on its capital, creating business, and so afford-
ing employment of different kinds for a greater number
6£ SIR BHENTON HALLIBURTON'.
of persons within it. The latter emigration was more
direct in its bearing upon the population of the town.
Hundreds came to Halifax, who knowing nothing of
agriculture, were glad to find employment as labourers,
servants, mechanics, clerks, and book-keepers, while
others set up various kinds of business, or opened, on
their account, shops in which to conduct their own
trades. There is nothing more remarkable in the his-
tory of Halifax, during the first half-century of its exis-
tence, than the fluctuation of the population ; it far more
resembled the tide than the stream ; in place of a steady
flow increasing gradually in volume, and emptying itself
into the reservoir, it now rushed like the tide at full
moon, until it reached its highes tmark, and then re-
ceded with an ebb as rapid, leaving only the original
number, as the main water is left in the channel of an
estuary. And thus at the close of the century there
was but a very slight difference in Halifax, as regards
its population, from the beginning of it.
To one other feature of the town it is necessary to
advert, vastly more important in its nature than any of
those already described, and yet such as must be more
briefly discussed : it is that of its religious condition.
Our proximity to those days is too close to admit of a
searching scrutiny into the moral phase of the commu-
nity, or to delineate it with the same minuteness of detail
as its material state. But it would be unjust to pass
over in silence a subject of so much moment, and to
withhold a portion of the truth most necessary for
drawing a contrast between past and present. Unhap-
pily, those days were eminently irreligious days. The
laxity of sentiment, and the disregard to the doctrine
SIR BRENTOX HALLIBURTON. 63
and precepts of the Gospel were painfully manifest.
Noble exceptions there were — bright spots amid the
murky clouds — refreshing oases in the desert. But the
testimony left on record of those whose opinion is wor-
thy of trust, is unanimous, that religion was treated with
indifference by the many, with scorn by some, and writh
reverence bv but few. To cite none others, the first
Bishop of the Diocese was so impressed with the fearful
condition of the community, the general tone of society,
and the debasing tendency of the opinions prevailing,
that he wrote a letter to some in high places, which is
still extant, bewailing in no measured terms the terrible
degeneracy of the days, and urging that some steps
should be taken to erect barriers against the impetuous
torrent which threatened to overwhelm religion and
morality. The lament was the same from such men as
the pioneers of the Scottish Church and the Wesleyan
denomination, in whose biographical memoirs these
views are to be found. And from a letter of the late
Chief Justice, we gather like sentiments on the subject.
There were zealous clcr»vmen, but their efforts were
productive of comparatively little good in the town itself.
Some heard and took heed : but the majority turned a
deaf ear to their warnings and counsel. Many, under
the cloak of their not beins* members of the Church of
England, kept themselves aloof from its sanctuary and
its clergy, and not being provided with ministers and
teachers of the denomination in which they were profes-
sedly brought up, were left to their own devices. For
some time there were but few places of worship beside
those of the Establishment ; but towards the end of the
century others arose : the "Wesleyans, the Roman
64 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
Catholics, the Baptists, as well as the Churches of
Scotland and England, had their churches and their
ministers ; but the labors of each and all combined pro-
duced but little apparent benefit. It would be alike
painful and unprofitable to enter into this subject ; and
as no good could arise from a record of the facts which
would prove the strong statements made, it is better to
leave them, in order that they may sink into oblivion.
The knowledge of the fact is enough — the particulars
are unnecessarv. While on the one hand it would be
a culpable omission to pass over in silence the general
truth, on the other it would only pander to a morbid
taste, to recall the errors and vices of the age. Happily,
that period of indifference and carelessness has long
since passed away, and, we may trust, never to be repro-
duced.
Such was the condition of Halifax, material and
moral, during the first half century of its history.
Although the changes which took place have not been
strictly traced in their chronological order, it will not be
difficult for any one to distinguish between those
circumstances, habits and customs which belong to an
earlier or a later period. With the exception of that
which is expressly mentioned as belonging to the very
infancy of the town — such as its limits and defences —
the details belong almost as much to the middle and
close of the fifty years, as to the commencement. The
inattention to the order of time is designed, in reality
there was but little permanent change between, 1750
and 1800, either in the material condition of the town,
in the number of its inhabitants, in the nature and
extent of business which they transacted, or in their
SIR BREXTON HALLIBURTON. 65
manners, habits and customs. The fluctuations have
been fully noticed, and the tendency of these transient
gleams of prosperity not darkly hinted at. But what-
ever changes took place, there was a singular uniform-
ity preserved in all that constituted Halifax proper. It
always returned if not altogether, at least, nearly, to its
own level.
Into this place with its customs, habits, manners, and
amid society framed and moulded by the events and
circumstances described, the subject of this memoir was
thrown at an early age. The influences under which
his boyhood and early life passed may be clearly seen :
and as they were not calculated to expand the mind or
cherish the moral qualities, it elevates and ennobles his
character, that amid so much to depress and so little to
enlarge the mental powers, he acquired so much know-
ledge and trained his intellect with so much discipline,
and that amid so much to blunt the moral senses, he
preserved his integrity, his reverence for God, and his
firm resolve to act his part in the great drama of life
upon the principles and motives inspired by Christi-
anity.
CHAPTER III.
Captain Halliburton having resumed his studv of
the Law, with Mr. Stewart, Solicitor-General, wras, in a
short time, admitted to the Bar. He signed the Roll
on 12th July, 1803, as Attorney, and on the same day
was admitted as a Barrister. Seated on the Bench of
Nova Scotia at this time, were Chief Justice Blowers,
and assistant Judges Monk and Brenton. He could
have but little supposed at the time of his admission
and of commencing the practice of his profession, that he
himself so soon should occupy a seat upon the Bench.
The practice at the Courts was lucrative and important,
consisting chiefly of causes arising out of the shipping
interest. The general war, in which all the European
powers were more or less involved, had the effect of
making the mercantile marine of the United States of
America the carriers of a great part of the commerce of
the world, and parti cularlv of that connected with the
American continent. Hence arose constant difficulties,
seizure of vessels, charges of illicit traffic, and a host of
similar troubles, prolific of litigation. Mr. Halliburton
was engaged in some of these cases, and proved himself a
successful practitioner. Nothing remarkable, however,
appears to have transpired during the short period of
time that he practised at the Bar. There can be little
doubt that he occupied himself diligently in the dis-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 67
charge of his duties, and in accumulating information on
all subjects of general interest, as well as of a local nature.
In addition to his legal studies and business, we find
him, during the time that he was practising at the Bar,
acting as Secretary to the Board of Governors of Kind's
College, Windsor. He then became interested in that
young institution, nor did his interest in it ever flag.
Down to the day of his death he continued tc be one of
its ablest supporters. For half a century and more he
was so identified with it, that a leng succession of stu-
dents associated the name of Judge Halliburton with
College and their College days.
The change from military life to the confinement of
an office, affected a constitution not then very strong?
and though his professional prospects were so good, he
felt that his health would be seriously injured by their
pursuit, and was somewhat doubtful as to the propriety
of pursuing them. At this juncture a vacancy occurred
on the Bench, by the death of Mr. Justice James Bren-
ton, and to this responsible post he was elevated at the
early age of thirty-three, on the 10th of January, 1807.
On the loth of the month he received from Mr. Gautier,
the Clerk of the Council, his Commission as Assistant-
Judge of the Supreme Court, went to the Council
Chamber, and there took the oaths of office. Shortly
after his appointment he removed from the town to
Sherwood, on the Bedford Basin, where he resided for
several years. His mind was very solemnly impressed
with the nature and responsibility of the arduous duties
which this high preferment imposed upon him ; and
highly gratified as he was at the promotion, he did not
permit himself to be carried away by his new honors,
68 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
but seemed more conscious of his own need of wisdom
and grace. To men of the present day who are ac-
quainted with the opinions which prevail now among all
classes, and which have prevailed during the last thirty
or forty years, it will not seem at all remarkable that he
should have had a profound reverence for revealed reli-
gion in early life. His character was so moulded, and
his conduct so guided of late years, by the doctrines
and precepts of the Word of God, and society in gene-
ral— however there may be many and sad exceptions,
outwardly at least acknowledging a belief in religion
and a respect for its consistent exponents — that we are
not surprised at finding true religious feeling anima-
ting Judge Halliburton. He was just the high-minded
and amiable man, who would appear likely to adopt
religion ; in his position it would seem incongruous not
to have manifested at least an external reverence for
God, and an outward respect for His will. But the
views entertained on religion were far different in the
outset of his career ; society was in general but little
leavened by it, and vastly influenced by scepticism and
infidelity. A looseness of conduct, and an open indif-
ference to moral as well as religious law, prevailed to a
fearful extent. The French He volution, at the close of
the last century, had been productive of evil in a vast
variety of ways. In social life the greatest laxity of
conduct had sprung up, — sacred ties were broken with-
out remorse, — self- gratification was the ruling principle,
— and men learned to smile at and applaud the most
unhallowed scenes of dissipation. In the political world
the most unprincipled demagogues ruled and advocated
the overthrow of all ancient laws ; and while they kin-
SIR BSEXTON HALLIBURTON". 69
died the hopes, fired the blood, of those who had nothing
to lose and every thing to gain. The religious commu-
nity was held up to scorn by the Encyclopedists, whose
unquestioned learning in literature, art, and science,
rendered them formidable foes. Not only the Continent
of Europe and Great Britain and Ireland were flooded by
men who openly avowed themselves unbelievers in Chris-
tianity, but the United States and British North America
were equally invaded by them, either in person or in their
writings. The Colonies were especially innoculated
with their baneful notions. Volney, Tom Paine, and
Voltaire, Hume, and Gibbon, were favorite authors in
England. As the chief, and nearlv all the offices of
Government were filled up by the Crown, (and some-
times perhaps more for the purpose of finding a living
for some needy relative of a minister, or an impatient
hanger-on, than out of regard to his fitness,) there was
a constant renewal of this element of scepticism intro-
duced. It was thought not only manly but fashionable
to deny the truth of Christianity. Questions of doctrine
were freely discussed, in order to show how inharmo-
nious they were with the attributes of God, — infidel
authors were the grammar and text-book. Their axioms
and opinions were quoted glibly at the dinner-table and
at those evening feasts which were the custom of the
times. The great topic was not in the back-ground, but
brought to the fore, only, however, as an object of as-
sault.
Those were irreligious days, and as might be proved,
pre-eminently so in Halifax. Witness the following
70 SIR BREXTON HALLIBURTON
letter, from the late Chief Justice himself to the author
of the life of the Duke of Kent : —
" At the time of his arrival, the habits of the garrison
were very dissipated. The dissipation, indeed, was not
confined to the military ; the civil society partook of it
largely. It was no unusual thing to see gentlemen
join a company of ladies in a state of intoxication,
which would now be deemed very disgraceful, bat
which was then merely laughed at by the ladies
themselves. His Royal Highness at once discoun-
tenanced such conduct. Among the military he soon
put an end to it by parading the troops every morning
at five o'clock; and as he alwavs attended himself
no officer could of course feel it a hardship to do so.
The improvement which thus took place among the
military gradually extended to their civil acquaintances,
and his Royal Highness thus became instrumental in
improving both.
" Gambling also prevailed to a great extent : but his
Royal Highness never touched a card ; and as the
early parades compelled its former military votaries to
retire early to bed, gambling, as well as drinking, fell
into disuse.
" I must mention a circumstance which occurred about
this period, which interested many at the time. A
very kind-hearted captain of the regiment had been
sent to Newfoundland to recruit. He was not well
calculated for that service, and in the hands of an artful
sergeant had returned much in arrears to the pay-
master. He was an amiable but easy-going man, and a
few days after his return, he dined at a party where
cards were introduced in the evening. He had never
been in the habit of playing, but was easily prevailed
upon to join the party ; and by one of those runs of
good luck by which the tempter frequently seduces no-
vices, bore off all the money of the evening. It was a
sum quite sufficient to relieve him from his difficulties.
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 71
His great luck was the engrossing subject of conversa •
tion throughout the following day. ' But of course,' said
the losers, ' Macdonald will give us a chance of winning
our money back again, when Ave meet at Esten's, on the
next Thursday evening.'
"Every body knew that Mr. Macdonald would be
easily persuaded to do so, and his friends feared that he
might become a confirmed gambler. His Roval High-
ness heard of it ; sent for him ; and after conversing
with him, very seriously and kindly said, ' Mr. Mac-
donald, you have never been in the habit of playing, —
these gentlemen requested you to play, and if, by com-
plying with their request, you have won their money, it
is much better that they should bear the loss, than that
you, from a false notion of honour, should run the risk
of acquiring a bad habit. I request that you will give
me a positive pledge, on honour, that you will not again
play at games of chance.' Macdonald did so. The
Prince made it public. Of course, after that, no gentle-
man could solicit Macdonald to play ; and as he was not
inclined himself to do so, he escaped the snare in
which, had it not been for his Royal Highness's 'friendly
interference, his good luck might ultimately have en-
tangled him. Poor, kind-hearted Macdonald! he fell a
victim to the climate in the West Indies not Ion"- after-
wards.
" His Royal Highness's discipline was strict, almost
to severity. I am sure he acted upon principle ; but I
think he was somewhat mistaken in supposing such un-
deviating exactitude essential to good order. Off the
parade, he was the affable prince and accomplished gen-
tleman. At his table every one felt at ease ; but while
it was evidently his object to make them so, his digni-
fied manner precluded the possibility of any liberty
being taken by the most forward.
" I cannot close without mentioning Ms benevolence to
the distressed. A tale of woe alwavs interested him
72 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
deeply, and nothing but gross misconduct could ever in-
duce him to abandon any whom he had once been induced
to befriend. I have much pleasure in giving these recol-
lections of his Royal Highness, under whom I served
for several years, and from whom I received very great
kindness.
" I return Mr. Neale's letter herewith, and have the
honour to remain,
" Your Excellency's obedient servant,
" Brenton Halliburton.
" His Excellency Lieut. Gen.
Sir John Harvey, K. C.B., &c, &c, &c."
It was in the midst of society like this that Sir Bren-
ton Halliburton embraced and held fast to religious prin-
ciple. No doubt there were honourable exceptions to
the class alluded to, but they were few. Yet Sir Bren-
ton was emphatically a religious man, not indeed as he
was in later life, but having much light in the midst of
great darkness. His views of this all-important subject
were clear and strong. That he was a man of private
prayer, amid all this worse than coldness, is amply
proved by his own journal of those days. And it is
really marvellous that such a man should have existed
at all. He who speaks in private letters, which he
never supposed would come to light, of the state of his
feelings and heart in this way, must have had a high
sense of the value of the Gospel :
" I do not remember any time when I have joined in
public prayer with more continued attention. Mr.
officiated. He was inaccurate in several instances, and
gave notice that the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper
would be administered on Christmas day, without
reading the exhortation. This was particularly excep-
tionable. Clergymen should never give the congrega-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 73
tion the idea that any part of the service is useless, or
merely formal, and that they can substantially and more
briefly answer the purposes intended to be effected by it.
Neither the head nor the heart of a man who thinks so,
can be quite right. It is true it may be done without
the intention of doing ill ; but thoughtlessness in such
characters and in such cases, is a sad excuse. He <*ave
us a very good sermon. If I was inclined to criticise it,
I would say he went rather too diffusedly into the gene-
ral character of Christianity, without sufficiently enfor-
cing its peculiar duties ; in the language of my former
profession it would be called a parade sermon, prepared
and reserved for great occasions. Perhaps it may be
very fair for a clergyman, preaching in a parish where
he is a stransrer to the congregation at large; but a
Parish Priest should confine himself in a single sermon
to the enforcement of particular duties : let him recom-
mend sobriety at one time, honesty at another, chastity
at another : they will each provide him an ample sub-
ject for one discourse. But when I say he should thus
bend all his force to the illustration of any particular
duty, I mean that he should enforce faith in Jesus
Christ (on which all depend) at all times.
" Rose, and endeavoured to impress my mind with
the feelings this day ought to excite, — this day which
we commemorate as the anniversary of the birth of our
blessed Lord — of the advent of Him who forms the sole
connexion between heaven and earth, — who redeemed us
from the bondage of sin and misery, to which we were
everlastingly doomed by the decrees of justice, — who
paid the price of His precious blood for the purchase of
our freedom, and atoned for our sins by his sufferings,
— by whose wonderful love mercy was extended to de-
praved, sunken, and sinful creatures, without wounding
the immaculate character of justice in the moral world.
I trust the mercy of God, through our Lord Jesus
Christ, will enable me to feel the value of this stupen-
dous exertion of goodness. May I never cease most
6
74 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON",
humbly and ardently to implore Him to do so. ....„„„
visited me before church, and introduced the subject
which occupied my mind yesterday, (the seat on the
Bench). I did not wish to divert my mind from a more
important subject, and told him I would not engage to
do anything about it to-day. We had a numerous con •
gregation, and I think the worst sermon I ever heard
deliver, — inconclusive in its arguments, (if it
contained any,) and very ill-adapted to the day. The
communicants were numerous. I partook of this Holy
Sacrament with more satisfaction than usual, and hum-
bly trust my gracious Creator, Redeemer, and Sanctifier
will extend to me the graces He has promised to all that
seek Him there."
Nor can a more touching scene be painted than hi&
course on that day on which he was promoted to the
Bench, January 12, 1807 :-—
" This day I rose between eight and nine o'clock,
breakfasted alone, and afterward went in search of Mr.
Gautier, the Clerk of the Council, to obtain my Com-
mission as Assistant Judge of the Supreme Court, to
which office I had been appointed by His Excellency
the Lieut. Governor, on the 10th inst. ; procured it from
him at the Secretary's Office ; went to the Council Cham-
ber, and there took the oaths of office before the Chief
Justice ; returned home and prostrated myself before
the Almighty to thank him for this instance of goodness
to me, and to beseech Him to enable me to do those
things which are pleasing in His sight, and act with
diligence, integrity, uprightness, fidelity, and independ-
ence ; and that in the discharge of my public duty I
might fear Him and Him alone. May He grant these
my petitions for the sake of my blessed Saviour."
For the next day we find the following entry : — •
" Rose, and offered up my prayers, and again peti-
tioned for grace to enable me to perform the duties of
my office."
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 75
His attendance upon public worship was regular, and
when in the House of God, his journal shows him to
have been most attentive and devout.
Judge Halliburton had not been seated long on the
Bench when fresh troubles arose between England and
the United States. The pacific relations between these
Countries were violently disturbed by the discovery of
several English deserters on board the American frigate
" Chesapeake," from which they were taken by his
Majesty's ship " Leopard."
As a consequence of this collision, a very hostile feel-
ing arose, and unhappily was fostered by too many rest-
less spirits, so that war was confidently anticipated as an
inevitable result. Exports of provisions from Nova
Scotia were prohibited ; and the American Congress, in
retaliation for the commercial restrictions of Great Bri-
tain, imposed an embargo on all American vessels, and
commanded all British ships to quit their ports. Into
all the questions arising from this trouble, whether di-
rectly or indirectly, Judge Halliburton entered with
great zeal. He thought, he talked, he wrote upon the
topic. The ability which he displayed was equal to the
interest which he felt. Whether he viewed the subject
as one grand whole, or analyzed its separate parts, he
proved himself capable of mastering it. He grasped
the great question at issue, with all its accumulated com-
plications, and he severally weighed the minute details
with accurate justness. Although much oocupied with
his professional duties, he took the liveliest interest in
everything connected with the welfare of the Colonies.
It was for this reason especially that he turned his
attention so much to the dispute between Great Britain
76 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
and the. United States. The consequences to the Cana-
das, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia were, in his esti-
mation, of the highest importance. Hence he spared no
pains nor opportunities to place them in a right light-
before the British Government.
Judge Halliburton did not confine himself to the cir-
cumference which the colony formed ; while he ever
had it uppermost in his mind, he took a wider range, —
looked at events abroad, — entered deeply into all the
great questions of the passing day : and this gave his
mind an expansive cast. But those affairs occupied him
most which had a bearing upon the colonies. It was
by them that all his abilities and all his sympathies
were evoked. The impressment of sailors by British
vessels out of American, — the commercial relations be-
tween Great Britain and the United States, — the state
and condition of trade between the Colonies and the
Republic, — the true relative position between England
and the Provinces, — and the manner in which the mo-
ther-country should treat the colonists ; these, and all
such matters as these, were constantly engaging his
mind.
In 1810 he wrote a very long and able letter, ani-
madverting upon the conduct of the American Govern-
ment, in so abruptly breaking off negociations with the
British Commissioners. It would be, at this date,
uninteresting to the general reader to quote portions of
this closely -reasoned document, although to those who
take an interest in American history, and especially the
conduct of the American towards the British Govern-
ment, it would be bv no means devoid of instruction.
All through the period of misunderstanding and disa-
SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON. 7T
greement, bad temper, and wilful perversion of facts,
Judge Halliburton watched the course of events until
they reached the crisis in 1812. War was formally
declared, and the arrival of his Majesty's ship " Belvi-
dera" at Halifax, announcing that she had been chased
and fired into by an American squadron, proved the
necessity of meeting the declaration with vigor. Mea-
sures were immediately adopted to meet the case. A
press-warrant was granted to the Admiral on the station,
the Militia were called out and armed, letters of marque
were issued, and privateers fitted out against the Ame-
ricans. So much was Judge Halliburton's mind occu-
pied with all that was now transpiring, and the causes
which led to this unhappy state of things, that early in
the following year he published a series of letters upon
the subject over the signature of " Anglo-American."
These letters are valuable, and especially worthy of
being again brought to light at the present juncture in
America. Indeed, it is no less to preserve, as far as
possible, some of the best productions of his mind than
to delineate impartially his character, that this memoir
is written. For this reason the following letters are in-
troduced : —
[For the Recorder.]
Mr. Holland, —
Sir, — As a constant reader of your paper, I request
that you will accept of my thanks for the publication of
the eloquent and interesting speech of Lord Liverpool,
in support cf his Royal Highness the Prince Regent's
message to Parliament, recommending a grant of
money, to relieve those patriotic Russians, who have
made such important sacrifices for the benefit of their
Country and the World. I trust, sir, that it has
78
SIR BRENTOX HALLIBURTON.
arrested the attention of all your readers ; and that the
passage, in which his Lordship so feelingly describes
and deplores the miseries to which a people are expos-
ed, who inhabit a country that becomes the theatre
of war, has excited mingled feelings of detestation
against the unprovoked author of such calamities, and
of admiration of those, who have so heroically endured
them. Such feelings, sir, will naturally arise in every
generous bosom : but unless we have some personal
interest in the events which excite them, their duration
will be momentary.
The whole civilized world, it is true, is concerned,
and deeply concerned, in the recent transactions in the
North of Europe, but the inhabitants of these Colonies
have a peculiar interest in dwelling upon them with at-
tention.
During a warfare of twenty years, in which our
parent state has not only maintained her own inde-
pendence, but has interposed a barrier to an ambition
that would know no bounds, we, sir, have dwelt in
peace ; and while pursuing our usual avocations could
scarcely realize to ourselves that so great a portion of
the human race was enduring the miseries, which were
inflicted upon it by that ruthless Tyrant, who has long
ruled a nation that, under every form of Government,
has been the disturber of Europe.
But, the rulers of a neighbouring country have
thought proper to light the flame of discord on this side
of the Atlantic ; and, as even successful war may have
its attendant miseries, I would wish my fellow-subjects
here, to dwell upon those feelings of indignation, which
the description of the calamities of the Russians could
not fail to excite against the author of them, and then
direct them against those men, who have done their ut-
most to introduce similar horrors amon^ us. That the
war, which the American government has declared
against Great Britain, is wicked, wanton, and unjust,
must be evident to all who have paid attention to the
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
transactions between the two Countries : but as the
majority of your readers may not have had leisure to
mark them as they passed, and general assertions are
not calculated to produce conviction, I shall endeavour
to supply satisfactory testimony in support of this posi-
tion. The Americans will not, I trust, object to my
proof, when I resort to their own official documents to
obtain it.
Among the numerous pretexts for the commencement
of hostilities, which disgraced the pages of Mr. Madi-
son's message to Congress of the 1st of June last, the
orders in council were prominent and pre-eminent ; and
It is highly probable that, without the aid of the
feelings that had been excited against this retaliatory
measure, a majority of the Congress could not have
been obtained in support of the darling object of the
American administration. When they laid so much
stress upon this grievance, they were not aware that
sound policy would be obliged to yield to popular cla-
mour, and that a combination of interested and factious
men had driven the British Cabinet to abandon the
Orders in Council, at the very moment when America
had declared war on account of them. So firmly had
they taken their stand upon this ground, and so com-
pletely had the attention of the British Government
been drawn to this subject by the American Ministers,
that it was considered in England as the cause of the
war. it was confidently expected there, that, as the
cause was removed, the effect would cease ; and in that
^expectation the British Admiral on this station was
directed to devote to negotiation that time which would
perhaps have been better employed in vigorous hostility.
But whatever may have been the honest construction
which British candor gave to American declarations, the
conduct of the American Government has proved that
they had very different views. The revocation of the
Orders in Council certainly took them by surprise, and
well indeed, sir, it might, The foundation of the war
80 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
was gone, but the superstructure, which the Legislature
alone could erect, remained, and American ingenuity
was at no loss to devise a support for it. They have
chosen one which, they are well aware, cannot slip from
beneath the fabric they are so anxious to maintain.
The war now rests upon a stable foundation. It rests
upon a right which no British minister will, I trust,
have the boldness or the treachery to abandon : " The
right to employ our own subjects in our own defence."
By referring to the Report of the Committee on Foreign
Relations, made to the House of Representatives at
Washington on the 30th of January last, you will per-
ceive that the American Government are now deter-
mined to persist in the war until Great Britain relin-
quishes the exercise of the right of impressment on
board of American vessels. This report, which occupies
three columns of a paper, is one labored tissue of false-
hood and sophistry. But I shall not at present impose
upon myself the task of exposing all its misstatements,
but confine my attention to what may be truly termed
the burden of the song.
The report, in order to "impose upon the understand-
ings and inflame the passions of the American people,
dwells, with wonderful pathos upon the evils that attend
the impressment of American citizens into the British
Service, and states in so many words, that " the impress-
ment of American Seamen being deservedly considered a
principal cause of the war, the war ought to be prosecuted
until that cause was removed." Butr that Great Britain may
fully understand how long the war is to be continued,
and by what sacrifice peace must be purchased, the
report subsequently states : " With the British claim to
impress British Seamen the United States have no right to
interfere, provided it be exercised in British Vessels, or in
any other than those of the United States."
Inhabitants of Nova Scotia ! listen to these declara-
tions,, and learn from them the determination of the
American Government to inflict upon you the cala-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 81
mities of war, until Great Britain shall be so far lost to
every sense of honour and of interest, as to direct
those gallant officers, whose achievements occupy the
brightest page in our history, to forego the right of
reclaiming British seamen, deserters perhaps from
their own ships, from American vessels ; — until the
Commanders of our ships of war shall be told by their
own Government : If when the carnage of battle, or
the ravages of disease, have thinned your crews, you
should meet an American vessel, whose decks are
crowded with British seamen, you must not presume to
claim from them the performance of that duty which
they owe their Country ! True it is, that by the im-
memorial customs of the civilized world, by the laws
established among nations, and by the feelings implanted
by the God of Nature, every man is bound to protect
and defend the country which gave him birth. But the
President of the United States of America wills it other-
wise ; the American Congress hath spoken, and the laws
of nations and of nature must be silent !
Every man, sir, must feel the insolence and arro-
gance of this demand. I must acknowledge that it has
excited no small degree of indignation in my breast.
But I shall endeavour to dismiss those sensations, and in
my next letter, calmly, and I trust impartially, examine
the justice of the American claim.
An Anglo-American.
In the two letters which followed in order he enters
into the justice of those claims, and with great logical
acumen proves the propositions which he lays down :
and though they would afford to the reader an excel-
lent specimen of his reasoning powers, their introduc-
tion would make this brief memoir too voluminous.
The selection without them is ample, and except for
their bearing upon great questions now thrust upon the
88 8IR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
notice of England and British North American colo-
nists, might be thought by some, more than ample.
The close of his fourth letter is written with so much
nerve and vigour, that it is worthy of being read : —
fi Great Britain, I trust, will not be the first of the
European Powers to abandon a principle so essential to
the preservation of social order. She will not be the
first to consign to the grave that virtue which the poet
has delighted to celebrate, and the orator to inspire ;
which the historian has labored to perpetuate and the
moralist to instil ; the amor patrice, which is the parent
of those honorable sentiments that stimulate the wise,
the worthy, and the brave to conquer every selfish feel-
ing, and to devote their talents, their integrity, and their
valor to the service of their country. No, sir, let
America, who is yet unknown to fame, let the progeny
of that motley mixture which she has deemed it wise to
introduce into her bosom, be the authors of this code of
selfishness and depravity ; let them lay the corner-stone
of the tomb of disinterested virtue and of genuine pa-
triotism ; let it remain for them to obliterate those early
impressions which endear to us even inanimate objects,
those pleasing recollections of our infant years, those
ardent friendships for the companions of our boyish
days, that generous interest in the partners of our youth-
ful joys, and that delightful association of personal and
local attachment which have hitherto bound mankind to
the land of their nativity ; let it remain for them to
banish all these ennobling feelings from the human
bosom ; to listen solely to the selfish suggestions of in-
terest, and carry themselves to market, to sell their alle-
giance to whatever Government will promise them the
most advantageous bargain. Yes, sir, let Mr. Madison
and his associates, if such means of acquiring celebrity
are most congenial to their feelings, transmit their names
to posterity as the incendiaries of the temple of patrio-
SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON. 83
tism. But let Englishmen, and let us who participate
with Englishmen in their inestimable privileges, ever
fondly cherish those sentiments of enthusiastic attach-
ment to the land of our forefathers, which have anima-
ted our long list of patriots and of heroes from our
Alfred to our Nelson. Let these pretenders to philan-
thropy and philosophy instil into that part of the rising
generation which may come within their baneful influ-
ence those principles of frigid indifference and gloomy
scepticism, which will leave mankind without a home
here or a hope hereafter ; but let us firmly adhere to
those sound doctrines which have stood the test of expe-
rience ; let us instruct our children early to know and
deeply to revere the sacred volume, which will present
to them the most animating prospects of future felicity,
which, while it tells them that they are not vagabonds
upon the earth, will teach them to exclaim, when
the fond recollection of the land of their nativity rises
in their minds : * If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, may my
right hand forget her cunning; if I do not remember
thee, may my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth.'
" May such, sir, be the sentiments of every
" Anglo-American."
[For the Recorder.]
Sir, — Having closed my examination of the justice
of that complaint against Great Britain, which the
American administration now assign as the chief cause
for the continuance of the war ; and having: endeavour-
ed to place in its proper light, their insolent and un-
principled claim for the restitution of native British
subjects as American citizens, I shall now attempt to
prove, that these are the mere pretexts for hostilities ;
that they were not actuated by the motives, which they
avow ; and that the real causes, which have induced
them to assume the awful responsibility of arming their
fellow-creatures against each other, are of a very differ-
ent nature.
84 SIR B REN TON HALLIBURTON.
This undertaking, T admit, is in many respects dis-
similar from that in 'which I have hitherto been engag-
ed. Whether a professed motive justifies the conduct
which has been adopted in consequence of it, is a ques-
tion which every man who is capable of comprehending
the subject, and who is made acquainted with its atten-
dant circumstances, may decide upon the common prin-
ciples of justice. But when we attempt to dive into the
recesses of the heart, and pronounce an opinion not
upon the actions but upon the motives of men, we re-
quire not only correct sentiments of justice, but a know-
ledge of the human character, to guide us in forming a
decision. This, however, is not one of those cases
which require an uncommon depth of penetration, or
quickness of apprehension, to assist us in its investiga-
tion. Notwithstanding the infinite variety of characters
which human nature presents to our observation, there
are certain fixed principles of action which are common
to all, and bv which mankind in general arc actuated,
while they retain their reason ; and when men assign
motives for their conduct which are manifestly insuffi-
cient to account for, or are directly inconsistent with it,
we do not hesitate to pronounce that they have not
revealed the truth.
If we view the situation of the United States of
America, and consider the different habits and interests
of the separate governments which form that confede-
ration, the conduct of those who represent them in the
American Congress, and to whose care their interests
are confided, we must be convinced that the motives
assigned by that portion of the Union which constituted
the majority, for plunging the country into war, are
manifestly insufficient to account for their conduct, and
quite inconsistent with their situations as the represent-
atives of those States which are not injured by the evil
of which they complain. It is notorious that the States
who are concerned in navigation, and whose citizens
must of course be almost the only sufferers by the prac-
SIR BRENTOK HALLIBURTON. 85
tlcc of impressment, are unanimous in their opposition
to this war. No person, I think, who is in the least
acquainted with the situation of America, can entertain
a doubt of this fact. When the question of war was
carried in Congress, its main supporters were the repre-
sentatives from the States not engaged in navigation,
and its opponents were those whose constituents de-
rived their chief support from it.
It is true that some of the members from Massachu-
setts and New York, two of the most wealthy and
populous of the commercial States, voted for the war ;
but it must be recollected that those members were
elected before it was known that such a question would
be proposed for their decision, and the general senti-
ments of their constituents have since been strongly
expressed upon this subject by the unanimity which
prevalcd among their electors for the Presidential chair.
The author of this war was unanimously rejected by
New York and Massachusetts, as well as by all the
other commercial States of the Union, and he owes the
continuance of his authority to those who are as little
affected by the injury for which they have sought such
awful redress, as they will be by the misery and ruin
which this disastrous remedy will bring upon those
whose interests they profess to defend. It is in vain
that the commercial States exclaim ' Non tali avxilio,
nee defensoribus istis.'' Their Southern confederates have
substantial reasons for pressing them to the earth by the
weight of their protection. It is in vain that they ex-
postulate with the representatives of those portions of
the Union who do not own a single seaman, upon the
inconsistency of their stepping forward as the cham-
pions of the rights of the ocean! It is in vain that they
conjure them to leave the care of their own interests to
themselves ; that they assure them that the means by
which they would secure a few of their seamen from
impressment, will condemn the whole of them to impri-
sonment ; that the measures which they have adopted to
86 SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON.
vindicate the rights of commerce, will consign commerce
itself to destruction : regardless of arguments, which
they cannot answer, and deaf to entreaties to which
they were predetermined not to listen, the guardians of
American seamen and of American commerce have
resolved to expose all the former to captivity, to pre-
serve a few of them from temporary restraint, and to
annihilate the latter, to secure it from a partial restric-
tion.
That these men, sir, have reasons for their conduct
I do not pretend to deny; but that they are not the
reasons, which they have assigned, must be evident, I
think to every man of common understanding. Should
we not be surprised, if the Tin-miners in Cornwall
should rise in rebellion to redress a grievance, which
only affected the Coal-miners in Newcastle ; or if the
men, who hew Timber at Pictou, were up in arms to
avenge an injury sustained by those who quarry Plaster
of Paris at Windsor ; while neither of the parties im-
mediately interested thought the injury of sufficient
consequence to excite a tumult. No man of common
sense would be so credulous as to believe that these
rioters had assigned the real motives for their turbu-
lence ; and the case of America is still stronger than
that which I have put, for the commercial States not
only do not consider this grievance as a sufficient cause
for war, but they earnestly deprecate having recourse
to that measure ; they implore their Southern masters
not to extinguish a partial conflagration from which
they do not apprehend any serious consequences by a
general deluge, which will overwhelm them with ruin.
But their petitions are unheard ; they are not permitted
to have a voice in the consideration of evils which are
exclusively their own ; and they must degradingly sub-
mit to a remedy, which is indeed in a tenfold degree
worse than the disease.
What the real motives of the prescribers are, I shall
attempt to develope in my next letter ; and, if I am
SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON. 87
right in my conjectures respecting them, the inhabitants
of these colonies are deeply interested in dwelling upon
them with serious reflection.
An Anglo-American.
[For the Recorded.]
Sir, — I think it must be evident to every man of
plain sense that the representatives from the southern
states of America, who in conjunction with the cabinet
at Washington now rule over the Union, could not
have been induced to involve themselves in war, for
the mere purpose of avenging the wrongs of their
northern brethren, when the injured parties did not
seek their assistance ; nor for the still less colourable
pretext of vindicating the cause of those British subjects
who have been naturalized in America. The spirit of
chivalry, when it existed in full force, seldom influ-
enced the conduct of governments ; and we shall
require very strong testimony to induce us to believe
that it now actuates the minds of the American adminis-
tration, and their adherents in Congress, who are
neither so disinterested as to expose themselves to evils
for the benefit of their political opponents ; nor, low as
our opinion of their talents may be, so foolish as to
suppose that they could protect Commerce by a
measure, which, it is evident to men of the meanest
capacities, can only tend to its destruction. As we
cannot therefore believe their own account of their
motives, we must endeavor to discover the causes of this
unnatural war, as it is termed, by an examination of the
circumstances and situations of the men who have de-
clared it, and of the country which they govern. And,
however bold the assertion may appear, I cannot refrain
from pronouncing, that this war, which is termed unna-
tural, has grown very naturally out of the situation of
the United States of America, and might have been ex-
88 SIR liRENTON HALLIBURTON.
pectcd by every intelligent man who had attended to
the affairs of that country ; who had watched its s:ene-
ral progress, the distinct and clashing interests of the
northern and southern portions of the Union, and the
growth and comparative strength of the political parties
in that country.
The majority of the writers in America who arc op-
posed to the Government, attribute this war to French
influence, to the subserviency of their own Cabinet, to
the views of the Tyrant of Europe, and assert that Ame-
rica has declared war against Great Britain in obedience
to th2 dictates of that usurper. That the " hand of Na-
poleon," to use the phrase of one of their own orators,
" is in this thing," I do not entertain the smallest doubt.
But the question then presents itself, how came it there ?
And why is American blood and American treasure to
be lavished in support of his views ? It is more difficult
to suppose that the rulers of America have entered into
this war solely in compliance with the orders of Bona-
parte, than that they declared it for the motives which
they themselves assign. As my wish is to take an im-
partial and a liberal view of this subject, I will not con-
descend to consider the baser motives of bribery and
corruption, which have been urged, without any proof,
asrainst the leading men in America, until such charges
are substantiated. An unprejudiced mind will never
admit them for a moment. If they have had any foun-
dation in fact, their opponents would delight to detail
and triumph in exposing them ; and while they rest up-
on assertion only, we must attribute them to political
animosity.
It is to the distinct and clashing interests of the Nor-
thern and Southern States of America that we are to
look for the real and original causes of this war. But
although we are to consider these as the primary sources,
I certainly admit that there are secondary causes, and
among these, French influence is predominant.
Nothing could be more natural than that confedera-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 89
tion, which was formed by the thirteen colonies of Great
Britain after their separation from the parent state.
They had almost every motive, which can influence the
minds of men to induce them to unite with each other.
Born the subjects of one general government they had
long considered themselves as fellow-countrymen. En-
gaged in one common cause, they had persevered to-
gether in an arduous struggle against a powerful nation,
until success had crowned their efforts. Looking to one
individual as a leader, who had guided them to inde-
pendence, they could not but desire to form a govern-
ment under his auspices, by which those sanguinary
contests might be prevented, that have generally pre-
vailed among small independent states. Thus influ-
enced both by their reason and feelings, they formed
that confederation which we have long known as the
United States of America. But, although this step was
recommended bv the wisest men among: them, and was
certainly the most prudent plan which they could adopt,
it could neither remove nor remedy all the evils to
which they were exposed in their new situation. It
prevented those scenes of bloodshed, which the history
of their parent state exhibited to them during the period
of the Heptarchy, and which, without such a Union,
would have been repeated among them, until the most
powerful government had gained the dominion over the
others. But it could not prevent that desire of sov-
ereignty, which ever exerts itself in those who embark
m political life. It restrained the passions of the men,
who, actuated by the thirst of power, would have delu-
ged the fields of America with blood ; but it could not
preserve that political independence and entire quality
among the separate states, which.it was designed to es-
tablish and perpetuate. Their jarring interests had
until this period been adjusted by the disinterested deci-
sion of the mother country. They were now to be set-
tled by interested delegates from the respective states
of the Union ; and influence and intrigue would not fail
7
90 SIR BRENT02S HALLIBURTON.
to exert themselves in that field, from which actual war
had been prudently banished, and they might prove
equally efficacious in the acquisition of political ascend-
ancy. If the situation of the Union had produced a
variety of conflicting interests and opposing parties,
these under the guidance of able and upright men,
might have been managed in such a manner as to con-
duce to the general interest of the whole ; or at least
might have been so balanced as to make the general
good preponderate upon all important occasions ; and
had several parties existed, none of which decidedly
overpowered the others, men of talent and integrity
would have stood a fair chance of holding the reins of
government. But when once the separate interests of
the country had divided it into two great parties, the
leaders of each must consent to be led ; and when their
own opinions did not concur with those of their political
associates, they must either have abandoned their posts,
or have acted in subserviency to their views. Such is
the situation of the United States of America. The
Congress is not divided into a number of parties con-
tending for the various interests of the respective states,
which its members represent ; but as the interests of the
southern and inland states are identified from natural
causes, and are distinct from those of the northern and
eastern portions of the Union, which last are also held
together by the same firm and common bond, so it
necessarily follows, that the Congress is divided into
two parties, and that the struggle for ascendancy, which,
if they have entered into the confederation, would have
been decided in the field, is now contested between the
northern and southern states within the walls of Con-
gress. I am aware that men, who do not consider
questions of this nature upon general principles, but con-
fine their observations to particular facts, will enquire
how it happens then, that many of the members from
the northern states have coalesced with those from the
south, and uniformly acted with them prior to the de-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 91
claration of war. But the answer to this question is
very obvious. In the first place, the interests of the
southern party led them to favour the views of France,
the enemy of Great Britain. To France many of the
northern representatives were attached by the recollec-
tion of the services she had rendered to them during
their revolutionary war ; and the political animosity,
which had subsisted in the minds of others against Great
Britain, was too keen to allow them to listen even to the
suggestions of interest. It is no answer to my argu-
ments to observe, that they did not universally overcome
the influence of prejudice and of prepossession. It is
sufficient for my position to establish, that the majority
of the commercial states, in defiance of that spirit of
hostility against Great Britain which the war had excit-
ed, felt that it was their interest to preserve a good un-
derstanding with her ; and that the majority of the south-
ern states did not feel any such interest, but were dis-
posed to favour the views of France, not from any posi-
tive benefits which they promised themselves from a
connection with that country, but because, in their con-
test for superiority in their own, it was their interest to
depress their political opponents, whose enterprising-
spirit, if it received no check, would acquire a degree
of weight and influence, which might perhaps counter-
balance the numerical advantages of their more indolent
rivals. I cannot suppose it will be disputed that the
interests of the northern and southern inhabitants of
America are not the same. The former are a hardy,
active, enterprising people, whose country is not rich in
native productions, and who can only rise to wealth and
power by industry and commerce. The latter, though
they may be as intelligent, are by no means as active as
their neighbors. Nor is it necessary for them to be so,
as they possess a country which yields them abundantly
ail the necessaries of life, and whose surplus produce
will always bring purchasers to their shores. The in-
habitants of the northern states have hitherto been their
92 SIR BRKNT0N HALLIBURTON.
carriers, but it is of greater consequence to the southern
party, who have obtained the reins of government, to
prevent an increase of wealth and power, and its attend-
ant influence, in the hands of their rivals, than to pre-
serve the convenience which the navigation of the
northern states has hitherto afforded to them.
Since the recognition of the independence of America
by Great Britain, four individuals have successively
filled the Presidential Chair. Washington was called to
it by the general voice of the country. But, even dur-
ing that early period, the northern and southern inhabi-
tants of America began to entertain different ideas of
their respective interests; ideas which naturally arose
from the difference of their respective situations, and
which they must therefore ever entertain. Massachu-
setts produced his successor in office. But, although
that powerful state was the originator of that resistance
to the mother country, which success has deprived of its
harsher name, and America should therefore have con-
sidered her as the parent of the revolution, yet the
southern states reluctantly submitted to the sway of
Adams. A regular systematic opposition was perfected
during his administration, and, at its expiration the
reins of government were placed in the hands of a
Virginian, about twelve years ago, and have never since
been resumed by the northern portion of the Union ;
nor, wThile the people of the south persist in their pre-
sent measures, can those of the north ever acquire suf-
ficient power and influence to regain them.
I consider the question then, sir, in this point of
view. If the confederation had never been formed, it is
probable that those different portions of it would, long
before this time, have contended for the dominion over
each other at the point of the sword. As they are al-
ready united under one general government the political
contest for superiority, though carried on without blood-
shed, is quite as serious and as interesting to those who
are engaged in it, as if their forces were encamped
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 93
against each other, in the open field. Each party will
look abroad with as much earnestness for support, and
will avail itself of the passing scenes in other countries,
either to advance its own interests, or to depress those
of its opponent, and nothing could have a greater tend-
ency to depress the Northern and Eastern States than a
war with the greatest maritime power in the world.
This, sir, I consider as the sole primary cause of the war
in which we are now involved, though there are second-
ary causes, to which I shall turn the attention of your
readers in my next letter.
I cannot, however, close this, without observing that
I by no means assert or think, that every individual
member of Congress who voted for the war, was induc-
ed to give his vote by these considerations. Various
arc the motives which lead different men to the same
determination ; intrigue and influence, prejudice and
partiality, friendship and hatred, interest and passion,
may separately act upon the members of a popular As-
sembly, and induce them to concur in one design. But
I am firmly of opinion, that that disposition to remain
at peace with Great Britain, which prevails among the
majority of the commercial states, and that subserviency
to the views of France, which is so evident both among
the leading;* men, and in the great bulk of the inhabi-
tants to the southward originates in the distinct interests
of each, and in the political rivalship which subsists be-
tween them ; which, after a long train of hostile conduct
against Great Britain on the part of that faction which
has possessed itself of the government, has finally termi-
nated in open war. The only difference between the
two parties is, that the previous prejudices and animosi-
ties of the northern people were in opposition to their
interest; and therefore we do not find such decided un-
animity among them, as we meet with to the southward,
where their prejudices and prepossessions unite with
their political views. I am? sir? Sec,
Ax Anglo- American.
9i SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
[For the Recorder.]
Sir, — In mv last letter I stated that that Confedera-
tion, which was designed to establish and preserve the
independence and equality of the separate States of
America, was not calculated to effect that purpose ; that
it only caused those who were desirous of obtaining
superiority to adopt different means of accomplishing
their object, and to carry on their plans of conquest in
the Congress instead of arming the Northern and South-
ern hosts against each other ; and I consider the war with
Great Britain into which the Southern people have
plunged the whole country, as a very natural conse-
quence of the measures which they had adopted to es-
tablish their ascendancy over the Northern portion of
the Union ; that it is in reality a war of the Southern
and Inland against the Northern and Eastern States of
America, and that the Executive Government and the
majority of Congress intended the Act, which declared
it, as an authority to the British cruisers to seize the
property and to destroy the power of their political
rivals.
I am quite aware that many persons will consider
these as very extravagant positions, and though they
may not be disposed to think very favourably of Mr.
Madison and his confederates, they will not believe
them so depraved as to act with such determined
hostility against their fellow-citizens ; but it must be
remembered that the fellow-citizenship of an inhabitant
of Boston and of Baltimore is not a very strong tie,
and the maxim " nemo repentc fait turpisdmus" is as
applicable to the progress in political as in any other
species of depravity. Men who have been long eagerly
bent upon one object, whose principles have become
habituated to bend to their passions, and whose percep-
tions of right and wrong have consequently lost their
original acuteness, will adopt measures with indifference
which, at one period, they would have shuddered even
SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON. 95
to contemplate. I have no doubt that Mr. Madison
when he first became jealous of that commerce which
was elevating the Northern States, could not have
believed that he ever would have resorted to so violent
a measure to effect its destruction. But when his
enmity and that of his associates had once been exerted
against the commercial part of the country, each year
would silently increase it, and every succeeding measure
which they directed against it, would probably prove
stronger than its predecessor. Many of the inhabitants
of the commercial states are convinced that the war has
originated in the causes which I have assigned, and
inveigh with much bitterness against those anti-
commercial prejudices which actuate their rulers. But
we, sir, though deeply interested in the subject, may
discuss it with less partiality than either of the political
parties in America ; and if the discussion should con-
vince us that the antipathy which the men of influence
in the Southern States entertained for Commerce, does
not originate in mere prejudice, but in a well grounded
apprehension that the wealth and consequent influence
which it would introduce into the commercial districts,
would eventually insure to them the superiority in the
Union, we must necessarily conclude that those who
are now possessed of power will persist in the measures
by which alone they can preserve their ascendancy ; and
consequently if they should succeed in their attempts
upon these colonies, they would have the same motives to
oppress us, which now induce them to devote the pro-
perty of their commercial fellow-citizens to destruction,
and their persons to captivity.
In the consideration of this subject it is necessary for
us to bear in mind the distinguishing characteristics of
the northern and southern inhabitants of the United
States of America ; both are sagacious and acute, but the
former are active and enterprising, the latter indolent
and luxurious. Notwithstanding the fertility of their
country, the love of case and pleasure has always ren-
96 SIR BREXTON HALLIBURTON.
dered the natives of the southern states more depen-
dent upon those with whom they were accustomed to
traffic, than those of the north whose country afforded
them less to give in return for what they received.
For a long time prior and indeed subsequent to the
Revolution in America, the inhabitants of Virginia, of
the Carolinas, and other southern states, were so deep-
ly indebted to the British merchants that it might be
said that the agriculture of those countries was carried
on with British capital.
But when America began to reap the advantages,
which she derived from the confusion introduced into
Europe by the French Revolution, when the ships of
France and Holland were seen no more on the ocean,
and those of America were substituted for them, the con-
sequent influx of wealth, though generally felt through-
out America, was peculiarly beneficial to the inhabitants
of the Northern States, who owned by far the greater
part of the vessels so profitably employed, and whose
activity and energy was unremittingly exerted to in-
crease the number of their shipping. From the mere
carriers of the productions of the Southern States, an
increase of capital very soon enabled many of them
to become the purchasers of it, and they then not only
derived the benefit of the freight, but the profits upon
the sale of the car^o when carried to its ultimate
market ; their capital likewise enabled them to purchase
such articles as were calculated for the consumption of
the Southern States, and by supplying them with these
they secured a profit upon the return cargo also. The
same indolent and luxurious habits which had plunged
them into debt to the British merchants, still prevailed
among the southern inhabitants of America, and they
would very soon have become generally indebted to
their more active fellow- citizens. It is true that there
were many merchants of opulence, enterprise, and
activity in the commercial towns to the southward, but
these would soon have borne no proportion to the num.-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 97
ber of those from the north who were engaged in trade
in the manner that I have described, as the shipping
generally and the American seamen exclusively belonged
to the northern states.
These circumstances early excited much alarm and
jealousy on the part of the leading men to the south-
ward, and although they did not think that the com-
merce in which the country was engaged was directly
injurious to them, but on the contrary was beneficial, as
they participated in the wealth which it introduced,
foresaw it would produce a serious effect upon their
relative situation with their northern confederates ; as it
would not only give them a much greater comparative
accession of wealth, but would occasion a direct state of
dependence upon them in a numerous body of the
southern planters and traders.
While the inhabitants of the Southern States were
indebted to England or to any other foreign country,
although such a state was not desirable, the disadvan-
tages attending it were by no means so great to the men
of influence there, as they would have become if they
had fallen into debt to those who lived under the same
elective government with themselves. Foreigners would
not have the same inducements to exert that influence
in their elections, which a creditor ever has with his
debtor ; indeed, if they interfered at all they would
probably be disposed to forward the views of those who
were indebted to them ; but if this influence should be
transferred from those who had no immediate interest in
the event of their elections, to their political rivals, it
was highly probable that they would exert it most
actively and successfully. It was obvious, therefore, to
men of reflection that commerce not only increased the
wealth of the northern states in a greater degree than
those of the south, but that it had also a direct tendency
to render the latter dependent upon the former.
Some of your readers may not immediately compre-
hend the political consequences which would have
98 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
ensued, if the southern states should have become
generally indebted to the commercial states ; and others
may be at a loss to imagine how it could happen that a
fertile country possessing many articles of export should
become indebted to the consumers of many of those
articles who had no native productions to give them in
return. But I would turn the attention of this class of
your readers to a very common case in our own
Province. We frequently see in the different town-
ships of this young and flourishing colony, and par-
ticularly in the new settlements, the sons of some of our
farmers commence, what is termed a country trader ; the
father is probably no richer than his neighbors, and the
trader therefore commences without a capital, and relies
solely for success upon his own activity and prudence ;
if he bears a fair character, he very easily procures a
small supply of goods from a merchant in town : these
he retails to his neighbors and receives their produce in
payment, which he brings to market, and with the
proceeds of it pays for his first supply of goods, and
obtains another. In this manner he continues to
traffic for some time, and if he has onlv a tolerable
share of prudence and judgment he will not fail to
amass a fair portion of wealth. If the inhabitants of
the townships are extravagant, and indulge themselves
in articles of luxury or dress beyond their means, which
has been the case in some of the settlements, they
become generally indebted to the trader, who is then
the first man in the township ; and need I ask the
inhabitants of this country if they have not often
witnessed the effects of the influence which a man thus
situated, exerts at an election. Now the same causes
will generally speaking produce the same effects upon
the great scale as upon the small, and the case I have
mentioned illustrates the relative situation of the north-
ern and southern States. The southern states yield the
articles with which America is to pay for those foreign
productions which she consumes ; so in the case I have
SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON. 99
mentioned, the extravagant farmers produce the articles
with which the merchant in town is to be paid for his
merchandise which they consume. But when the trader
steps in as a middle man between the farmer and the.
merchant, although he has no capital and produces
nothing himself, yet by deriving a profit both upon his
sale of country produce in town, and upon the articles
which he carries into the country, he creates a capital
by his industry, and renders his extravagant customers
dependent upon him. So the inhabitants of the com-
mercial states, by purchasing the productions of the
south from their extravagant owners, and deriving a
profit upon the sale of them in Europe, and returning to
the southern ports with wine and other articles of
luxury of European growth, which suit the taste and
habits of the natives of the southern states, create a
source of wealth by their superior industry and
economy, which it is probable would eventually in-
troduce a state of dependence on the part of those they
supplied, similar to that experienced by the extravagant
farmer on the country trader.
The Northern States of America though deficient in
native productions, would have become to the Southern
States, what Holland was to those nations on the conti-
nent of Europe who were but little engaged in naviga-
tion and commerce ; and it is notorious that the Dutch
merchants, although they had no native articles to
export, were among the richest in Europe. Nor was
there any reasonable prospect of preventing the north-
ern states from deriving this advantage but by the de-
struction of that commerce which threatened to bestow
it upon them. The original causes were beyond the
control of those men whose political consequence was
thus brought into jeopardy. They originated in those
distinguishing characteristics of indolence and extrava-
gance, of activity and enterprise, which climate had
introduced and habit had confirmed. It is true, if Ave
consider the United States of America as one nation she
257887 H
100 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON'.
was materially benefited by commerce, in the southern
as well as the northern portion of the Union, and had
she been under a monarchial government, or indeed
under any government where the care of the general
interest was the actuating principle, it would have been
carefully cherished. But as it would certainly have
diminished the political importance of the great land-
holders and planters to the southward, they early deter-
mined upon its destruction.
We, sir, have indulged ourselves for years in laugh-
ing at what we termed the Chinese schemes, the philo-
sophical reveries, and the Utopian dreams of Mr. Jef-
ferson and his political associates ; but although they
have sacrificed the good of their country to their own
ambitious views, yet I confess it appears evident to me
that they could not have devised better means to secure
that personal superiority and political power which
they are so anxious to retain, than those to which they
have had recourse. If commerce had flourished as it
would have done, if it had not been assailed bv embar-
goes, non-importation acts and those other measures
with which the American government pretended to
defend, but really meant to destroy it, it is highly pro-
bable that the mere agents of the northern merchants'
would soon have acquired a greater degree of influence
in many of the southern States than the greatest land-
holder and planter. This influence would of course
have been exerted in favour of those candidates for the
Presidential Chair and for seats in Congress, who were
supported by the northern states, and the dictatorial
voice of Virginia would have been heard no more.
It is then to preserve the power of the landholder to
the southward by the destruction of American commerce
and navigation, that war has been declared against Great
Britain. To commerce itself they are not inimical ; and if
Sweden, Denmark, or any other European nation should
be permitted to withdraw from the great contest in
which the world is now involved, and to maintain the
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 101
character and privileges of a neutral, there are no ports
on the borders of the ocean to which they will be more
welcome than those in the Southern States of America.
If we do not blockade them strictly, they would then
not only accomplish the object of destroying the wealth
and power of the Northern States, but they would
accomplish it without a sacrifice of their own trade ;
they would much rather encourage the navigation of
Sweden or of any other European power than that of
Massachusetts Bay, as their own commerce may be
carried on quite as conveniently in neutral vessels as in
those of their political rivals, who would thus be de-
prived of the means of acquiring that aggrandizement so
much dreaded by the present rules of America.
We have heard much, sir, lately, of an embassy from
the United States to Russia, to seek her mediation be-
tween Great Britain and America. If this mission has
any object beyond that of cajoling the American people,
it is probably designed to impress upon the mind of the
Emperor the necessity and convenience of allowing one
among the northern nations of Europe to remain neu-
tral ; if this point was once carried, it would release
the southern people from most of the evils of the war
(except at such times as they should be blockaded)
while the navigating states must inevitably sink beneath
its pressure.
The impositions which have been practised upon
John Bull have frequently exposed him to ridicule ; but
if the good folks in America can really be persuaded
that their government have undertaken this war in de-
fence of their commerce, when every school boy sees
that it must inevitably lead to its destruction, or that
they are sincere in seeking the good offices of Russia to
induce Great Britain to grant them that peace, which I
blush to acknowledge, she has been soliciting from the
Court of Washington ; honest John must then cede the
palm of credulity to his American offspring ; but as the
wresting of this trophy from his brow is not one of their
102 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
most undutiful acts it will excite more surprise than
anger ; let the act, however, be their own, for I trust
the deception is too gross to impose upon a single
Anglo-American.
It is needless to remark how half a century ago,
Judge Halliburton foresaw and prognosticated the hos-
tility of North and South towards each other. True,
the proximate cause of the present difficulty is not
specially pointed out, as the spark for kindling that
flame which now burns with such furv throughout the
late Union. But the ultimate issue arising from all
causes was distinctly perceived by him and foretold.
But the documents may speak for themselves ; they, at
least, prove the interest which he felt in the colony,
and the ability with which he could wield his pen in
furtherance of any great cause.
Upon Mr. Madison's message he wrote and published
some severe strictures, particularly examining it from a
legal stand point of view. These letters, and those of
the " Anglo- American" were, without doubt, written
for more eyes and heads than those in Nova Scotia.
Sir John Sherbrooke at the time was Lieutenant-Gover-
nor of the Province ; and there can be little question,
but that through him the views of one close at hand,
and familiar with the whole business from beginning to
end, were read and studied with deep attention, at home.
Two more papers of this class were written by Judge
Halliburton some ten or twelve vears later : one of
them was published, the other was not. They were
both written during the administration of the Govern-
ment by Sir James Kempt. The one consisted of cer-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 10S
tain observations upon the Governor's instructions de-
livered to Sir James during his term of office, and con-
tains sentiments on free trade so enlarged and liberal as
to be worthy of a later age. The other is a pamphlet
seen by very few of those now living, originally printed
at Halifax in the year 1825, and afterwards printed in
London in 1831. The value of these colonies to Eng-
land in her position as mistress of the seas, is set forth
with arguments so sound and language so powerful, that
it may not be amiss in the present day to call attention
to the unalterable facts. The extracts immediatelv fol-
lowing are from observations on the Governor's instruc-
tions :
" It does not occur to me that any alterations are re-
quired in the remaining sections, and I would venture
to suggest a hope that no very material alteration will
be made in the General Instructions.
" The instructions which have been given to Govern-
ors with their Commissions on the first formation of a
Colonial Government have been generally considered
to be the basis of the Colonial constitution, and the
Colonists have thought that as far as they conveyed to,
or recognized rights in his Majesty's subjects, within
the Colony, they could neither be altered nor rescinded,
so far indeed as they were restrictive, it has never been
questioned that the restriction (if it depended solely
upon the instruction) might be lessened or removed.
" This idea has been carried so far that some have
supposed that a Colonial Constitution, derived from his
Majesty's instructions rests upon a more secure founda-
tion than one created by Act of Parliament, upon the
ground that the Parliament has the power to repeal any
law which they have previously enacted, but that his
Majesty cannot recall any rights which he has granted
to his subjects; and the advocates for this opinion de-
T04 SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON.
clare that if the Parliament were to repeal the Quebec
Bill without making any provision for the Government
of Canada, that the power of governing that country
would revert as a matter of course to its old channel,
and the people would lose their right of being repre-
sented ; but they assert that the inhabitants of Nova
Scotia would not lose their right of representation by
the revocation of the Governor's instruction to call
assemblies of the freeholders.
" Without discussing the soundness of this opinion I
would merely suggest to your Excellency the impolicy
of making any important alterations in the General In-
structions. The mischievous might represent the mea-
sure as a remodelling of the Colonial constitutions.
" But this argument does not apply to the instructions
relative to trade ; these are generally speaking restrict-
ive upon the Colonies, and a relaxation of them is most
ardently desired. My situation and pursuits in life have
not afforded to me the opportunity of acquiring suffi-
cient knowledge upon this subject, to give to your
Excellency any opinion upon these instructions in de-
tail : but no one who takes any interest in the welfare
of the country can reside long in the Colonies without
making general observations upon this important sub-
ject ; and the first consideration which presents itself is
the effect which the erection of an independent govern-
ment on this side of the Atlantic must ultimately pro-
duce in the mind of the colonist in his view of the
relations between the colony and the mother country.
" While the whole of America was subject to one or
other of the European powers, the system of confining
the trade of the colony to the mother country, extended
all over the western continent, and while every inhabi-
tant of America was subject to it, no invidious compa-
risons presented themselves to excite discontent.
(t But when a merchant, residing in Quebec or in
Halifax, is now called bv the course of his business to
visit New York or Boston, and sees the wealth which
SIR BREXTON HALLIBURTON. 105
the inhabitants of those cities have derived from unre-
stricted trade with all the world, it is natural for him to
-desire a participation in that advantage, and although
he may be warmly attached to the British constitution,
he is insensibly led to condemn the restrictions which
debar him from it.
" It may, however, be said with justice, that an in-
terested individual is not the proper person to judge of
interests, so various and so complicated as those which
are involved in the system of commercial restrictions,
mi
which the European Powers have hitherto imposed
upon their Colonies. But it is the duty of the states-
man to consider the effect of every material change in
the situation of public affairs and of public feeling ; and
to decide whether a system, which may have been wise
and useful at one time, may not under other circum-
stances become impolitic and mischievous.
" I am aware that some are of the opinion that the
period of separation between a Parent State and its
Colonies, must inevitably arrive, and that no system of
policy can avert this event, when the colonies have
attained sufficient wealth and strength to assert their
independence ; and politicians have existed, so narrow-
minded as to suppose it expedient to cramp their exer-
tions, and stint their growth, in order to preserve them
in a state of dependence.
" Whatever opinion may be entertained by his Majes-
ty's Ministers, upon the first point, we have no reason
to suppose that any one of them is actuated by the nar-
row-minded principle to which I have last alluded. I
am persuaded that they take a lively interest in the
affairs of the Empire at large, and. that they would
gladly adopt any measures to advance the growth of the
colonies, which did not interfere with the general inter-
ests of the country.
" It can scarcely be supposed that any person in his
Majesty's confidence, can think the separation of the
colonies from the mother country a desirable event ; if
8
106 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
there be, I address no arguments to them. But to'
those who think it inevitable, I would suggest that the
present colonies in North America are differently situ-
ated from those formerly possessed by Great Britainr
which now compose the United States. When disputes-
arose between them and the parent state, the popular
leaders were animated by the prospect of erecting the
country into an independent nation ; but no reasonable
man in these colonies can ever entertain any such view.
We can never become sufficiently strong to stand alone,
and must, therefore, either continue our connexion with
Great Britain, or form one with America. In consider-
ing the 'probabilities upon this subject, I would introduce
no high-flown sentiments of loyalty on one side, or of
liberty on the other ; but adopting the lower, though
sounder principles, that the colonies, like the rest of
mankind, will be ultimately guided by their interests, I
think it may be made to appear probable at least, that
interest would induce them to desire a continuance of
their connection with Great Britain, if a liberal system
of policy should be adopted towards them.
" In the first place, it is certainly true that no citizen
in the United States of America has his personal liberty
more firmly secured to him, than his Majesty's subjects
have in this Province.
" Secondly, it is equally true, that whatever property
we acquire is guarded as sacredly by the laws which
prevail in the colonies, as it is by those which exist in
the United States.
" Upon these important points, therefore, we have no
reason to desire a change. It must, however, be ad-
mitted that the facility of acquiring property is greater
in the United States than in these colonies ; and that a
wider field is opened there for commercial enterprise.
Should this continue to be the case, it cannot be doubted'
that the interest of the colonists will lead them ulti-
mately to prefer a connexion with a country which will
\>ermit them to- participate in those benefits, rather than
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 10T
to continue subject to one which withholds from them
such privileges. •
" It is for his Majesty's ministers to decide, whether
it would not be wise to prevent this desire, by gradually
removing the cause of it. I say gradually, because too
sudden a relaxation of those restrictions, would certainly
injure that class of his Majesty's subjects at home, who
have hitherto engrossed the colonial trade, and might
prove injurious to the colonies themselves, by exciting a
wild spirit of speculation in branches of commerce, with
which they are as yet unacquainted.
"It is for them to consider whether it would not be
proper now to view the colonies in a different light.
They have hitherto been viewed as a p?'operty, by which
the sources of the wealth and commerce of the parent
state might be increased ; not as an extension of terri-
tory, by which the physical force of the empire may be
augmented. So far, indeed, from adding to its strength,
they have generally presented vulnerable points to an
enemy, and have required a considerable portion of the
British forces to be employed in their defence. But
the time will soon arrive when they must either add to
the strength of Great Britain, or of America. In the
event of a war between those two countries, it is evident
that, if the feelings of the colonists were not favorable
to Great Britain, it would be difficult to retain them ;•
and few persons will be so romantic as to suppose those
feelings would be in favour of Great Britain, if interest
leant the other way.
" It will be easy to prove that the addition of these-
northern colonies to the United States, would not be a
desirable event to Great Britain. It would increase in
a very great degree the naval strength of America, by
giving to them many commodious harbours, and a
hardy race of seamen which our fisheries must produce ;
it would add to the wealth and consequently to the
national resources of that country, bv the possession of
108 SIR BREXTON HALLIBURTON.
those fisheries, and the mineral productions in which
these provinces abound. •
"The retention of these provinces would not merely
prevent America from enjoying these advantages ; but
if the affections of the people are also retained it would
be an important weight thrown into the opposite scale.
The population of the colonies, it is true, neither does
nor wTill enable them to cope single handed with
America ; but it must be remembered that the United
States of America are not composed of a people well
adapted for recruiting armies, to carry on conquests.
The inhabitants of that country are a formidable enemy
to invade ; but they are, generally speaking, too com-
fortable in their own homes to engage in distant expe-
ditions ; and their Government could seldom raise a
disposable force, which the colonies, if hearty in their
opposition, could not with a little assistance from the
mother country, successfully resist.
" The question w?hich his Majesty's ministers, there-
fore, have now under consideration, relating to the
colonies, is not merely commercial, but involves import-
ant political considerations. Should they be induced,
after mature deliberation, to decide that it would be
sounder policy to act upon the principle of relaxation,
rather than upon that of restriction, and determine to
pursue a course which would ultimately give to the
colonies a much greater freedom of trade, it may be
doubted whether that event would prove injurious to
the commerce of Great Britain. The wealth which a
free trade has enabled the inhabitants of the United
States to acquire, has made them better customers to
Great Britain, than they could have been, had thev
continued cramped by restrictions ; and should the
liberality and indulgence of the mother country even
produce the effects of making the colonics in a series of
years, virtually independent, their nominal connexion, if
it should be nothing more, would prevent their falling
into the hands of America. The pride which they now
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
10D
feel, in considering themselves as forming a part of one
of the greatest empires in the world, would in all pro-
bability still continue. If the power of the mother
country over the colonies should not be as great, after
they had attained to a state of maturity, as it was in
their infancy, her influence would still be felt ; as those
angry feelings which successful rebellion excited in the
revolted colonies, would never be called into existence
among a people who must attribute their prosperity to
the fostering hand of an indulgent parent."
Each reader can make his own observations on the
tone and judgment manifested in this document. It
surely proves that he was not pent up by contracted
notions, or the mere servant at will of Governments and
Governors. He had an opinion of his own, and he
exercised it. Though all may not agree with the con-
clusion at which he arrives, it is evident that he care-
fully weighed in the scale any matters brought beneath
his notice, and endeavoured to ascertain just what they
came to in the balance. His mind was more enlarged
and his sentiments more generous than men of his day
are usually accredited with.
In the year 1816, Judge Halliburton was appointed
to a seat in the Council, then consisting of twelve mem-
bers, and discharging the combined executive and legis-
lative duties. The names of those with whom he was
thus associated, were as follows : —
Hon. S. S. Blowers, Prest.
Rt. Rev. Robert Stanser,
Bishop of Nova Scotia.
Michael Wallace.
Charles Hill.
Richard John Uniacke.
Charles Morris.
James Stewart.
Thomas N. Jeffery.
John Black.
Brenton Halliburton.
Philip WonEnousE.
Rupert D. George, Sec'y.
110 SIR BRESTON HALLIBURTON.
His value as a working man was soon felt, and lie
was rarely absent from his post. Scarcely a measure of
importance came up, that lie was not chosen as one of
those most competent to take it in hand. In looking
over the minutes of Council, we cannot help noticing
the frequent recurrence of his name. In the years
1817, 1818, and. 1819, he was very busy with all those
questions of local interest which came before the Coun-
cil ; and when, a year or two later, the province took a
fresh start, he specially interested himself in all that
pertained to its true interests. Like the law lords in
the British House of Peers, he watched and moulded
all questions with a legal eye and hand. In all matters
relating to education he took the deepest interest. He
was a warm advocate for granting provincial aid to the
Pictou Academy, and for many years strenuously sup-
ported its claims. Nor did he cease to uphold its cause
until the injudicious character of the resolutions passed
by its trustees, compelled him most reluctantly to
withhold from it his further advocacy : for he was
no blind adherent to party, but gave reasons for his
course, — reasons always clearly expressed with orderly
connexion and simplicity of language. Nor was it
in the Council only that he was busily engaged. In
everything which concerned the welfare of the pro-
vince he came forward prominently to lend his aid.
When the mercantile community were anxious to im-
prove their position as a body, and to possess at once a
recognized status amongst the merchants of British
North America, and a bond of union and mutual inter-
course, Judge Halliburton was to be found in their
midst, helping them with information, and furthering
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. Ill
their cause. At the public meetings his speeches were
among the most lengthened and able. When social
matters attracted the attention of the community, he
was at his post, ready to work, as he was willing to
advise. Of the Poor Man's Friend Society — an insti-
tution which circumstances seemed loudly to call for —
the Judge was an active member. At the public meet-
ings for the furtherance of its objects, his voice was sel-
dom unheard. Unhappily this last public movement
seems to have been early blasted by the introduction of
politics. The newspapers Avere filled with correspond-
ence, breathing strongly of bitter feeling and insinuating
unworthy motives. The society soon broke up, and its
name was soon forgotten. Thus busily employed with
public affairs, and the special duties of his office, his
time was diligently and usefully spent in the province.
Nor does he seem to have sought any respite from
labours which were at once toilsome and responsible,
until the year 1821, from which date until the year of
his elevation to the Chief Justiceship, will comprise
the period of time contained in the following chapter.
CHAPTER IV".
On the 23d June, 1821, Judge Halliburton made one-
of a party who embarked with Admiral Griffith on
board H. M. S. " Newcastle," on a voyage to Quebec.
Of this pleasant trip to Canada he kept a journal, the
brief notes of which testify to his powers of observation,
the vivacity of his disposition, and his love for nature
The voyage was made without any special incident but
one, which he describes with a good deal of interest as
bearing witness to the order and discipline maintained
in the British Navy. The ship was beating through the
narrow Strait of Canseau, and in tacking touched the
shore near Ship Harbour, and the quiet and prompt
manner in which everything was done struck him so-
much that he made the following note of it :
" Nothing could have been more interesting than
this scene. Instead of the hurry and bustle which
might naturally have been expected to accompany the
exertions to get the ship off, they were made with so
much quietness and regularity that a person seated in
the cabin would not have known that anything unusual
had happened ; everything was done with the utmost
promptitude : but the officers issued their orders without
the appearance of haste, and the crew received them in
silence and obeved them with alacritv."
As the ship sailed up the St. Lawrence, the weather
SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON. 113
was gloomy, and the passengers saw but little of the
scenery. On the third day, however, after entering the
mouth of the river, the fog cleared away, and Judge
Halliburton enjoyed the scene unfolded to him very
much. " July 3d, 1821. Until this morning the wea-
ther had been wet and hazy from the day of our en-
trance into the St. Lawrence, and consequently we could
discover but little of the banks of that majestic river ;
the occasional glimpses, however, which we gained
through the fog inspired us with an idea of the grandeur
of the scenery. But on this morning the sun rose in all
his majesty, the atmosphere was clear and cool, the
wind fair, and everything conspired to heighten the
natural beauties of the country. Confined as I had been
for years to the tame scenery of Nova Scotia, I was not
merely surprised, I was astonished on opening the view
of Quebec, which presented itself to us. About half-
past 8, the wind baffled us a little off Point Levi, which
afforded to us the opportunity of seeing the prospect
from different points. The bold grandeur of Cape Dia-
mond excited my admiration much more than the Falls
of Montmorenci, which (although a beautiful feature in
the scene,) 1 must acknowledge fell short of my expecta-
tions. Cape Diamond has the advantage of contrast in
the soft view which Point Levi presents on the opposite
banks, and its rude and abrupt height is augmented to
the eye by the buildings which cluster at its base. We
landed with the Admiral at 11 a. m., and viewed the
town, which by no means fulfils the expectations which
its appearance from the water excites. We ascended
the heights of Cape Diamond. The approach to its pre-
cipitous bank towards the river made me so dizzy that
114 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
I was glad to turn my eyes in the opposite direction,
and the eye cannot turn any way from the magnificent
eminence without meeting much to gratify it, The
country on the banks of the Charles, which runs into
the St. Lawrence below Quebec, is delightful, and the
distant mountains make a very fine termination to the
scene."
After a short visit at Quebec, the party proceeded to
Montreal, and in their walk through the city, Judge
Halliburton made some observations on the buildings,
which it will be as well to transcribe : " The town is
very superior to Quebec. The generality of the private
houses are substantial and apparently comfortable, and
many of them indicate that the owners are or should be
wealthy. I afterwards learned that these buildings had
enriched the town, but impoverished the builders. The
public buildings are very good, and appear quite consis-
tent with the present state of the country. They have
not fallen into our error in Nova Scotia of building for
posterity. There is a lofty monument erected near
them to the memory of Nelson, which speaks more for
the inhabitants of Montreal than it does for the taste or
skill of the artist employed to erect it. The represen-
tation of some of his naval victories is displayed on the
faces of the pedestal- If they are at all correct, the fire
from Nelson's ships must have indeed been terrific, for
the very smoke appears as if it would sink whatever
vessel it fell upon. I wish the hero had been enveloped
in such a cloud on the memorable 19th of October ; a
musket-ball never could have penetrated it."
The Earl and Countess of Dalhousie who had left
Quebec some time previously, for the purpose of
SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON. 115
making an excursion through the United States, were
now at Kingston, having accomplished their purpose,
and been highly gratified therewith. It had been
arranged that the Admiral's party should meet them in
Canada, and together proceed to visit the Falls of
Niagara.
A letter from a friend to Judge Halliburton, an-
nounced that the Earl and his friends were at
Kingston, anxiously awaiting the arrival of himself and
the Admiral, that they might start immediately for their
destination. Of the journey between Montreal and
Kingston, Judge Halliburton gives the following ac-
count : " We thus accomplished our journey from
Montreal to Kingston, in three days, and were only
thirty-seven hours and three quarters actually in the
carriage. The road as far as Prescott - is very good ;
from that to Kingston, it is extremely bad. There is
not, however, a bad hill in the whole extent ; the
country is uniformly level and very fertile. Through-
out Lower Canada it is almost studded with churches,
whose glittering spires (for all are covered with tin)
enliven the scene very much. The system of Agricul-
ture, however, is most wretched ; and the land which
appears originally to have been of an excellent quality?
is quite exhausted. The crops were thin and miser-
able ; the farmers' houses, small, but well calculated
to resist the cold. In Upper Canada, the appearance
is directly the reverse of all this. You travel for miles
without meeting with a place of worship ; but the
private houses are very superior to any thing in the
country parts of Nova Scotia, and I might say (with
few exceptions) to those in the towns also. Their
116 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
farms are apparently well cultivated, and the crops in
general look extremely well. As to the characters or
manners of the people of either Province, it would be
presumptuous to speak, as we merely passed through
the high road. The soil in Upper Canada, on the
banks of St. Lawrence, is of a very superior quality,
The road passes through a great extent of intervale-
occasionally through a sandy loam, and sometimes,
though rarely, through a loamy sand. One of the
drivers, (a very decent man) assured me that they
frequently took a crop of potatoes, or Indian corn, and
two crops of wheat off the burnt land, before they laid
it down, and this, of course, without manuring."
As soon as arrangements were made, the whole party
started for the Falls. If it were proper to quote from
the Judge's "journal," the entire description of the
journey and the actual visit to this wonder of the
world, the whole would be read with interest. The
account, however, is so interspersed with remarks and
anecdotes of a private nature, and only meant for the
perusal of his own friends, that it would be a breach of
confidence to transcribe them. Bat there is a simplicity
and vivacity in the running comment that lends a charm
to the diary, and makes one desire to travel over the
same ground.
A few extracts, necessarily shorn of much of their
value by their severance from the context, are intro-
duced, in order to show the pleasure which the scene
afforded him :
" After breakfast we proceeded to the Falls, but as
the Admiral's party had not experienced the pleasure of
travelling in canoes, his lordship proposed that we
SIR BR&NT'ON HALLIBURTON. 11
i*
should accompany the ladies, who preferred that mode
of travelling. The two canoes which had brought the
Earl's party from Lower Canada, and were to convey
his lordship to Drummond's Island, on Lake Huron,
were accordingly launched. They were thirty-three
feet in length, five and a half in breadth, and about
three feet in depth, and manned with eight Canadian
voyageurs, besides a steersman aft and another forward.
Mr. Shaw, a gentleman of N. W. Company, who was
with us, assured me that these canoes would carry four
and a half tons of merchandize, besides provisions for
their crews, for sixty days. The canoemen commenced
singing and paddling almost at the same time. The day
was fine, — the water smooth, — the surrounding scenery
beautiful,- — the party pleasant ; in short the toute en*
semble was delightful. The two canoes kept within a few
feet of each other. One of the canoemen led the songj
and the crews of both joined in the chorus. The sing-
ing was in a very different style from our batteau-men
on the lake, and although we could not get at the sense,
we were highly delighted with the sound of the songs.
In this manner we proceeded to Queenstown, about seven
miles above Fort George. Here the rapids commenced,
and we quitted our canoes very reluctantly to proceed
by land. After viewing the spot where the gallant
Brock fell, we repaired to the carriages which had been
prepared for us.
" We were now within ten miles of the Falls, and
anticipated the pleasure of witnessing this great wonder
of nature in less than two hours. Her ladyship, how-
ever, proposed that we should quit the road and drive
to the whirlpool, as we might not have leisure to stop
there on our return. She proposed this without inti-
mating that it was an object deserving of much atten-
tion, and we proceeded towards it, without having our
expectations highly raised. You may judge, therefore,
of our surprise when we found ourselves, after a short
walk through the woods, on the edge of a precipice,
118 SIR BltEXTON HALLIBURTON.
which appeared to be two hundred feet high. The
opposite bank corresponded in height ; and the whole
waters of the St. Lawrence were rushing between in a
narrow channel to a point where a sudden turn in the
river produced an ever-boiling whirlpool. You cannot
understand the effect by mere description.
" We remained admiring the whirlpool about a quar-
ter of an hour, and then resumed our course towards
the Falls, which we reached about two o'clock ; and
here the pen should drop, for bold would he be who
would attempt to describe them, or even to communicate
an idea of bis own feelings, when they first burst upon
the view, as it respects the Falls of Niagara. Therefore I
have only to sav, that to know, you must see them.
" The Horse Shoe Fall on the English side, which is
infinitely grander, burst upon us, and we were really
lost in admiration and astonishment. I do not remem-
ber to have experienced similar feelings. I could
neither speak nor be silent, but left the whole party be-
hind and hurried towards the Horse Shoe with an inex-
pressible mixture of wonder, of delight, and of awe. I
never longed so much at once to dive, to swim, to soar,
to glide, as at this moment, and wished that I were suf-
ficiently etherial to float in safety upon the waters which
rolled so majestically over the precipice, near to which
I stood. The rest of the party soon joined me, and we
remained nearly two hours at the Table Rock."
After mentioning a number of separate visits paid
during two or three davs to the Falls, and viewing them
from various stand-points, — sometimes by the light of
the early sun. — sometimes by that of the moon, far on in
the hours of the night, — we have a description of the visit
now so ordinarily paid to the Falls. Here are his
notes. Those who have lately done the same, may
institute a comparison between the present and forty
years ago :
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 119
" 16th. I rose early this morning, having engaged to
accompany his lordship and Col. Beresford under the
Falls. We left our clothes in the shed which covers the
staircase, and proceeded along the bottom of the bank
about half a mile sans chemise in a nankeen jacket and
pantaloons only. The morning was very favorable to
our enterprise, and we advanced many yards (1 should
think thirty,) under the tremendous torrent without any
difficulty. His lordship led the way, and seated himself
near to a slanting rock, which impeded our progress-
farther. We could scarcely hear each other's voices.
There was at times a momentary difficulty of breathingr
from the rush of the waters inwards, but the adventure
is not attended with any risk. The situation produces
a mixed sensation of awe and admiration. One would
not go to the Falls without paying a visit to the cavern,,
which does not appear designed for human entrance ;
hut when the visit is once paid there remains no wish to
repeat it. On my return home it appeared to me that
the following lines might be conceived, though they
could not easily be penned there : —
" Here, seated mid the rush of mighty watersr
We look aloft to that stupendous height
From whence the roaring cataract descends,
And tremble, lest the torrent in its fury
Should dash this massy rock into the flood.
But 'tis not fear, when such a scene as this
With awful grandeur overpowers the soul,
When mixt emotions thrill through every vein,
Astonished man seems raised above himself,
Nor knows if pain or pleasure 7tis he feels."
" The countess and the ladies were to return under
our escort to Montreal. Soon after breakfast we paid a
farewell visit to the Falls, where, as I was lying upon
my breast looking over the precipice at the Table Rock,
I heard Lord Dalhousie utter an exclamation which at
first alarmed me, but I was soon relieved by his calling
out, " The hat, the hat." I looked up and beheld my
120 SIR BRENTOX HALLIBURTON,
poor broad -brimmed hat (upon the acquisition of which
Judge Stewart congratulated me so warmly) grace-
fully floating upon the air between the Table Rock and
the abyss below. Notwithstanding the half-formed wish
which I entertained on my first visit to the Falls — that
I could take a similar flight — I was well pleased my
head was not in it. I had taken it off, before I laid
•down, and placed it upon the rock, to avoid the very
evil which occurred, but a sudden breeze bore it away
in despite of my precaution. His lordship immedi-
ately took Lady Dalhousie's arm, who was upon her
hands and knees looking over the precipice beside me ;
and reminding her ladyship that as she was not very
weighty the wind might seize her drapery and bear her
oft1 also. It was supposed that my poor beaver was
irretrievably lost, but I dispatched a man after it, with
the promise of half a dollar if he would look for it, to
be augmented to a dollar in case he found it : and I very
soon regained the felt, and felt what I regained. Of
course its value is very much augmented, as I imagine
very few hats have floated down the Falls of Niagara
•and returned to their own hloclcs again."
The Judge soon returned home, and was once more
•engaged in his duties at the Council board., and on the
Bench. It has been alreadv mentioned that he wrote
and published, in the year 1825, some " Observations on
the importance of the North American Colonies to
Great Britain," which were republished in London in
1831. At a time like the present, when the question
of throwing these colonies upon their own resources for
defence, has been seriously brought forward in the
British Parliament, and advocated by some of the ablest
writers of the British press, it will not be inappropriate
to reprint the pamphlet entire. Indeed the reproduc-
tion of this treatise will give a value to this memoir
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON, 121
which it would not otherwise possess, inasmuch as it
not only shows the compass of his mind, but may also
be of service at that juncture of affairs towards which
we are fast hastening.
Observations on the Importance of the North
American Colonies to Great Britain : By an Old
Inhabitant of British America.
CHAPTER I,
It should aiford great satisfaction to the inhabitants
of British America to observe, that the attention of our
statesmen is every day called, more and more towards
the colonies of this continent, not only by those who
have an opportunity of expressing their opinions in
parliament, but by numerous writers in the public
prints and periodical publications of the day.
The minds of his Majesty's Ministers have been so
much occupied, by the important events which have
occurred in Europe during the last five-and-thirty years,
that they have been unable to allow themselves time to
inquire into the real value of these colonies ; and we
should therefore rejoice, if this subject is brought to
their consideration even by those who deny our im-
portance.
It is contended, by some writers of the present day,
that the North American Colonies are not worth the
expense which it will cost the mother country to main-
tain and defend them. These writers do not say that
the colonies are positively mischievous, or that Great
Britain would sustain any injury from retaining them if
they cost her nothing ; but they lay down this position
— * that no colony is worth retaining, unless the mother
country derives a revenue equal to her expenditure upon
it.' But may we not ask the advocates of this opinion,
whether pounds, shillings, and pence should alone
122 SIR RRENTON HALLIBUKTOK.
engross a statesman's mind ; and if the adjustment of
an account of profit and loss is the whole duty of a
politician ?
It behoves those who would wish to form a correct
opinion of the propriety of retaining or discarding these
colonies, to consider well the present situation of the
United States of America. During the long contest
which so recently distracted Europe, the feelings of a
large portion of the population of that country were
decidedly hostile to us ; and their government chose to
declare war upon us at a time when the freedom not
only of Great Britain, but of the whole world, might be
said to have depended upon the event of the invasion of
Russia by Buonaparte.
Circumstances may aeain occur, to excite a similar
disposition, and it may be roused into action at a period
still more inconvenient than that which has just been
alluded to. Should not our statesmen, then, reflect
upon the means by which this hostile disposition may
be best averted ; and how it may be rendered least
formidable should it unfortunately be excited, ?
When we look to the United States of America, we
see a people of British descent ; who speak our lan-
guage, adopt our laws, and who inherit our love of
freedom and our spirit of enterprise. We see this-
energetic people rapidly spreading themselves over an
immense continent, containing every variety of climate,
and capable of yielding the richest productions of the
earth. We can set no bounds to the population which
such a country may in future maintain ; and we cannot
refrain from asking ourselves if they are not destined to
become formidable rivals to the nations in Europe ; and
whether it does not behove the statesmen of that por-
tion of the world to keep a watchful eye upon their
growing power ?
Now it may be safely asserted, that no circumstance
would have so great a tendency to increase that power^
as the surrender of these colonies to the United States t
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON, 123
nay, we may go further, and declare that it is almost the
only measure that can render these states formidable
enemies of Great Britain.
Separated from Europe by the Atlantic Ocean, they
can only become formidable to nations of that continent
as a maritime. power. This truth is so obvious, that it
cannot have escaped those who direct the affairs of the
present mistress of the sea : but it ought not to be taken
for granted (as it unfortunately is by many) that
America must inevitably become a great maritime power :
many predict that she will be so, because she possesses
a great extent of coast, has the means of supporting an
immense population, and abounds in rich productions,
with which she can carry on an extensive foreign trade.
It must be admitted, that a country so situated may
become very powerful upon the ocean : and it is highly
probable that the navy of the United States will very
soon be a valuable addition to the fleets of any of the
European powers in future wars. But let it be
recollected, that France and Spain possess all the
advantages which have been enumerated, and yet their
united naval force has ever been unequal to overpower
that of Great Britain. And to what is it owing, that
thirty millions of Frenchmen, aided by ten millions of
Spaniards, are unable to equip and man fleets sufficient-
ly powerful to destroy the navy of an Island which
does not possess half that population ? Principally to
this, that the inhabitants of the inland parts of France
and Spain, which form so large a portion of their
population, reside in a country which affords them the
means of subsistence, without obliging them to seek it
abroad, and they are therefore indisposed to encounter
the hardships of a seaman's life. Whereas Great Britain
is everywhere surrounded by the ocean; the most in-
land parts of the island are not very distant from the
sea ; and as the productions of the soil would not
support a very numerous population, a large proportion
of its people are compelled to seek their subsistence by
124 SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON.
engaging in the -fisheries, or in the coasting and
foreign trade. And it is from this hardy and enterpris-
ing portion of her subjects, that Great Britain derives
the means of establishing and maintaining her superiori-
ty upon the ocean.
Now it is evident, that the United States of America,
even now, resemble the countries of France and Spain,
in this particular, more than Great Britain ; and as
their people recede from the ocean, and plant them-
selves in the valleys beyond the Alleghany mountains,
the resemblance will be still greater. By far the greater
part of the inhabitants of those distant regions will live
and die without ever having placed their feet upon the
deck of a ship, and will consequently add nothing to the
maritime population of the country ; the rich produc-
tions of their fertile valleys will find their way to New
Orleans,* and there provide abundant means of carrying
on foreign trade ; but the carriers of these productions
to the foreign market will either be foreigners, or
natives of the Atlantic States.
It is to these States, then, that America must look to
provide the seamen who are to man her navy, and
anions these New York and New England will stand
pre-eminent. The southern states of Virginia, the
Carolinas and Georgia, it is true, carry on an extensive
foreign trade ; but, independent of their being destitute
of any very commodious harbours for ships of war of
the larger classes, their climate, and the nature of their
population, equally unfit them to produce hardy and
enterprising mariners. They have few, if any, vessels
en^a^ed in the fisheries, and are therefore destitute of
that first great nursery for seamen. The mercantile
sea-ports to the southward of the Delaware would,
doubtless, produce a very respectable number of sailors
* It may be observed here, that the exclusive use of steamboats
upon the Mississippi will even lessen the number of fresh-water
sailois which must otherwise have been employed on that immense
river.
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 125
at the commencement of a war ; but as it is notorious
that merchants usually navigate their vessels with the
smallest possible number of hands, the employment of
these men in the navy, in a country where the labour-
ing classes cannot provide substitutes for them, will not
only be productive of great inconvenience to the mer-
cantile interest, but will render it difficult, if not imprac-
ticable, for the American Navy to procure further re-
cruits from the southern states after it made its first
sweep from the ships of the merchants ; for surely those
who are destined to wrest the sovereignty of the sea
from Great Britain will not be selected from the indolent
slaves of the southern planter.
I submit it, then, to the consideration of those who
will reflect seriously upon this subject, whether the
maritime population of the United States of America
must not be principally derived from New York and
New England. I do not deny that seamen will fre-
quently be met with from other portions of the Union,
but I mean to contend that these are the only states in
that Union, who possess a population wThich, by their
habits and pursuits, are calculated to raise America as
a naval power. Let us, then, view their present situa-
tion, and consider whether there is much probability of
their increasing the means they now possess of adding
to the naval strength of their country.
The states of New York and New England are iioav
old, settled countries : the population of the former may
become more numerous in the back parts of the country,
but an increase in that quarter will add but little to her
maritime strength. But New England, and the south-
eastern parts of New York, are already so fully peopled,
that frequent emigrations take place from them to
the inland States. Massachusetts does not, and we
believe we may say cannot, raise within herself bread
to support her present population, and therefore can
never expect to increase her numbers very rapidly ;
while the western territory offers to her vouth the
126 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
tempting prospect of obtaining a livelihood in that rich
country upon easier terms than they can procure it
within her limits.
Let it not, then, be deemed chimerical to say, that
America has no immediate prospects of becoming a
great naval power.
If the confederation of these states continues, they
will no doubt become rich and powerful to a degree
that mav defy all agression : but it does not follow,
that they will acquire a naval force that will prove
formidable to the powers of Europe. Germany has
been among the most powerful nations of Europe, and
Austria and Hungary now produce valuable articles of
export ; but these countries, from their geographical
situations, cannot produce a maritime population : other
nations have, therefore, become the carriers of their pro-
ductions, and they have never possessed any power
upon the ocean. The inland states of America are
precisely in the same situation ; and I close these
observations by repeating, first, that the sources of the
naval power of America must be principally derived
from the states of New York and New England ; and,
secondly, that there will be no great increase of the
maritime population of those states until the western
territory is fully peopled. When these fertile valleys
are all occupied, and no longer hold out a temptation to
the vouth of the Atlantic States to remove thither, then
they must follow the example of their ancestors in
Great Britain : and if the soil of their country will not
vield them a subsistence, thev must seek it from the sea
%, J m,'
which washes its shores. But that day, I think it will
admitted by all, is far distant : ages must elapse before
that vast country, through which the Ohio, the
Missouri and the Mississippi roll, will afford no further
room for the enterprising emigrant.
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 127
CHAPTER II.
If there is any truth in the preceding observations,
that the United States of America can only become for-
midable to the nations of Europe as a maritime power —
that their maritime strength must spring from the
maritime states, and can only increase with the increase
of the maritime population of these states — it follows
inevitably that the addition of other maritime states to
that confederation must increase their maritime re-
sources, and accelerate the period wrhen they will
become formidable upon the ocean.
I have before ventured to assert that no circumstance
would have so great a tendency to increase that power
as the surrender of these colonies to the United States ;
and I shall now endeavour to prove this assertion.
America wrould thereby gain an immense addition to
her sea coast, and of a description, too, very superior to
the greater part of that which she now possesses, for
the formation of a maritime population.
This coast may be divided into three portions. The
first, commencing at the Bay of Passamaquoddy, where
the American line now terminates, alon^ the shores oi
New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, to Cape St. Mary's.
The second, running from Cape St. Mary's along the
Atlantic coast of Nova Scotia and Cape Breton, to Cape
North. The third, running from Cape North, along the
western side of Cape Breton, to the Gut of Canso — ■
thence along the northern shores of Nova Scotia, to the
Bay of Verte, and from thence along the coast to that
part of New Brunswick and Canada which lies upon
the Gulf St. Lawrence, to the mouth of the noble river
from which that Gulf takes its name.
Each of these three divisions contains an extent of
coast equal to that which runs from New York to the
Bay of Passamaquoddy ; which may certainly be deem-
128 SIR BRENTOX HALLIBURTON.
ed the most formidable part of that now possessed by
America, for naval purposes.
In the first section, we commence with the fine Bay
of Passamaquoddy, containing several islands, whose
inhabitants, from their situation, will always be sea-
faring persons ; the town of St. Andrew, in this bay, is
already rising into mercantile importance, and is resort-
ed to by numbers of European fishing and coasting
vessels. At no great distance from St. Andrew's is the
town of St. John, situated at the mouth of the fine river
of the same name, which supplies it, and will for years
continue to supply it, with immense quantities of
timber : many hundred vessels are engaged in carrying
this timber to Great Britain, and bringing out the
supplies of British goods which the wants of a rapidly
increasing population annually demand : ship-building
is carried on to a great extent up the river, as well as
in many other situations farther up the bay, on the New
Brunswick and Nova Scotia shores ; and, as the capital
of the country increases, more attention is paid to the
construction of them, and they will very soon bear a
high character. As we proceed round the Bay of
Fundv to the counties of Westmoreland, in New
Brunswick ; Cumberland, Colchester, Hants, King's
County, and Annapolis, in Nova Scotia, we meet with
a country, the greater part of which can scarcely be
exceeded in point of fertility. The upland is of an
excellent quality, and thousands of acres of most valua-
ble marsh have already been reclaimed from the sea,
and are capable of maintaining ten times the number' of
people which now inhabit these districts.
This section of the coast has no good harbours, but it
has numerous rivers, inlets, and creeks, into which the
rapid tides* of the Bay of Fundy enable vessels of large
size to enter; and when those tides recede, the soft
* These tides rise in some parts of the bay, 30. in others 40 or 50j.
and in some from 60 to 70 feet.
SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON. 129
muddy bottoms of these inlets and ereeks render it
perfectly safe even for heavy-loaded vessels to rest upon
them.
Great numbers of small craft, owned and navigated
by the inhabitants of the country, are now met with on
this bay, carrying from the places I have mentioned,
gypsum and lumber (in which the country abounds)
and agricultural produce, to the ports of St. John and
St. Andrew ; and if these colonies were possessed by
the United States, it would be filled with vessels of a
larger description, conveying, not only such articles in
much greater quantities, but coals also (which are
found in abundance at the head of the bay) to the
populous towns of Boston, New York, Philadelphia,
&c, wrhere their cargoes would meet with a ready sale.
The navigation of the Bay of Fundy is at all times
difficult, and in particular seasons of the year it is
dangerous ; but the people who reside upon its shores
are a hardy, enterprising race ; and you can scarcely
enter the house of a farmer in that part of the country,
in wrhich you will not find some member of the family
quite capable of taking charge of one of these small ves-
sels, and conducting her in safety up or down the bay.
The difficulty and the danger, therefore, will only tend
to make more expert seamen of those who undertake to
convey the productions of that country to market.
At Cape St. Mary's, the fishing-coast, as it may be
termed, commences, and runs without interruption
along the whole southern and eastern shores of Nova
Scotia and Cape Breton, to Cape North. This line of
coast is peculiarly adapted to produce hardy and enter-
prising seamen. With the exception of the small
county of Lunenburg, which lies about forty miles to
the westward of Halifax, no part of this coast can
support an agricultural population. The land upon
these shores is, generally speaking, rocky and barren,
containing many spots capable of affording the fisher-
man potatoes to eat with his fish ; but few which can
130 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON,
repay the man who devotes his labour exclusively to
the cultivation of the soil. But perhaps no part of the
world is more favourablv situated for carrying: on
extensive fisheries ; it abounds with numerous and
commodious harbours, accessible at all seasons of the
year,* and capable of affording shelter to the largest
vessels. The shores swarm with fish, and, not with-
standing the injurious effects of the restrictions upon
our commerce, which the liberal policy of the mother
country is now about to remove, the natural advantages
of this part of Nova Scotia have induced many enter-
prising merchants in the settlements along the coast,
not only to carry on the shore fishery to a great extent,
but to employ vessels in the Labrador and Bank fishery
also. Now that these restrictions are removed, and the
commerce of the world is laid open to us, there cannot
be a doubt that our population upon this coast will
most rapidly increase ; the numbers of the fishermen will
very soon be more than doubled ; and the supplies which
these fisheries will require will increase the coasting trade
in the same ratio that the fisheries themselves increa.se :
thus producing, in a vigorous and healthy climate, a
most extensive nursery for hardy seamen.
At Cape North we commence the third section ; and
although it is true that the navigation of this part of
the British possessions in America is closed during four,
or, in unfavourable seasons, during five months of the
year, yet during the other seven or eight months, the
whole o;ulf mav be said to be whitened with the canvas
of vessels en^a^ed in the timber trade, in the Labrador
and coasting fisheries, and in carrying supplies of
European and West India produce, not only for the
consumption of the inhabitants of this coast, but of the
rapidly increasing population of Upper and Lower
* As I wish not to mislead any one who may favour these obser-
vations with a persual, I must except the harbours of Cape Breton,
lying between Scatari aud Cape North.
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 131
Canada. Seven hundred sail of vessels annually
proceed up the river St. Lawrence ; upwards of three
hundred go to Miramichi ; and as many more may be
divided among the ports of Merrigomish, Pictou, Tata-
magouche, Bamsheg, Bichibucto, and other harbours,
between the Gut of Canso and Miramichi.
It may be said, that by far the greater part of these
vessels are owned in Great Britain, and that if these
colonies were ceded to America, their inhabitants would
still wish to dispose of their timber, and would continue
to require the same supplies which they now receive
from the mother country, and would, therefore, afford
the same employment to British shipping.
We will admit that this might be the case during a
state of peace ; I say, might be, because it is certainly
more probable that American vessels would be substi-
tuted for British, to carry what would then be the
productions of an American country to market, and also
to bring back the supplies which that part of the
country would require. But, in a state of war, all
communication would cease ; and, in the event of a
mischievous alliance between America and the northern
powers of Europe, where, we may ask, would Great
Britain obtain those supplies of timber and other
articles which these colonics are capable of producing,
and which she may command as long as she retains
them in her own possession?
The supply of timber is almost inexhaustible in the
immense forests of this part of British America, and, as
the forests are cleared, the land, particularly along the
western side of Cape Breton, the whole of Prince
Edward Island, the Gulf Coast of Nova Scotia, and the
greater part of that of New Brunswick, is well calcu-
lated for cultivation, and is capable of maintaining an
immense population. Numerous settlers are already
established upon the shores, some of whom devote them-
selves to agriculture, others to the Gulf and Labrador
fisheries, and some engage in the coal trade and in
132 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
foreign commerce. When this part of the country is
more fully peopled, the inter-communication of the
numerous ports and harbours in the Gulf must create
an extensive coasting trade, which will be carried on
exclusively by the vessels of the power that owns the
surrounding country.
I do not proceed to describe the coast northward,
from the river St. Lawrence to the Straits of Bellisle,
and from thence along the western side of Newfound-
land to the entrance of the Gulf, because, although the
first part of that coast is British, yet it affords no home
for fishermen, and, as visitors, during the fishing
season, it is open to American vessels as well as to our
own, and the remainder belongs exclusively to the
French. .
Under existing circumstances, therefore, the coast of
Labrador may afford equal facilities for forming seamen,
both to Great Britain and America ; but if the whole of
the British possessions in North America should be
surrendered to the United States, it may be doubted
whether they would then be equally complaisant to us.
It is not improbable that they would soon deem both
the French and ourselves to be intruders on any part of
the coast of North America. The President of the
United States stated to Congress, upon a late occasion,
that he had availed himself of the opportunity to which
he then alluded, to intimate to the powers of Europe,
that the continent of North America was no longer
subject to colonization from that side of the water ; and
if Great Britain were once expelled from it, the slight
hold which France has would soon be loosened.
Let us here pause and behold this young gigantic
republic in possession of this vast addition to her sea-
coast, a great part of which would deny to the people
who inhabited it a subsistence from the soil, but would
afford to them not merely a subsistence, but the means
of acquiring wealth from the sea ; and the remainder
capable not only of supporting a numerous population,
SIR BRENTO^ HALLIBURTON. 13S
but abounding in minerals of various descriptions, in
inexhaustible forests of timber, and other means of
supporting an immense foreign and coasting trade.
Let us contemplate the numerous inhabitants of this
extensive coast, who, from their pursuits, their habits,
their laws, their language, their religion, and their
feelings, bear a greater resemblance to the inhabitants of
Great Britain than any other portion of the known
world, and who are now well disposed to continue her
subjects. Let us, I say, view these persons ranged
upon the side of her enemies ; let us see them manning
the fleets of hostile America, and engaged in endea-
vouring to subvert that power which they are now
desirous to support ; let us see the treasures of Great
Britain lavished to carry on a maritime war with
America, into which, but for this accession of strength,
the latter would not, perhaps, have engaged ; and then
let us ask ourselves if it would be wise in those who
can retain them as subjects of Great Britain, to relin-
quish them to America, merely because they do not
directly pay into her treasury a revenue equal to the
expense of their establishments.
Are all the wholesome principles which formerly
regulated the conduct of British statesmen to be forgot-
ten ? When France endeavoured to establish a nursery
for seamen on this side of the Atlantic, Great Britain
viewed her proceedings with the most jealous eye ; and
the city of London was illuminated for three successive
nights, when the news of the capture of Louisburg was
announced. Was it the acquisition of this small town,
which is now reduced to ruins, that occasioned this
burst of joy ? Nay, were the rejoicings which took
place on the reduction of Canada itself, owing to any
positive advantages the nation expected to derive from
this addition of territory ? No, it was the blow which
these events gave to our natural enemy ; it was the
diminution of her means to do us further harm, in our
future contests with her, that excited our exultation ;—
134 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
and it was then thought that the money which the re-
duction of these places, as well as that which the reten-
tion of them would require, would be well expended in
wresting and preserving them from the hands of France.
And shall we now, for the sake of saving a few
pounds, abandon a much more important country to a
nation who, when she once obtains possession of the
coast which I have described, will become more formid-
able upon the ocean than France has ever been ?
That nation has already evinced a disposition to rank
herself among the enemies of Great Britain ; and the
events of the last short war had a strong tendency to
increase the national vanity of the Americans, and to
induce them to believe, that they alone are capable of
coping with Englishmen upon the seas. Nor let us con-
ceal from ourselves that there is some foundation for
this idea ; they are descended from Britons ; they have
the spirit and the energy of freemen ; the climate of the
northern portion of their country is calculated to make
them hardy ; and it must not be supposed that they are
even now contemptible foes.
It remains for Great Britain to decide whether the
maritime population of the country which I have de-
scribed shall add to her own strength, or that of this
growing rival.
The inhabitants of British America have no desire to
change their national character, and will feel disposed
to cling to the mother country as lonsr as she fosters
and protects them. Does not sound policy, then, re-
quire that she should do so ? Should a country which
will be capable of adding so much to her own maritime
strength, and the loss of which would add so much to
that of another, and a rival nation, be voluntarily aban-
doned by Great Britain ?
SIR BKENTON HALLIBURTON. 135
CHAPTER III.
It may be said, by those who are unfriendly to the
retention of these North American Colonies, that the
very arguments which I have adduced to prove how
much they would add to the naval resources of the
United States show their value to that country ; that the
retention of them, therefore, must lead to contests with
the Americans, and that if they were once surrendered
to them, all subjects of dispute between Great Britain
and America would be removed.
These two positions, that the retention of these colo-
nies must lead to contests between Great Britain and
America, — and that the cession of them to the latter
would remove all causes of future difference, — appear
to be very plausible. But let us inquire if they are
sound.
I admit, that if America were governed by a monarch,
or even if that country consisted of one vast republic,
that the acquisition of these colonies would be so great
an addition to their maritime strength, that those who
administered their affairs would never rest until they
had achieved a conquest wrhich, under either of those
forms of government, sound policy would urge them to
make. But, instead of being one entire republic, they
consist of a confederation of republics, and the Congress
is composed of persons who receive a delegated power
from various states, that are not only destitute of com-
mon interest upon many essential points, but whose in-
terests frequently clash with each other.
The southern states on the Atlantic have no desire to
increase the political influence of New York or New
England. The Virginians, who take the lead among
the former, look with great jealousy upon Massachu-
setts, which state has twice wrested the presidency from
their hands ; and the inhabitants of the western territory
begin to look upon both as usurpers of that power and
influence in the general government, which their grow-
136 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
ing importance teaches them to believe should belong to
them.
Under these circumstances, neither the representa-
tives from the western territory, nor those from the
southern states, would be very desirous to engage in a
war which would interrupt the safe transmission of their
valuable productions to market, merely to acquire a
country which would add so much to the political
weight and influence of New England.
If the coast, which I have described, were added to
the American possessions, its interests and those of New
England would be precisely the same, and the citizens
of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick would certainly en-
list under the banner of Massachusetts in all political
contests, either in congress, or for the presidential chair.
Mr. Jefferson, the former leader of the politicians of
Virginia, was so well aware of the influence which
foreign commerce was calculated to give to the states
concerned in navigation, that he invariably endeavoured
to instil into the minds of the inhabitants of the south-
ern and inland states, that they had no interest in en-
couraging the American carrying trade ; that it only
tended to embroil them with foreign nations ; and that
it was their best policy to remain at home, and sell their
native productions to the foreigners who came to their
own shores in search of them. This policy was indig-
nantly resisted by the New England States, who saw
that it must prove ruinous to them ; but it had numerous
advocates to the southward, and in the states beyond the
Alleghany, until the French influence, which prevailed
in the American cabinet, involved that country in a war
with Great Britain.
The unexpected brilliancy which attended some of
the American achievements at sea, during that war, en-
listed the national pride on the side of the seamen, and
we have recently heard but little of this doctrine of Mr.
Jefferson ; but the principles upon which it was founded
still subsist in, and are perhaps inseparable from, the
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 137
American confederation. We cannot therefore, expect
to see trie same earnest desire to make this conquest, on
the part of the American Congress (with whom the
power of declaring war is solely vested,) that we
should witness in a government, where these conflicting
interests did not exist.
It is, therefore, very probable, if Great Britain man-
ifests a resolute determination to retain her possessions
in North America, that the representatives of the
southern and inland states, who form a vast majority
over those of New England, will not subject their
property to spoliation, by engaging in a contest with
the mistress of the sea, for the purpose of adding to the
power and influence of a portion of the Union which
both consider as a rival.
But, secondly, will it follow that if these colonies
were ceded to America, all causes of difference would
be removed between the two countries ? It will be
admitted that this measure must increase the power of
America ; and in politics it is too often deemed that
power is right — for those who have power to assert a
claim which it is their interest to make, generally con-
clude that they have the right also so to do ; and,
therefore, in all the differences which may hereafter
arise between the conflicting: interests of two commer-
cial nations, America, when her power is thus increas-
ed, will assume a higher tone, and feel more disposed to
support her claims by arms, than she will do if she
should not acquire this accession of maritime strength.
It may be also observed, that while the inhabitants of
these colonies remain subjects of Great Britain, it is
their interest that she should retain her possessions in
the West Indies, on account of the advantage which
their character as British subjects gives to them over
the Americans in those islands.
But as soon as they became American citizens their
interests would be directly the reverse, and they would
join with all the Atlantic states in America, in urging
10
138 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
the American Government to seize the first opportunity
of possessing itself of those islands. What the result
would be I do not attempt to predict, but I think it
will not be denied that the augmentation to her naval
force, which the possession of these colonies would give
to America, and her vicinity to the scene of contest,
would enable her to become a much more formidable
enemy to Great Britain in that quarter than France or
Spain have ever proved ; and the natives of the British
West India Isles (who have frequently manifested a
sufficient portion of republican spirit) would feel much
less repugnance in yielding to the dominion of America,
than they would to that of any of the foreign govern-
ments of Europe.
They would recollect that a large proportion of the
rulers of that country are themselves interested in
guarding the rights (as they consider them) of the pro-
prietors of slaves, and might, perhaps, think that their
interests as slaveholders would be taken better care of by
the American Congress than by the British Parliament,
with whose recent proceedings upon that subject the
West India planters are very generally dissatisfied.
These things should certainly be maturely considered
before it is decided that the North American Colonies
are of little or no importance to the mother country.
CHAPTER IV.
The preceding observations have been directed
against those writers who have assumed, as a general
position, ' that no colony is worth retaining unless the
mother country derives from it a revenue equal to her
expenditure upon it ;' and an humble attempt has been
made to induce his Majesty's Ministers to think that the
North American Colonies are valuable appendages to
the British crown, independently of all considerations of
pecuniary profit and loss.
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON, 139
The writer of these pages does not boast of that inti-
mate knowledge of the principles of political economy
which would enable him to unravel all the intricacies of
that perplexing science, and to prove to demonstration
that, although these colonies do not directly pay into
the treasury of Great Britain a sum equal to that which
Is annually issued from it for their support and defence,
they do indirectly increase the commerce and manufac-
tures of the mother country in a degree that renders
her no loser by them upon the whole ; yet he thinks,
that might well admit of proof from the pens of those
who have devoted themselves to the consideration of
such subjects.
Indeed, the Edinburgh Reviewers, who are strong
advocates for ridding Great Britain of the incumbrance
of her Colonies, do not deny that she derives advan-
tages from her commerce with them, in common, how-
ever, with that which she carries on with the rest of
the world ; but they are of opinion that she would
derive the same advantages from them which she now
does, if they were independent of all connexion with
her.
They contend that as long as the manufactures of Great
Britain are superior to, and cheaper than those of other
nations, she will ever experience the same demand for
them that she now does ; but they gravely tell us that
it will be of little importance whether these manufac-
tures are carried to market, or the returns from them
are brought to Great Britain in foreisrn or in British
ships : that it is erroneous to suppose, ( that an exten-
sive mercantile is necessary to the possessions of a great
warlike navy f * that all that is required for the attain-
ment of naval power is the command of convenient har-
bours, and of wealth sufficient to build and man ships ;'
and ' that, however paradoxical it may at first sight
appear, it is nevertheless unquestionably true, that the
navy of Great Britabi might be as formidable as it now is0
140 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
or, if that was desirable, infinitely more so, though we had
not a single merchant ship.'
These sage reviewers proceed to tell us very gravely
that the merchant service is a very ' round about method
of breeding sailors' for the navy, and that it would be a
much better plan to ' breed up sailors directly in men-of-
war :' to effect which, these advocates for discarding the
colonies, on account of the expense of maintaining them,
propose that Great Britain should always keep afloat a
sufficient number of men-of-war, manned wholly during
peace with able-bodied seamen, to enable her, on the
breaking out of war, with the addition of the propor-
tion of landsmen and boys allowed by the admiralty, to
equip a fleet worthy of the mistress of the sea ?
Had the wise gentlemen who conduct this review
had the conduct of the affairs of the nation during the
last ten years, those rows of floating castles which have
so long been lying in idleness at Portsmouth, Plymouth,
and Chatham, would not have excited the anxiety
which John Bull so lately felt lest his bulwarks were
mouldering with the dry rot ; they would have been
ploughing their own element, contending with, and, of
course, sometimes suffering from, its fury ; filled with
the choicest seamen, who would have been withdrawn
from the servile task of adding to the nation's wealth in
the employment of humble individuals, and would have
been nobly occupied in consuming the revenues of the
country, and cruizing in quest of a non-existing foe.
For I take it for granted, as these sailors are to be train-
ed up in men-of-war, that the fleets in which they are
to be trained, are not to lie like guard-ships, at their
moorings. No, these costly nurseries, with their full
complement of able-bodied seamen, whose services will
only be obtained by paying to them the highest rate of
wages, must proceed to sea, and there encounter the
dangers of the ocean, and such of them as escape from
it will return into port to refit, and give ample employ-
ment to a numerous host of carpenters, shipwrights,
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 141
ropemakers, blacksmiths, &c, &c, &c, who would all
be rescued from the degradation of looking up to private
, persons for a subsistence, by procuring employment in
the shipyards of our merchants, and become respect-
able salaried servants of their king and country.
But this is really too serious a subject for badinage,
and at the same time it is difficult to bring one's self to
answer people seriously who hold the monstrous position
that a nation, whose greatness is founded upon her naval
power, should be indifferent to her mercantile marine ;
who tell us that convenient harbours, and wealth suffi-
cient to build and man ships, is all that is requisite for
the attainment of naval power.
Has not France, has not Spain, convenient harbours,
and have they not each had ample revenues in the days
of their prosperity, to build, and to pay for the man-
ning of fleets ; have they not also been animated with
the most earnest desire to crush the naval power of
Great Britain ? and have thev not been unable to do so,
because, although they had abundance of men to place
upon the decks of their ships, they were destitute of
seamen to manage them ?
That great statesman, Mr. Burke, laid it down as an
axiom, that experience was our surest guide, either in
political or private life, and until these gentlemen can
point out to us an instance, in which a nation, possess-
ing commodious harbours and abundant wealth, has
attained to permanent naval power without a respectable
maritime population, let us pursue the beaten track.'*
Let us leave our merchants, who are engaged either
in foreign commerce, in the coasting trade, or in the
fisheries, to devise schemes for the cheapest and most
effectual mode of procuring those seamen in time of
peace, which their respective pursuits require, and we
* I hope the Edinburgh Reviewers will not refer us, in support of
their position, to the fleets of boats, of ancient days, with their three
banks of oars, armed prows, and legions of soldiers to fight them.
4
142 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
may depend upon it, that individual interest and sagacity
will effect the object of creating and preserving a mari-
time population more effectually, and upon better terms,
than the government can do. Let us not, by the adop-
tion of this scheme, withdraw from their service thou-
sands of the best of seamen, to eat the bread of the
nation either in idleness or in unproductive activity ;
and increase the expense of navigating our merchant
ships, by raising wages in the degree that this demand,
or rather this unnecessary employment of seamen, would
inevitably occasion ; and thus drive those whose interest
it now is to give bread to British seamen, to carry on
their business in the ships of foreigners.
Let us not too hastily adopt the opinion, that as long
as British manufactures are better and cheaper than
those of other nations, that we shall always enjoy the
same share of commerce that we now do, and that it is
unimportant whether this commerce is carried on in
British or in foreign vessels. While all things flow
smoothly, the individuals of every country will naturally
seek to supply their wants upon the best terms, and will
therefore resort to that* country which can supply them
with the best and cheapest articles : but governments
may take a different view of the subject, and control the
wishes of their people in this respect. Great Britain is
equally hated and feared in Europe ; and the govern-
ments of that continent would willingly see the sceptre
of the ocean transferred to this side of the Atlantic.
Distant America might not interpose that barrier,
which the naval power of Great Britain has so often
enabled her to do to European ambition ; and if that
power were once lost, where should we find a counter-
poise for that of France, whose ambition has so fre-
quently threatened the liberties of the continental
nations, and the destruction of our own ?
Let us remember the declaration of the greatest
politician and warrior that France has possessed for
ages : that all he required, to render that country
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 143
powerful upon the ocean, was Ships, Colonies, and
Commerce; and as the result of his observations upon
the wants of France is confirmed by experience of the
advantages which have resulted to Great Britain from
such possessions, let us support and cherish them with
the most anxious care.
Let speculative politicians amuse themselves with
their discussions upon minor subjects, but let them not
be encouraged to sport with our palladium.
Some few years after the publication of this pamphlet,
Judge Halliburton — deeply interested in the political
affairs of that great country to which he felt it a high
honour to belong — drew another sketch, but in a very
different style. It is a humorous account of the changes
wrought in the English constitution, under the influence
of Earl Grey and Lord John Russell, and is added here
as a specimen of that kind of writing in which he occa-
sionally indulged his playful mind, and by means of
which he pointed a shaft with sharp satire, or turned
into ridicule a selfish or unsound measure. The leaders
and prominent parties of the day, the Duke of Welling-
ton, Earl Grey, Lord John Russell, Lord Brougham,
Lord Althorpe, Birmingham, Sheffield, and Manchester,
will easily be recognized through their disguise :
CRITICAL STATE OF THE BULL FAMILY.
Few folks have made more noise in the world than
the family of the Bulls. They were a roaring set of
blades, always up to their work, and equally prepared
for a frolic or a fisdit. There were two branches of the
family, the elder descended from old Mr. John Bull, a
sturdy farmer in the north, and the other descended
144 S1K BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
from Paddy Bull, trie drover, who said he was a half
brother of John's, by a different father and mother.
Pat was a riotous, good humoured fellow, who cared
not much how the world went, provided he had plenty
of potatoes and whiskey.
The mode in which the Bulls managed their concerns
attracted great attention in the neighbourhood. In all
the other families in the parish, the head of the house
gave law to every individual in it, and no one dare
question the propriety of his measures ; but among the
Bulls the old gentleman could do little more than pro-
pose plans for cultivating the farm ; and Mrs. Bull, who
lived much among her children, generally- talked the
matter over with them, and with the trustees of the
estate, before they were adopted, owing to which, all
hands generally went to work with hearty good will,
and if the seasons were tolerably fine, they could always
reckon upon a good crop. It must be acknowledged
that this had not always been the case. Old Mr. Bull,
in his younger days, was disposed to be as headstrong
as his neighbours : and his wife, for some time after her
marriage, was obliged to be mighty obsequious. It was
then, " As you please, my dear, I cannot pretend to set
up my judgment against yours ; but, if I might venture
to suggest," and so on. In this way, by degrees she
wheedled herself into the old gentleman's confidence,
and exercised a good deal of influence in the manage-
ment of the family. In looking a little more into the
matter, she satisfied herself that she had good right so
to do ; she inspected the title deeds of the estate, and
found that the old gentleman held it in right of his wife,
and that it was entailed upon his descendants, male and
female. She therefore, felt great interest in preserving
it for her children ; she would not allow the trustees to
interfere with the rents ; but insisted that the marriage
articles gave her the right to do so, and that they were
only appointed to prevent these articles from being in-
fringed upon by either party. She thus got possession
t .,
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 145
of the strong box, and then the old gentleman had to
make his bow to her, whenever he wanted either to
frolic or to fight, for he could neither pay a tavern bill,
nor buy a rapier unless she gave him the money. In
fact, the gray mare had completely become the better
horse ; and if all iamilies, in which the ladies bear sway,
were as well managed, we should have little cause to
complain of petticoat government. The whole parish
admired her prudence, and many fruitless efforts were
made bv the neiohbours to imitate her.
Among others, the Frog family, who had long been
rivals of the Bulls, and generally opposed them at all
parish meetings, were determined upon trying Mrs.
Bull's system. But as soon as they met to adjust their
plans, the greater part of them got drunk, and set fire to
the house ; not content with this, the drunken dogs
knocked every man's brains out, who attempted to ex-
tinguish the flames : and actually caught Mr. Frog and
his wife, as they were, attempting to escape out of a
window, and chopt both their heads off. The whole
neighbourhood was struck with horror at such atrocity.
But the ragamuffins did not stop here : they threat-
ened to burn down every house in the parish, and
actually sent a parcel of drunken rascals into the streets,
with fire brands in their hands, to carry their threats
into execution.
The Bulls were not people to submit quietly to such
conduct. They turned out manfully to defend their
property, and after a long struggle they brought the
Frog family to their senses ; but what with the payment
of constables and firemen, the purchase of engines and
water buckets, and the expense of maintaining watch-
men to guard the Frogs, until they got sober, they
expended a world of money, and found themselves en-
cumbered with a heavy debt at the end of the contest.
This obliged them to economize in the management of
their affairs, and the younger branches of the family,
who were compelled to work hard to get a living, and
146 SIR BRENTOX HALLIBURTON.
contribute their share of the interest of the debt, began
to manifest a good deal of discontent. The farm, it is
true, continued to be very productive, but still the debt
bore hard upon them ; and forgetting that they had
incurred it, to prevent the Frogs from destroying the
whole estate, they complained loudly of their mother's
management, as if she had been the whole author of the
evil. The old gentleman and lady set their wits to
work to put matters to rights ; they employed their son,
Wellslay Bull, who had put an end to the fray with
the Frogs, by knocking down their great champion, Nap
Frog, with his own hands, to be their steward, and
directed him to work the farm at the least possible
expense.
Wellslay was a thorough man of business, went to
work at once to discharge all the able-bodied servants
and labourers, that could be dispensed with ; but,
like a true son of John Bull, he would not turn
those who had grown gray in the service of the family,
into the streets, nor take away the parish allowance
from their widows and orphans. He also thought it
right to keep a good number of constables in pay, to
watch master Frog's movements, as he knew that the
only way to keep him quiet was to show him that he
would get the worst of it, if he kicked up another
row ; he also thought it would be bad economy in the
end to discharge too many of the workmen, as the
harvest might be lost by such a measure. At the end
of the year, therefore, notwithstanding Wellslay's re-
trenchments, the necessary expenses of the farm, and
above all, the interest due upon the mortgage, pinched
the family sadly ; and the young folks, who of course
knew least about the business, grumbled loudly against
Wellslay's management.
These roaring blades held a meeting at the Split
Crown, kept by Batterdown Bull, the most drunken
dog of the whole family, where, after draining the
punch bowl to the bottom, they decided that all the
SIR BRENTOH HALLIBURTON. 147
difficulties they laboured under were owing to their
mother's listening so much to old Sam, and his
brothers, who, they decided, had no longer any right
to interfere in the management of the farm. Old
Sam and his brothers had once been thriving men,
but it must be confessed that they were not now so
well to do in the world as they had been. The family
mansion had gone to decay, and some of them had
scarcely a shed left to protect them from the weather.
The young Bulls, therefore, said that it was a shame
for their mother to continue to advise with such a
set of paupers, when such thriving men as Brummage
Bull the Blacksmith, Shuffle Bull the Cutler, Manshuttle
Bull the Weaver, and many other rising members of the
family, were not permitted to have a word to say about
the management of the farm.
The old lady seemed to think there was something
like reason in what the young rogues said, although she
did not like their rudeness ; but placing much confi-
dence in Wellslay's judgment, she asked him what he
thought of it. " Why," says Wellslay, in his plain
blunt manner, "My dear mother, good advice is good
advice, let it come from rich or poor. Some folks, now-
a-days, seem to think that it is of more consequence
who is to give you advice than what advice they give,
but that's not my way of thinking. Now you know
that though old Sam and his familv have not as much
of the ready in their pockets as they once had, they are
shrewd, sensible folks, and have frequently given you
better advice than you could get elsewhere. Our affairs
are now in a ticklish state, and that confounded, mort-
gage hangs like a millstone about our necks. But we
must not turn rogues and rob a church, or refuse to pay
our just debts, as I am afraid master Brummage and
Shuffle and their crew would willingly do, although the
fellows would never have been the men they are now,
if it had not been incurred. Why should they complain
forsooth of your acting upon the advice of old Sam's
148 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
family, when they have prospered so well under it, and
poor Sam has scarce a house over his head. Try no
experiments, my good mother, in these ticklish times,
but just manage matters as you have done, at all events
till you can pay off, or reduce the confounded mort- •
gage." There was a terrible uproar at the Split Crown
when they learnt that Wellslay had given this advice
to the old woman : Batterdown, Brummage, Shuffle,
and Manshuttle, roared like mad bulls, and in a short
time made so many of the labourers drunk that Well-
slay said he would manage the farm no longer, and left
them to their own misdoings. In an evil hour John
applied to the old Gray Bull to become steward. He
was as stiff-necked and wrong-headed a bull as any that
bore the name, but was supposed to have much influ-
ence with Brummage, and that set, because he had for
years said that every bull, let his skull be thick or
thin, had an equal right to give his advice about the
management of the farm, and that old madam was in
justice bound to listen to it, and to follow it too, said he
in a thundering voice, which always set the disorderly
bulls outside roaring — " Grey forever," " Grey for-
ever." When Mrs. Bull saw that this old codger had
become steward, she began to think she should find it
expedient to let Brummage and Shuffle, and a few
other roaring bulls into the hall, where she usually
consulted with her children, and consoled herself with
recollecting that she should have many a steady and
sturdy farmer to keep these upstarts in order, and above
all, that old Sam's family would still be there, upon
whose discretion she could always rely. The good lady
therefore walked into the hall to meet her children,
with tolerable composure, and had made up her mind
to let those noisy fellows in, with as good a grace as
she could. She knew that little Johnny Bull, of Bed-
ford, was to make the proposal to her, and as he was a
desperate proser, the old woman seated herself in her
arm chair, expecting to enjoy a comfortable nap, while
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 149
he was drawling out the threadbare arguments, which
had been so often refuted in favour of their admission ;
but judge of her astonishment when, instead of the old
story of Brummage's and Shuffle's rights, he began by
proposing to kick the whole of old Sam's family out of
the hall, and ended by declaring that it was necessary
for John to divorce his present wife, and get a new one.
The old lady at first burst out a-laughing in his face,
but she soon found it was no laughing matter, and that
the new set of clothes with which Grey had furnished
John, was actually intended for his wedding. She was
so staggered by this intelligence, that instead of boldly
telling little Johnnv she would not listen to another
word upon the subject, she gave a sort of half promise
to take it into consideration. The truth was, the old
woman was not quite as good stuff as she once was.
She had seen so many strange things come to pass of
late, that she scarcely knew whether she was upon her
head or her heels. She remembered when master Nap
Frog wished to get rid of his rib, he made mighty short
work of it. He walked up to madame's room, made
her one of his best bows, pressed her hand to his heart,
gave her a tender embrace, heaved a deep sigh, kicked
her out of the window, with an earnest entreaty that
she would fall upon the softest stone in the pavement,
and then returned to the parlour, whistling " Ca ira."
— recollecting this, she feared that Grey might try to
persuade Mr. Bull to play her some such scurvy trick,
and to gain a little time to recover herself, she stam-
mered out something about taking it into consideration.
Grey, however, saw how she was likely to consider it,
and that he had little chance of getting the old lady's
consent in her present humour ; he therefore proposed
to John to send her down into the countrv, where the
young bulls were keeping it up ; and he hoped, between
wheedling and bullying, to cajole the old woman into
giving her consent, as the tiling could not be done with-
out it. John was not very fond of these trips to the
150 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
country, they cost a plaguey sight of money, and it was
a long time before the family got to rights after one of
them. He told Grey that Mrs. Bull had just returned
from the country, and he did not see much use in send-
ing her there again so soon ; but Grey reminded him
that Wellslay was steward when she paid her last visit,
and that things then went on in the old dull jog trot
way ; "but since I have had the management of the
farm, Mr. Bull," said he, " the servants have learnt
that they are as good as their masters, and ten to one if
some of the chaps don't run some rig upon the old lady,
that may show her that there is as good men as you in
the world." " Well, well," said Bull, in a surly tone,
" take your own way about it, but I expect no good
on't, remember that." Away went the old lady, and a
pretty time she had of it : there were rare doings at the
Split Crown. Batterdown filled the well with Hollands,
so that there was no getting a drop of pure water for
love nor money. During the whole of her visit, Mrs.
Bull scarcely met with a sober man. " Evil communi-
cations corrupt good manners," said the wise man of
old, and so, alas, did it prove with Mrs. Bull ! She re-
turned to town, more than half drunk, took little Johnny
in her lap, hiccup'd that he was her darling boy, and
she could refuse him nothing ; and Johnny, before the
old woman got sober, wheedled her into consenting to
let Grey have his will and cut her connexion with the
old man. But there was still a stumbling block in the
way. The divorce could not take place without the
consent of the trustees, and they vowed they would
listen to no such doings. Grey rated and raved at them
at a great rate, and threatened to apply to Chancery to
appoint other trustees, who would do his bidding ; but
they snapt their fingers in his face, and said they didn't
care that for his threats : as long as they were trustees
they would do their duty like honest men. Sober folks,
therefore, began to hope, that notwithstanding these
drunken bouts, the divorce might yet be prevented, and
SIR BREXTON HALLIBURTON. 151
the family saved from disgrace and ruin ; and so per-
haps it might have been, for John had still a sneaking
regard for the old lady, although he did not like to let
it out before Grey, and he thought if he could get her
to listen to Wellslay's advice again, she might soon be
prevailed to give up the low set at the Split Crown, and
conduct herself once more like a decent woman. He
gave Wellslay a pretty broad hint of this ; but Grey saw
them exchanging mighty significant glances, and as he
had opened a correspondence with Batterdown, and his
ragamuffin set, he persuaded them to waylay John, as he
was coming to town to consult with his old steward, and
to threaten to knock his brains out, if he didn't break
off with Wellslay altogether. These rascals kicked up
such a riot that thev frightened the trustees into fits,
which were succeeded by a state of lethargy, in which
they all laid for several days. Before they had recov-
ered from their stupor, Grey read old Mrs. Bull's con-
sent to the divorce over to them. Whether they really
nodded assent, or whether it was a mere involuntary
paralytic nod, which they could not control, has never
yet been ascertained ; but Grey immediately brought
down old John to the hall, where the trustees were
assembled, sent for the old woman, and there all these
looking more dead than alive, ratified the divorce.
That same evening, old Sam and the whole of his family
were found dead in a dismal hole, called skull-dell A.
Some of their friends told Grey they thought that they
were entitled to christian burial, but he swore it would
cost too much money, and the beggars might rot where
they were. Grey was soon upon the lopk out for an-
other wife for John, and told him to don the suit of
clothes which he had already worn at his birth-day, in
order to be prepared to receive his bride. Mr. Bull
did not much like being reminded of his birth- day,
which had not gone off quite to his liking. Before
Grey became steward he had always kept it in great
state, went to church in his bes*- clothes, said his belief
152 SIR B REN TON HALLIBURTON.
aloud before all the family, and afterwards all the old
folks had a noble feast in the great hall, where the table
was covered with roast beef and plum pudding, and
cans of stingo, which it did their hearts good to look at,
and still more to swallow. But Grey said there was
not a fat ox, or a bushel of malt on the farm, which
could be spared for such doings, they must all be sent
to market to turn a pennysworth ; that as to going to
church, he would let the horses out of the plough for a
few hours, to draw the old family coach, but he would
have no junketings in the hall. Now John had al-
ways thought the feast in the hall the cream of the jest ;
but as Grey wouldn't hear of it, he said at all events he
would have a few friends to eat bread and cheese and
drink small beer with him in his own room. The day
went off flat enough, and folks neither liked John's
dinner nor his dress. It must be confessed that John
cut but a queer figure in it. His head was covered
with an old gray whig, which he had discarded upwards
of twenty years before, as unfit for use. His body was
buttoned up in a second-hand spencer, and his nether
parts were covered with patch work. Grey soon intro-
duced the beldame he had selected for John's second
wife, and if his dress was not in the best taste, his in-
tended's was a match for it. She stalked into the hall
in her pattens and black worsted stockings, and when
the trustees stared at her for appearing in such guise,
she told them that if they had been obliged to travel to
the hall through such dirty ways as she had passed,
they would not be sporting their pumps and silk stock-
ings, any more than herself. The marriage was cele-
brated much in. the usual way ; but it was observed that
John shut his eyes when he kissed the bride ; but the
poor man's other senses were unclosed, and she gave
him such a pestilent whiff of Hollands, that he per-
ceived she had not omitted her dream of blue ruin on
the wedding morning. Grey soon found his protege
but an ungrateful vixen. Instead of thanking him for
SIR BrLXTON HALLIBURTON-. 153
bringing about the match, and placing her at the head
of the family, she rated him so sorely, whenever he
failed to comply with any of her whims, however un-
reasonable, that he soon found himself obliged to quit
his place, and John was at his wit's end to get another
steward ; for few wTould undei'take to manage the farm,
under his new madam. For want of a better, he was
feign to take one Lamb, a man he knew but little
about, except that he had served under Grey.
Mr. Bull, though a sturdy well-built man, was by no
means so stout and bulky as most of his neighbours ;
but in former davs he had increased the stateliness of his
appearance very much by a long train which he con-
tinually wore, — and many folks thought that John
would never have been able to carry his head so high
at parish meetings, if it were not for the richness of this
train. He has long been very careful of it, and mighty
testv if any one touched it without his leave.
Grey and some of his friends began to complain of the
expense of this train, and said that it cost more than it
was worth, but they found John not at all inclined to
part with it, and to please the old gentleman, Grey had
covered it with good-rich stuff, which looked well
enough at first, but it was soon torn off in a scuffle, at
the Church door, where Batterdown and his Ragamuf-
fins were trying to break in to steal the plate. Grey
wrapt up John's train in a handsome piece of Derby-
shire ware, but that was shortly cracked in a scuffle of
the same kind, and nothing remained but to cover it
with a mat of Spring Rice, which Paddy Bull had
lately raised. How this would have worn cannot be
ascertained, for it was scarcely fitted on before the
Trustees discovered that they had become entitled to
John's spencer ; and the poor man was left without a
rag to his back.
John forthwith desired Lamb to provide him with
some covering or other. Lamb mustered the only
patterns he could get credit for at the tailor's, and sub-
U
154 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
mitted them for John's choice. The first was from
the little town manufactory. As soon as Lamb unfolded
it, he saw John fix his eyes upon some ugly spots ; he
explained that one Dan Cowhell, who soiled everything
that he touched, had handled the piece at Donnybrook
fair ; but he didn't doubt the stains might be scoured
out, and if not, folks were not so particular about ap-
pearances now-a-days, as they once were. But John
plumply said it was too dirty for a gentleman to wear,,
and was about throwing it out of the window, when
Lamb proposed taking the mat of Spring Bice from his*
train, and working it up, with a close-bodied jacket.
John didn't seem to relish this mode of robbing Peter
to pay Paul, and asked what was to become of his
train ; but without waiting for an answer, he wished to
know what tailor Lamb could employ to alter it.
" You know/' said he, " that you are in mighty bad
credit with the fellow in Cambridge street, who fitted it
on to my train, and I doubt if he will do another stitch
for you." Lamb looked very woc-begone, and said he
feared that was too true ', nor did he know another
tailor in the whole parish, who would do the job for
him ; " in short, Mr. Bull," said he, " the fellows are
grown so saucy, and spend so much of their time at the
Split Crown, that I can never be sure of getting a new
garment, or altering an old one for you, when it is
wanted." " Aye, aye, Mr. Lamb," said Bull, " if you
and your friends had not put an end to old Sam and his
family, we shouldn't have been reduced to this straight :
they were poor, it is true, and couldn't afford carousing
at the Split Crown, but they could turn their hands to
anything, and were always ready to work for their
money. If you cast a shoe on the road, there were they,
with their hammer and nails, to set you all to rights
again, without five minutes loss of time ; and, when re-
quired, they could make or alter a garment for you in a
jiffee." Lamb drew a heavy sigh, but said not a word
in reply. When the old gentleman, who began to
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 155
shiver with the cold, placed his arms a-kimbo, and
looking Lamb full in the face, said, in a loud voice,
" Look ye, Mr. Lamb, I'll not stand here any longer,
half naked, and if you can't provide me with decent
covering, I'll send for my old friend Wellslay again,
and see what he can do for me." John expected that
Lamb would have roared like a lion, when he talked of
sending for Wellslay ; but, to his utter surprise, he re-
plied, in the mildest voice possible, " Really, Mr. Bull,
I think you cannot do better, and as I shall pass his
door on my way home, I'll drop a note there for you,
with all my heart." The truth was, Lamb knew well
enough that he was not provided with any measures
that would suit the posture in which John stood, and
felt sure, that John must either employ Wellslay again,
or that madcap Lamp-black, the coal-heaver, who was
a fast friend of Batterdown.
Now, he and his wise-acres had found, that their
cursed attempts to improve the family mansion, had
nearly brought the house about their ears ; he knew that
Wellslay was the only man who had a chance of prop-
ping it up ; but if Lamp-black once got to work upon
it, /the roof would soon be in the cellar; and he there-
fore willingly undertook to carry John's note to Well-
slay. John's eyes overran with tears of joy, at the
thoughts of getting his old friend Wellslay to manage
the farm again, and although he was reckoning without
his hostess (for madam was out visiting), he ventured
at once to write the note, and Lamb promised to deliver
it without delay. Wellslay was not long in coming,
and seeing the plight in which the old gentleman was,
he covered him at once from head to foot in a long
cloak of his own, and told him he would arrange his
dress, and provide him with his usual garments, as soon
as Bob of Tamsworth came home. He's a clever lad,
that Bob of Tamsworth, said Wellslay, and if you'll
take my advice, you'll employ him as steward. He'll
probably manage matters better with madam than I
156 SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON.
can, as she knows I was such a fast friend to the old
lady that's gone. Bob stood well with her, too, but
then he's a smooth-tongued fellow, and may perhaps
persuade Mrs. Bull, that is, to hold up her head a little,
and keep good company. If we can once induce her to
break with that vile set at the Split Crown, she may yet
learn to live among gentle folks, and do the honors of
the house, so as not to bring disgrace upon the family ;
though I fear, said he, sighing, that we shall miss old
Sam's folks sadly. But there is no raising the dead, my
good father, in this world.
John was rather anxious that Wellslay should man-
age the farm himself, but he stuck to it, that Bob was
the man. "It will be all one, father," said he, "I can
persuade him to anything. Why, don't you remember,
that night when we prevailed upon you, and the trust-
ees, and old madam, to take down the bar, which we
had both helped so long to hold up, and let Pat in to
supper to keep him quiet, how nicely Bob managed
things ? We had breakfasted together that morning in
our old orange-colored clothes ; but we knew Pat always
grew sick at the sight of them, and as we didn't like to
throw them off altogether, Bob set to work to sponge,
and scour, and dye them, and did it so cleverly that
what you would have sworn looked like Orange Peel at
breakfast, was more like Potatoe Peel when we sat down
to supper." "Well, well, Master Wellslay," said John,
"I think you needn't boast much of that trick. Pat's not
much more peaceable, I trow, than he was before you
let him in to supper, and I don't much like the changes
of ypur slight-of-hand folks." "Why as to Pat" says
Wellslay, "there's no making him peaceable, unless you
set him fighting. Now in that affray with the frogs,
why he was among the best fellows that followed me,
and knocked them down with so much spirit and good
humour, that it did one's heart good to look at him ; but
when he gets home, there's no keeping him quiet. I
only mentioned the matter to remind you what a clever
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 157
fellow Bob is, and how he can suit himself to the times ;
and as to his slight- of-hand, why he is a dexterous lad,
that's true, but then he scorns to play foul with any
body, and depend on't, if any one can persuade madam
to behave herself decently, he's the man." John seated
himself by the fire, and remained for a short time com-
fortably wrapt up in Wellslay's cloak ; luckily Bob o'
Tamsworth arrived before Mrs. Bull returned home, and
John at once appointed him steward. He immediately
provided John with a full suit of good honest true blue,
and covered his train with a substantial piece of Scotch
Plaid, which, from all appearances will wear well.
All John's old friends say that he looks more like
himself than he has done for these four years past : in-
stead of appearing half-clown, half-harlequin, as he did
in his second-hand Spencer and Patchwork pantaloons,
you would take him now for a respectable old English
gentleman ; but how madam will like him in his new
dress is not yet known. If she gives herself any airs,
however, it is thought Wellslay will persuade John to
pack her off to the country for a short time ; and as the
conservators of the peace have renewed old Holdfast
Bull's license at the King's Arms, on Constitution Hill,
it is hoped the old lady will put up there, instead of
going down to that dirty hole, the Split Crown.
Old Holdfast keeps an orderly house, in a quiet
neighbourhood, and Constitution Hill presents a delight-
ful prospect, extending for some distance over a peace-
ful valley. All the decent, substantial farmers, and
tradesmen in the neighbourhood, frequent the King's
Arms, and the good woman will learn different habits
there from those of the dissolute set at the Split Crown.
If she goes to old Holdfast's, therefore, all will be safe ;
but if she takes up with Batterdown and his gang again,
why then, heaven help poor John Bull.
CHAPTER V.
For twenty-six years Mr. Justice Halliburton sat
upon the Bench of Nova Scotia, as Assistant Judge.
During this long period, of more than a quarter of a
century, he had discharged his onerous duties with the
most marked ability, and with great impartiality ; in the
language of the sixteenth century, he had "truly and
indifferently ministered justice to the punishment of
wickedness and vice, and to the maintenance of true
religion and virtue." It was in the year 1816 that he
had been appointed to a seat in the Council, then con-
sisting of twelve members, and discharging both Execu-
tive and Legislative functions. The combination of
judicial and political duties thus thrown upon him,
formed a task no less difficult than toilsome ; for it was
the necessary consequence of this two-fold position, that
the course which his sense of duty pointed out, and
which he unswervingly followed, could not always be in
accordance with the judgment or wishes of some portion
of the inhabitants of the province.
But we can ask for no better proof of the wisdom and
judgment which guided him, than the universal respect
in which he was held throughout the country. He
lived down all opposition. Not only did he outlive it.
but he conquered and dispersed it, soon after it arose.
In 1833 he was appointed Chief Justice of the Province,
and became ex officio President of the Council, which
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 150
latter situation he held until the year 1837, when the
Council was remodelled, and the Executive department
separated from the Legislative, and the Chief Justice
and Judges ceased to be members of either.
There is something very pleasing in the tone of the
numerous addresses which were presented to him,
upon his elevation to the highest seat upon the Bench.
At these tokens of respect, which were shown to him
wherever he went in the performance of his judicial
duties, he must have been highly gratified. They were
not the offspring of strong political partizanship, but the
spontaneous and hearty expression of esteem and re-
spect for a man who had presided in the courts of law
for a long period of time, with great ability, and marked
singleness of purpose. Immediately upon the announce-
ment of his well-earned promotion, the members of the
Bar, residing in Halifax, waited upon him with the fol-
lowing address, to which is subjoined his reply. Both
documents are worthy of being read, as they throw
some light upon his character, the esteem in which he
was held by others, and the spirit with which he re-
ceived their congratulations.
■" To the Honourable Brenton Halliburton, Chief Justice
of the Province of Nova Scotia:
" We, the undersigned members of the Bar of Nova
Scotia, beg leave to offer you our most cordial and sin-
cere congratulations, on your recent appointment to the
important station of Chief Justice of this Province.
" That the highest office connected with the adminis-
tration of Justice, should be intrusted to one competent
to fulfil its duties, is an object of the greatest moment to
all interested in the welfare of the country. And we
rejoice that in the selection of a Judge, whose talent.
160 SIR BRENTOJf HALLIBURTON.
integrity, and zeal, already long known and justly ap-
preciated, afford the most unequivocal testimony of his
eminent qualifications for that office, his Majesty's
Government have made a choice, from which all can
most confidently anticipate the happiest results to the
community. While your laborious exertions, for a long
series of years, in the judicature of this Province, your
experience and intimate acquaintance with the local cir-
cumstances of the country, your legal acquirements, and
the strict impartiality which has characterized your con-
duct on the Bench, have commanded universal respect
and confidence ; the unwearied patience, and invariable
courtesy and kindness, displayed both in public and
private, in your intercourse with the Bar, have secured
©ur sincere esteem, and demand our most grateful ac-
knowledgements.
" In the experience of the past we can perceive the-
most pleasing prospects for the future, and while we
tender the most respectful assurance of our undiminished
and increased regard, confidence, respect and esteem,
we most earnestly desire that you may live many years
to enjoy the dignity and honors you have so justly
merited, and which have been so deservedly bestowed,
find that your continued health will secure to this Pro-
vince, in a more exalted situation, the exercise of those-
abilities, which you have already so often conspicuously
employed in the public service."
To this the Chief Justice thus replied : —
" Gentlemen, — I should do myself injustice, if I did
not assure you that the kind address you have presented
to me, has excited feelings which I rind myself unable
to express.
"My professional career has passed under your im-
mediate observation, and as it has ever been my anxious
desire to discharge the duties of my office with diligence
and impartiality, it affords me great gratification to learn
that those who are so capable of forming a judgment
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 161
upon my judicial conduct, entertain opinions so favour-
able and so flattering to me.
" I thank you, gentlemen, for the indulgent review
which you have taken of the past, and so long as it may-
please my merciful Creator to bless me with health and
strength, I shall endeavour to prevent your kind antici-
pations of the future from being altogether disappointed.
" When the period shall arrive in which 1 feel my
strength unequal to the discharge of the laborious duties
of my office, it will be a great solace to me if I find that
1 still retain the good opinion of my brethren of the
Bar, and happy shall I be if I can retire with a portion
of that respect and affection which has followed my
venerable predecessor. Permit me now, gentlemen, to
express my best wishes for the welfare of each of you,
I assure you that it will give me great pleasure to see
success attend all your honourable efforts to advance
yourselves in your profession. We shall have much
communication with each other, and I am sure you will
unite with me in hoping that it may always be marked
by that courtesy which regulates the intercourse of gen-
tlemen, and bv that kindness which it is so desirable to
cultivate among members of the same profession."
It would be tedious to read one half of the addresses
which the newly appointed Chief Justice received, dur-
ing the course of his flist circuit. Their reproduction
would prove, indeed, that the regard in which he was
held was universal ; while to those who know anything
of the history of the settlement of the Province, espe-
cially the different countries whence the immigrants to
the several counties came, they would afford quite an
interesting study, since each would be found very charac-
teristic of the several national elements of which our
heterogeneous population is composed. One only is
selected — that handed to the Chief Justice upon his
16£ SIR B REN TON HALLIBURTON.
arrival at Queen's county — as a specimen of straight-
forward and independent expression of feeling.
" To the Honhh. Brenton Halliburton, Chief Justice of
the Province, of Nova Scotia :
** The Address of the Magistrates of Queen's County.
" Honorable Sir, — The magistrates of this county
have great pleasure in following the example of the rest
of the Province, on their own, and in behalf of the in-
habitants of Queen's county, generally, in congratulating
your honor on your elevation to the Chief Justiceship.
" We believe that to a person of real worth and good
understanding, the fulsome lanoriasre of flatterv cannot
be pleasing ; we shall not offend you, sir, in that way,
on this occasion.
" We must, however, be allowed to express our grati-
fication, that it has pleased our gracious Sovereign to
exalt to the station, a person whose unshaken integrity,
and long and faithful services in "a judicial capacity, has
commanded general confidence, and entitled him to the
high situation.
" We have only to add, honourable sir, that should
it please a gracious Providence to prolong your life to
the late period which marked the retirement of your
venerable and most worthy predecessor, we trust it will
be with equal honour to yourself, and approbation of
the province.
" We have the honor, &c, &c.
" Liverfool, Queen's Co., July, 1833."
It would not be within my province, nor come within
the scope of my purpose, even were I competent to the
task, to discuss the part which he took in politics. Yet
there is nothing more remarkable in his career than the
immense amount of labor which he performed at the
Council Board. By a reference to the minutes of that
SIH BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 163
bodv, it will be seen that his name recurs with an as-
tonishing frequency. On every important question he
was prepared to give his opinion, and on the majority
of important questions he took the decided lead.
In a verv sensible and dignified review of his life,
published in the "Acadian" newspaper at Digby, N. S.,
1860, the writer, in adverting to this period of his course,
made the following pertinent observations. "In days
gone by, when he occupied a prominent position in
both the upper branch of the legislature and the Execu-
tive, and when he dispensed to a great extent, the gov-
ernmental patronage of the country, it may be that a
few disappointed aspirants for administration favors re-
garded some of his official acts with feelings of disap-
proval. But now that years have elapsed since he with-
drew from the arena of politics, all parties concur in tes-
tifying to his capacity and uprightness as a Judge, —
uniform deportment as a gentleman, — and unostentatious
piety as a Christian."
In 1837 the old Council was dissolved, and a new
one constructed on different principles. By the adop-
tion of these new measures on the part of the govern-
ment the Chief Justice no longer had a seat in the Coun-
cil Chamber. At this juncture he was waited ifpon with
the following address from the members of the old Coun-
cil.
" To the Eon. Brexton Halliburton, late President of H> r
Majesty's Council, and Chief Justice of the Province of
Nova Scotia, &c. &c. &c.
"We, the members of her Majesty's late Council,
whose official intercourse with you is now terminated,
beg to offer you the assurance of our affection, esteem
and respect.
164 SIR BRESTON HALLIBURTON.
" The abilities, zeal, and high legal and parliamentary
knowledge, with which you have at all times aided the
Council in the performance of their duties, and the dig-
nified and impartial manner in which you have presided
over their deliberations since the retirement of your
venerable predecessor, give you the strongest claim to
the approbation of your Sovereign, and the respect and
thanks of her Majesty's subjects in this Province; and
we should not do justice to our feelings, were we to omit
the expression of our regret at an event which has de-
prived the people of this colony of your valuable ser-
vices in the councils of their country.
"In taking leave of you we shall carry with us, and
always retain, a gratifying recollection of the kindness
which has distinguished your conduct and intercourse
with the Council, and although you no longer fill the
situation which has enabled you to contribute so essen-
tially to the good of the Province, we hope it may long
enjoy the benefit of your talents and knowledge in the
high judicial office you now hold ; and with earnest
prayers that you may long possess health and strength
to enable you to discharge the duties of that important
trust, we tender you our affectionate and respectful fare-
well."
'' To the Honorable 31emhers of Her Majesty's late Council in
Nova Scotia :
" Gentlemen, — Few things have occurred to me in the
course of a long life, so truly gratifying as the address
with which you have this day honored me.
" During the period that I have had a share in the
Councils of this Colony, I have ever had an earnest de-
sire to perform with fidelity, my duty to my Sovereign
and to my fellow subjects.
"I feel amply compensated for all the care and anx-
iety inseparable from such desire, by the flattering tes-
timonial which you have now presented to me.
"That my colleagues, who have witnessed my con-
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON 165
duct should entertain and express such sentiments res-
pecting it, as this address contains, affords me the high-
est satisfaction, and I shall carefully preserve it, as one
of the most valuable records I possess.
"We live, gentlemen, in days of political experiments.
Should the result prove that those who have made them
have acted wisely, I am confident that, however they
may affect us individually, we shall all not only cheer-
fully acquiesce, but sincerely rejoice in any changes which
will eventually improve the institutions of the country,
and promote the welfare of its inhabitants.
"But whatever the future may unfold, the present
moment is saddened to me by the recollection that my
connexion is terminated with a body of gentlemen whom
I respect so highly, with some of whom I have been asso-
ciated in public life for upwards of twenty years ; whose
strenuous efforts to advance the best interests of the
Province, I have so often witnessed, and whose uniform
kindness to myself I shall never forget.
"1 beg, gentlemen, that each of you will accept of my
best wishes for your future happiness, and whether you
again embark in public or retire into private life, may
you carry with you what you so fully deserve — the gra-
titude of the people of Nova Scotia.
" Believe me it is with no ordinary emotions that I
now reciprocate your kind and affectionate farewell.
" Brenton Halliburton,
"Late President of Her Majesty's Council, in Nova Scotia-
"Halifax, Dec. 23, 1837."
Thus he stepped out from the political world, and
thenceforward was left free from the anxieties which it
produces, and the annoyances which are almost sure to
be endured while in it. To a certain extent the Chief
Justice must have felt relief on being severed from the
cares incident to the party politics of the province,
although his active mind must occasionally have felt a
1GG SIR BREXTOX HALLIBURTOX.
species of blank, so long and so deeply had he been in-
terested in public affairs. Yet in some measure the
scene had changed ; there were new actors to contend
with, and new plays brought upon the stage. It was
no longer that to which for many years, he had been
accustomed, and he soon decided that he was better out
of than in the political world.
Sir Brenton was fond, in a leisure half-hour, of writ-
ing humorous pieces, evidently thrown off in a lively
moment, and generally mingling some grave sentiment
with some pungent wit. On the occasion just referred
to he wrote the subjoined piece of pleasantry. None
will probably enjoy it more than those who took part in
effecting the change in the Council.
" Death of the Old Couxcil."
" Died, suddenly, at the Government House, on
Tuesday last, in the eighty- eighth year of her age, Mrs.
Majesty's Council.
" The sudden death of this venerable old ladv, has
excited some sensation in the community of which she
had long been an influential member. We do not sub-
scribe to the maxim, de mortals nil §c, but we feel it
unnecessary to make any comments upon the character
of the deceased. She did not live in a corner, and as
her conduct is before the public, every individual is en-
titled to form his own judgment upon it.
"Some rumours of an unpleasant nature are afloat,
occasioned we suppose by her expiring so suddenly.
From various symptoms that had recently displayed
themselves, her friends were apprehensive that some
change in her constitution was about to take place, but
none of them anticipated her immediate dissolution. We,
ourselves, firmly believe, that if the good lady had not
fallen into the hands of quacks, she would have long
SIR BRENTOa HALLIBURTON. 16
:-"
Lived to exercise her usual and useful functions. On the
morning of her decease, she walked to the Government
House, as she was wont to do, whenever she understood
that his Excellency was desirous of availing himself of
her knowledge and experience in the management of
the affairs of this little community. But she had scarce-
ly taken her seat, when a dose, which had been pre-
scribed by a practitioner in Printer's Square, and pre-
pared by an apothecary in Downing Street, was admin-
istered to her. How it was concocted, we say not :
many say they do know How, — but we say nothing !
"The old lady swallowed it with great reluctance,
and we reg-ret to state that it proved almost instantly
fatal. She never spoke afterwards. She immediately
lost the use of all her members, and her head actually
dropt from her body. We have no doubt that her loss
will be sincerely deplored by many intelligent and res-
pectable members of the community.
" As the good lady died without a will, and has left
no lawful heirs, her large possessions in Actingville and
Plannington will revert to the Crown. As the public
are much interested in the produce of these estates, we
trust that they will be committed to the management of
persons who will render them at least as productive as
they were when in the hands of the late possessor.
Report says that they will not be again united. From
the nature of the property, we ourselves doubt whether
they can be well cultivated, if entirely severed frcfni
each other.
" It is pretty confidently asserted, that a younger sis-
ter of the deceased (Mrs. Botherall, of Howling Hall)
was instrumental in procuring the administering of this
fatal dose. The two sisters lived formerly upon very
friendly terms, but there has latterly been much bicker-
ing between them, and it is surmised that Mrs. Bother-
all has for some time cast a longing eye upon Acting-
ville. She was servant in common of Planinngtown,
but it is said she has been anxious to have the sole con-
168 SIR BRRNTOX HALLIBURTON
trol of that estate. We trust that she will be disap*
pointed. She has not managed her property so well,
as to induce us to wish for an extension of it. We
would like to see Howling Hall in better order, before
any addition is made to the estate of Mrs. Botlierall."
The Chief Justice proved himself, during the years
which followed his separation from.the Council, a most
painstaking, laborious Judge. He never trilled with a
cause, but made it a matter of serious study. His great
anxiety to do right, to deal impartially, to show no
respect of persons, was manifest throughout his career.
When his life had drawn to its close, men looked
back upon his judicial career with admiration. The
integrity, legal ability, and firmness, which he displayed
at different times, and under different circumstances,
called forth justly merited eulogies. One evidently
written by a lawyer, and already alluded to, is worthy
of being read, as containing a truthful estimate of his
powers, without being fulsome.
" With an intellect sufficiently profound to compre-
hend the general principles of law and equity, and with
powers of acute analytical discrimination, he was well
fitted to grapple with matters of legal intricacy, which
were frequently submitted to him for judicial decision.
As a Judge, towards his brothers on the Bench, he was
deferential, urbane, and dignified ; and towards the Bar,
he was courteous, patronizing, patient and forbearing.
To young lawyers in whom he recognized indications of
undeveloped talent, he extended the friendly smile of
encouragement. He had the happy faculty of being
familiar with persons in an inferior position, without
compromising his dignity, or impairing the respect that
was due to his elevated station. Indeed, respect was as
much accorded to his person as to the high office he
filled.
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 169
"It is said that lie was an industrious and thorough
legal student, even in advanced life ; and that he brought
to the difficult and responsible duties of the Bench, an
amount of legal knowledge, of which few of his Colonial
contemporaries could boast. He made himself perfectly
conversant with every new treatise of value upon law ;
-and he was familiar with the improving practice and ac-
cumulating decisions of the English Courts.
"His mind was well disciplined, and enriched with
the treasures of legal lore ; and his lucidly vigorous
understanding was thus prepared for the complicated
questions upon which it was his duty to adjudicate. In
short, it is universally admitted that he was an able and
upright Judge. During his long judicial life, it was
sometimes his duty to pronounce upon convicted crimi-
nals the extreme penalty of the law. They who heard
him on such occasions, remember the pathetically im-
pressive tones of his voice, while he vindicated the right-
eousness and prerogatives of the law ; and at the same
time, addressed the condemned culprit in the language
of Christian charity and commiseration. He blended
the stern rigour of the Judge with the compassionate
spirit of an Evangelist. The man that was sentenced to
the gallows, was directed to the cross ; and an effort was
made to arouse the conscience — to awaken repentance — -
and to inspire faith in the soul of the guilty individual,
who was soon to be arraigned before a holier and more
august tribunal. In Judge Halliburton's language at such
times there was nothing harsh or reproachful. His pious
exhortations — often accompanied with tears, which be-
spoke the Christian sympathy of his heart — were always
as earnest, solemn, and impressive as any that were ever
uttered by the most devoted clergyman."
Judge Halliburton took a very deep interest in the
cause of Education. On this subject he held most en-
lightened and liberal views. His whole course of con-
duct relative to the Pictou Academy, sufficiently shows
12
170 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
the value which he set on a sound and thorough system
of instruction, and at the same time his own freedom
from the trammels of a narrow-minded bigotry. It was
by no means in accordance with the judgment of some
of his most highly esteemed personal friends, that he
acted in the beginning of that exciting contest, but rather
in direct antagonism to their wishes. The same difficulty
presented itself then, as now meets the country — that
of providing Common School education for every section
of the Province, — and of appropriating on sound princi-
ples, a share of public money towards the establishment
and maintenance of institutions in which the higher
branches of learning should be taught. It would have
been a great boon to the colony, if this great question
had been fairly grappled with and settled, before the
population had increased to its present size ; but there
were obstacles in the way, especially in reference to the
founding of a system of Collegiate instruction, and chief
amongst them, a jealousy of the predominant influence
of the Church of England. .The number adhering to the
Church, throughout the Province, was comparatively
small ; but in Halifax, the centre of power, it was com-
paratively large, and many held places of trust and in-
fluence in the Government. There, possibly, was some
cause for this feeling, to be found in the opinions and
conduct of the Churchmen of the day. They had a
College of their own, whose foundations had been laid
under the auspices and through the exertions of the first
Bishop ; it had been fostered with care by him and his
successors ; large sums of money had been brought from
England and expended upon its erection and mainten-
ance ; it was the first College in a British colony which
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 171
had received a Royal charter ; it was modelled, as to its
curriculum of study, after the most famous University in
the world ; it had served the Province well in sending
from its Halls, even in its earliest days, men who graced
the Senate and the Bar, — who discharged the duties of a
minister with ability and devotion, — of a physician with
skill and success. It was natural that Churchmen should
cherish an institution with which they were so intimately
blended; and we can scarcely wonder that they, on their
part, should have been anxious to give pre-eminence to
King's College at Windsor, whenever the question of
University education was discussed. With this jealousy
on either side, we can scarcely wonder that no better
system of providing instruction of a higher order was
adopted. But it may be doubted whether time has im-
proved, though it may have changed, the aspect of the
question, or in any degree lessened the difficulties. As
regards the Common School education of the country, it
could not be much worse than at present ; the theory
and practice are equally bad.
As respects the higher schools and Colleges, the
principle adopted by the Legislature of the country, of
giving a like sum to each denomination of Christians, for
the support of institutions which should be under their
own management, is thoroughly unsound ; and its prac-
tical working proves it to be a failure. It tends to create
a spirit of religious rivalry which is far from wholesome
in itself, and by no means conducive towards that much
to be desired end, in any country, but especially in a
young colony — a unity of feeling and interests amongst
the inhabitants. Separate interests are sustained, and
even called out, by these different communities, and
172 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
youths educated within them are so completely moulded
after the pattern of each, that they go forth into the
world, with a species of conviction that it is their first
and chief duty to promote the necessarily limited aims
and objects of those with whom they have been associat-
ed for years. So to train the pupils is not intentional
on the part of the several Faculties at the head of these
Colleges, except in so far as regards the students of
Theology ; these, of course, are specially taught the
doctrines peculiar to the body of Christians to whom the
College belongs, and conscientiously are impressed with
the superior value and soundness of that system of
doctrine and government to all others. With this no
fault can be found, but unhappily the particular interest
of the religious denomination, as such, imperceptibly
insinuates itself into the minds of the taught, through
various channels, such as the class of books in general
circulation within the walls of the College, and the or-
dinary tone of sentiment, feeling, and conversation. As
an almost necessary consequence, every year finds a fresh
set of young men ushered into the Province, who have
just passed their examination, and are about to take
their places as students in the several professions, or
clerks in the merchants counting house ; yet who are
disunited; who have come from four or five different
Colleges ; who form as many separate companies ; who
have, many perhaps unconsciously, though not less
surely, separate public interests ; who have each been
riving with those of their own way of thinking, and
meeting no opposition, deem themselves and the class
with which they are linked, to be right, and all the rest
of the world wrong ; who know comparatively nothing
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 173
of the great world outside of their own narrow circum-
ference, and are resolved that they and theirs must be
upheld politically as well as religiously at any cost.
For the good of the Province at large, it would be a
marvel, if men brought up under such influences could
as a rule, coalesce ; as says Sir William Temple, " Divi-
sions hinder the common interest and public good."
Great public measures, tending to the welfare of the
colony, are lost sight of in the resolve to push forward
the interests and increase the influence of the various
religious bodies.
There can also be little doubt, that our strength is
sadly weakened by the division of public money, now
granted by the House of Assembly, for the promotion
of a Collegiate education. At present it is frittered
away in small sums, too trifling in amount to be of any
great value to each, and merely enabling the several
Governors to eke out a small, and in most instances,
pitiably deficient support to their Professors and Tutors.
It is true that none could well continue without this
little aid, for the respective endowments are, in all cases,
far too small for the respectable support of the several
Colleges ; but it may be questioned whether this aid,
thus bestowed, is for the real welfare of the Province,
when the various sums combined, together with an ad-
ditional grant, would support one good University.
Let the country prosper as it may, for many years to
come the Denominational Colleges must continue to be
very small and insignificant institutions ; while their
funds must ever be kept up, and when lost, renewed, by
evoking the feelings of the Denominations whose cherish-
ed care they are : a practice which may indeed " pro-
174 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
voke to good "works," but not necessarily to "love."
In addition to all, it is clear that the leading object
of a University is wholly unattaincd by this division of
labour and separation of students. A University gathers
from the wide universe of knowledge, men versed in all
branches of learning ; brings to one centre, men who are
masters in some special subject ; culls them out of each
department of learning, and by uniting them, concen-
trates their light, intensifies their power, and by mutual
reflection increases the knowledge each of the other. It
attracts by its own intrinsic excellence students from all
parts of a country, who have been brought up under
different influences, and innoculated with various opi-
nions, and mingling them with each other, rubs off
their rough edges of thought, and gives them a general
insight into the human mind in all its phases. It must
be regretted that some one central University had not, in
the early stage of the colony, been established ; and had
all the leading men looked wisely forward to the future
of the Province, they might have so arranged as to have
effected this object with perhaps even less difficulty than
at present, or at any time hereafter. King's College,
at Windsor, had a Royal charter, a small endowment,
and a staff of Professors ; a little kindly consultation,
would have removed, as it long since has done, the ob-
noxious test of subscription to the thirty-nine articles.
The foundation was already laid ; nor need the selection
of this, the oldest chartered College in the British Colo-
nies, in any way have interfered with the establishment
of Theological schools by each denomination for the
especial benefit of their own students in Divinity. These
Halls, which might easily have been maintained as to
SIR BREXTOX HALLIBURTOX. 175
tlie staff required by each body of Christians, could
either have been so situated as that the religious instruc-
tion should have been imparted simultaneously with the
secular, or students in that Faculty been drafted into
them at the close of their University career. Possibly
the day is not far distant when this will be accomplished
and a central University be established. Judge Halli-
burton no doubt would gladly have lent his aid to the
furtherance of any good scheme, which might have been
prepared for this end ; and deeply as he was interested
in the welfare of King's College he naturally would
have desired that it should have been the mother Uni-
versity, with which all Denominational Colleges for in-
struction in Theology should be affiliated. In advoca-
ting the claims of the Pictou Academy, as he at first
did, he took high ground, and wished that its supporters
should have the privilege of educating their children in
their own principles of religion, as then it seemed im-
practicable to arrange any one plan by which all could
be taught within the same walls and their various forms
of creed not interfered with. It is true that for a reason
already mentioned he finally refused to unite with the
advocates of the grant ; the question was settled after
many warm debates, and the principle adopted of giving
like sums to eaeh denomination which should establish a
College in their own interests. A few years will tell us
or our children whether all will not unite to have one
University, in which literature, art, and science shall be
imparted to the youth of the country ; and while God is
honored and worshipped daily in its chapels, the special
study of Theology is conducted in Halls and Colleges
connected with it. A Faculty of five and twenty or
176 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
thirty professors and lecturers ; a Library of some thirty
thousand volumes ; philosophical apparatus of every
kind ; collections of specimens in all the branches of
science where they may be gathered ; and two or three
hundred students — would form a University in reality as
in name, from which it would be an honor to carry out
a degree. These views are thrown out as those of the
writer rather than the subject of this memoir ; and have
been introduced as reflections arising from the debate on
the question alluded to. The principle of assessment
for the support of schools has within a short time been
most wisely adopted by the Legislature of the land ; and
although some difficulties of detail may cause it to be
unfavorably received by a few, these will very soon
vanish, and the course taken be universally pronounced a
blessing. Should the weighty question of a central Uni-
versity be brought before the public at a future period,
the inhabitants of the Province, it is hoped, will con-
sider it in a frank and liberal spirit, and bend their
energies towards the attainment of that which would
tend more to keep down petty prejudices and create a
bond of union amongst the men who, as a rule, must
ever be leading in the land, than any other means which
could be devised.
The Judge's intimate connection with King's College
has been stated already. As in his youthful days, so to
the end of his long life he displayed a warm interest in
its welfare. From the meetings of the Board of Govern-
ors he was seldom absent. For many years he made it
a matter of duty to drive to Windsor for the purpose of
attending the most important — the annual — meeting held
in the month of September in the Library of the College,.
SIR BRENT03 HALLIBURTON. 177
and when there was always treated with that deep res-
pect wThich met him every where else. Indeed he
seemed to be so integral an element of the Institution
that it would have scarcely appeared like a meeting1
without him. As he grew older, and his always fragile
frame became weak, so highly esteemed were his wise
counsels, that rather than lose them the Board of
Governors proposed meeting at his house, to which he
willingly acceded ; and they accordingly did so until
his last illness. It would not engage the interest of the
provincial public in general, to have a relation of his
sentiments on those various questions of detail which
came before the Board of Governors ; but as a public
man they are entitled to know of him, that he ever de-
sired to legislate when sitting there, as would best sub-
serve the interest of the whole body of people. While
he ever defended the rights of King's -College with zeal
and ability, he never forgot to be just and liberal to-
wards all.
When the Encaenia next succeeding his death took
place, the President of the College from his place on the
dais in the public hall alluded to him in terms of great
respect.
"In all our difficulties he was a firm and constant
friend. In the Provincial Councils he Avas ever a most
prompt, energetic and judicious benefactor. When at
the bidding of that Lord whose cancrine and palindromic
name reads as harshlv backwards as forwards — nomen et
omen Jiabes — well betokening his retrograde measures —
when Lord Glenelg, I mean, called upon us (in his
notorious No. 1 Despatch, dated April oOth, 1835) to
surrender oar Royal Charter, the firm but characteris-
tically playful reply of this old soldier to Sir Colin
178 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
Campbell was " No surrender, your Excellency ! our
Royal Charter lias never been violated and shall not be
surrendered — it will survive even this Despatch!" When
the Imperial Grant was withdrawn he was among the
first to aid us by a liberal donation, and joined by other
friends a new Professorship was added to our Staff.
This example was soon nobly followed by our Alumni,
so that when the Provincial Grant was reduced two
more Professorships were immediately founded. It
seemed a pity we had no more to lose, or who can tell
how many learned Professors would be gracing our halls
on this happy occasion, and swelling the already goodly
number of my valued confreres ? It was a crisis tend-
ing to remind us of the sweet lines from his own pen :
'Deep feels my heart, God's providence can still
Surpassing good produce from passing ill.'
"Time would fail me were I to attempt his eulogy.
Honored by his Sovereign — happily panegyrized as you
may remember in this Hall, by Lord Mulgrave — vene-
rated by his Brother Judges and by all the numerous
and brilliant ornaments of his Profession, as well as re-
vered by all orders of men in the Province — eulogised
on his decease by the eloquent and friendly pen of one
who knew him well — a graceful tribute whose touching
power stirred the depths of many an heart — I feel were
I to add a word I should be guilty of the folly of at-
tempting " lliada post Homerum scribere."
" The last Encaenia I remember him to have attended,
Judge Parker and Judge Haliburton, our honored sons,
were both present. " The good old Chief," — such the
phrase universally applied, — "the old man eloquent"
drew a simultaneous burst of especial applause from
them, and from the whole assembly, by an impromptu
address of genuine and glowing eloquence, pathos and
burning vigor, which, while it charmed every heart,
evinced the deepest interest in our College, and was
pronounced to be a spontaneous effort worthy of the
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 179
best days of his prime. He honored me with his friend-
ship and occasional correspondence. He wrote for me
a short but most interesting biography, and a year or
two before his death sent me in manuscript for perusal
(afterwards privately printed) a poem on the passing
events of that exciting period, containing paragraphs
almost prophetically describing as the natural conse-
quence of their system the present internecine struggle
in the then United States."
It was well said in the closing paragraph of the reso-
lution afterward passed at the Board of Governors :
" As in the profession of which he was at the head, and
in the society of which he occupied the highest place,
so at this Board he was venerated by all, the oldest as
well as the youngest, in the light of a parent ; and his
counsels were received with additional respect, because
his wisdom was always tempered by kindness."
Sir Brenton was a member of the Church of England,
and as such very devoted to its interests. He was con-
vinced of the Scriptural basis on which its government,
doctrine and discipline were built, and zealously advo-
cated its claims whenever opportunity offered. When
the Diocesan Church Society was formed, in 1837,
under the joint auspices of the late Bishop Inglis and
the Reverend William Cogswell, the Chief Justice lent
his valuable aid. As a member of the executive com-
mittee, he worked with as much zeal and interest as
any of the clergy. Whenever he was not absent from
town, on circuit or other business, he was almost sure
to be seen on the afternoons of meeting making his way
up to the National School in which the committee met.
It was remarkable also, how very attentive he was to
the proceedings, which oftentimes were necessarily dry
180 SIR BRENTOX HALLIBURTON.
enough. But whatever they were he was never inat-
tentive. It may be doubted whether any one can re-
member his sitting listlessly, as the business was trans-
acted, in any one instance. When anything was said
which he did not distinctly hear, as was sometimes the
case in his later years, he would lean forward in a way
peculiarly his own for a minute and then resume his
position. If he was much interested in what was going
on, he would do this frequently while the speaker was
addressing the meeting, and as would be proved by
what he himself would afterward say, had listened to
and mastered the whole speech. One might have sup-
posed that with his accumulated experience and native
wisdom, he would have felt it very wearisome to hear
the remarks of quite young men, and scarcely have
listened to them ; but if no one else in the room paid
attention to the crude ideas, and badly expressed
thoughts of an inexperienced youth, he did. The truth
was, he obeyed the apostolic precept, — " he honored all
men," and instead of discoura«in2; a voun^ man in his
first attempts, by inattention, or an evident disregard to
what he was saying, he patiently listened through it all.
At the annual public meetings of the Society, his
speech was anticipated with the greatest pleasure. He
usually moved the adoption and publishing of the report
of the executive committee, which gave him an oppor-
tunity of reviewing the progress made during the past
year ; and such was his familiar acquaintance with every
part of the Province, that he spoke with a fluency and
clearness of the work of the missionaries and the state
of the churches, as to afford information while he gave
pleasure to his audience. It will be long remembered
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 181
by those who were present how touchingly and how
usefully he adverted one night in Temperance Hall, to
the mutineers of the Saladin, who were tried and exe-
cuted at Halifax. He was speaking of the influence
which education exerted over a community: and in
referring more particularly to reading he stated the vast
importance of circulating books and periodicals that
contained sound principles. Suddenly stopping he
stooped down, and reaching a book, held it up before
the assembly : " This," said he " is a book which be-
longed to the unhappy men who committed murder in
the Saladin ; it contains many a valuable treatise ; it is
widely known and very justly is it highly prized ; it is
Chambers' Journal. You may perceive that certain
pages are turned down at the corners. The book in
general has scarcely been read at all ; these have evi-
dently been re-read many times ; they bear marks of
thorough study ; and what is written in these pages ?
The story of a successful mutiny ! Who can tell but that
the thought was first suggested, to a mind hitherto un-
tainted with such diabolical designs, by a perusal of the
injudicious tale ? The well-thumbed leaves bear pain-
ful testimony, that if not planted, the thought was fos-
tered by the high wrought story. When men are influ-
enced by others thoughts, what Christian will not wish
to avoid sending forth what may lead to evil, and use
every effort to spread abroad only such works as may
tend to good ?" None will forget the earnest tones of
voice with which these sentiments were uttered, or the
nerve and vigour which animated the frame of the elo-
quent old man.
But Sir Brenton was no narrow minded zealot.
182 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
True, he loved most dearly the Church of England.
But he loved all, who loved his Lord. In every res-
pect he thought the Church stood pre-eminently high ;
as to its administration, its forms of worship, and the
doctrines which it drew from Scripture. As an instru-
ment in God's hands for building up believers in their
faith, and as a means of extending a knowledge of our
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ to fallen man, he believed
it the purest, and the means best adapted to the end.
Yet he hailed gladly every servant of Christ and bid
God-speed to all who maintained the essential truths of
the Christian religion. The Bible in these matters was
his text book. Whatever in it was plainly, unequivocally
stated, he received with deepest reverence ; but on
points upon which it was silent, he accepted no dictum
from other sources. His mind and heart equally were
far above adopting contracted notions on the grand
question, What is Truth ? He was one of those who
knew that the great, comprehensive, absorbing doctrine
taught in Holy Writ, was the Union of the Soul with
God through Christ by the operation of the Spirit. This is
the truth in which every man on earth is personally in-
terested. A wonderful being, who came originally from
God, he has derived his light, moral and intellectual, as
well as his life, from the Divine Being. He knows by in-
tuition and experience, that as a link of the human fam-
ily, as a link in the one long chain of human life, he is
alienated, estranged and separated from his Creator and
God. The Bible tells him how he may return and be
re-united to Him ; and how when this lower stage of his
existence is over, he may be admitted into His im-
mediate presence, and, dwelling in the atmosphere
*
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 183
which is round about Him, live, as He lives, for ever
and for ever. Redemption by Christ, and Sanctification
by the Holy Spirit, or dropping these theological ex-
pressions, the atonement which the Lord Jesus, "God
manifest in the flesh," has made for sin, and the blessed
influence of the Holy Spirit, which though as unseen as
the wind, is as surely felt, are the foundations on which
alone man can rest his hope. Doubtless, there are many
truths beside these clearly expressed in the inspired
volume ; but to these they may all be traced back, that
Christ may be " all in all."
For the better preservation of these truths, and their
better promulgation, through the world, Christ and His
apostles have laid down broad rules and plain prin-
ciples— but they have entered into no detail. The
grand criteria by which we are to know the people of
God, are as few as they are clear. Whoever he be who
believes in, and loves the Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity
and in truth, and who brings forth the fruits of the
Spirit in his walk through the world — that man has ap-
prehended the truth, and has found access by Christ
through the Spirit with the Father. Such, we believe,
as might be gathered from his conduct and conversation,
were the broad and enlightened views of Sir Brenton.
He liked the walls and bulwarks that were round about
the Church of England. The government, the liturgy,
the rites and ceremonies, he deemed more than expedi-
ent, he set a very high value upon them ; but he did
not think it necessary that every man should be within
the walls which surrounded the Church of England,
with whatever wisdom they were built, before he could
hail him as a companion and fellow-laborer in God's
184 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
vineyard. Having a brotherly esteem for all Christians,
he gladly united with them in the furtherance of any
good object. Asa member of the Bible Society, and of
the Sabbath Alliance, and such associations, he joined
most cordially with men of other denominations. The
last public meeting at which he was present was one
held for united prayer. His appearance on that occa-
sion was welcomed by Christians with great warmth of
feeling. It was a fine scene in every way. The public
hall was crowded with worshippers ; it was wholly un-
like the ordinary gatherings within those walls ; the
time was mid- day ; the attendants were not merely or
mostly the curious and idle. Men of business had left
their counting houses, and offices and shops, to wait
upon God, and present their supplications and prayers,
and intercessions before Him ; the aged as well as
the young were amongst the throng. On the raised
platform were the ministers, and many of the older
members, of each denomination. In their midst sat
the venerable Chief-Justice. With a few solemn
words he opened the meeting, and the worship began.
After the reading of God's Word, the offering up of
prayer, and an address from one or two of the clergy-
men present, he began to feel the effect of his unwonted
exertion, and fatigue compelled him to retire. Without
notice he rose from his seat ; in a few well-chosen
words, he said to the immense audience, that a weary
frame warned him to depart; and then the honored
patriarch, looking over the vast assemblage, uttered in
those tremulous tones which made the heart swell with
feeling : " God bless you." The whole assembly, as
by common consent, remained in solemn silence, as
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 185
leaning on the arm of a friend he slowly passed with
feeble step through their midst : the door closed, and
he was gone.
His seat in St. Paul's Church was seldom vacant.
Even when he had become very infirm, and might have
deemed himself unequal to the effort, he so enjoyed
public worship that he could not lose the opportunity
whenever it offered. There was no individual in the
congregation more devout than he, nor more attentive to
the sermon. Pie did net consider himself so wise but
that he misrht hear something of which he had not
thought before, or some old thought pnt in a new form.
His whole manner from the time he entered the house ot
God until he left it, was an example of all that could be
supposed reverential or devotional. His voice was heard
in the immediate vicinity of his pew as that of one who
had wholly lost sight of those who were about him, and
was in earnest in seeking grace for himself, and God's
blessing upon others. When he took his accustomed seat
in the church, it seemed natural that he should be there,
and gave a look of familiarity to that venerable place of
worship. When his well-known form was absent, there
was a blank which for long was felt.
Towards the immediate close of life the Chief-Justice's-
hearing had become slightly impaired, and in conse-
quence, he had some difficulty in catching the voice of
the officiating minister, as his pew was on the ground
floor. To remedy in some measure the evil, he resolved
to obtain, if possible, a sitting which would bring him
nearer to the pulpit ; and he therefore paid a visit to his
Parish church on a week day for the purpose of select-
ing a seat in which he could better hear the sermon.
13
186 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
At his time of life, and feeble in limb as be bad then
become, the ascending of the long night of stairs was a
serious effort ; he, nevertheless, mounted the steps to the
gallery, and after looking at the various pews in the
proximity of the pulpit, he decided on one in which he
thought he might hear the clergyman's voice ; and when
a friend who accompanied him read aloud in the pulpit,
and he distinctly caught the words, he felt and manifest-
ed great delight. An effort was made to negotiate with
the occupiers of this peAV for permission to the Chief-
Justice to have a seat in it ; but, strange to say, the ap-
plication was unsuccessful, and when this result to the
attempt was communicated to him, he felt the disap-
pointment to which it subjected him most keenly. As
in the Providence of God it so occurred, he mi^ht have
' CD
been spared the pain of a denial, for this was his last
visit to that sacred place whose hallowed courts he had
trodden for fourscore years.
The Chief-Justice in private life was one of the most
kind, amiable and cheerful of men ; while a retentive
memory, and a great fund of humor, rendered him a
most delightful companion. "Given to hospitality," he
frequently entertained his personal friends, and any
leading men who might have come to the Province in
an official capacity, or were paying Halifax a passing
visit. He charmed his guests with a constant flow of
lively conversation ; sometimes he instructed by grave
discussion on the leading topics of the day ; at others he
amused by his anecdotes. He was especially familiar
with the lives and characters of the most able and in-
fluential men, who at any time had held high places in
the Province, and of these he often spake ; now relating
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 187
some incident of interest which had occurred to them,
during some part of their career, — and now recalling
some happy remark or quick retort or witticism. So
playful was his mind on all occasions when it was right
to yield to its bent, that one could scarcely avoid recalling
the proverb of the wise king : " He that is of a merry
heart has a continual feast;" and as to its influence
upon others, " a merry heart doeth good like a
medicine."
Blended as he was for so many years with the history
of Nova Scotia, and a very prominent actor in all the
important events which occurred within its limits, the
Chief-Justice Was seldom or never the hero of his own
stories; and, as a consequence, but few of the facts of
his own life could be gleaned from his conversation.
Thus many an instructive and interesting passage of his
career has passed into oblivion. In his own house,
and amongst the members of his own family, he was
uniformly most kind, considerate and indulgent. His
cheerfulness and readiness to please were always at
hand, and always in action. They cost him no effort,
but manifested themselves spontaneously. Alike to
those who were daily with him, and those who visited
his house, he displayed an even gentleness of disposi-
tion and urbanity of manner. To the poor and dis-
tressed he exhibited not mere sympathy of feeling, but
proved it by generous dealing : the value of the latter
was enhanced by the former — while he was beneficent
he was also benevolent. Numbered amongst his plea-
sant ways at home was one which afforded a good deal
of pleasure to others. It was that of putting some
thought into metre : sometimes he would concoct a
138 SIR BRENT0N HALLIBURTON.
riddle, at others indite a poetical epistle, or again clothe
some scene in which he had taken part in verse, and send
the production to his friend. Such "was the agreeable
turn of his disposition ; happy himself, he endeavoured
by little as well as great things to make those around
him happy also. In that sweet little poem of which he
was very fond, " The Deserted Village," there are lines-
which could be most truthfully applied to him, as the
venerable old man, surrounded by his family and
friends, passed the evening of his life : —
His ready smile a parent's warmfli exprest j
Their welfare pleased him, and their cares distrest ;
To them his heart, his lovef his griefs were given,
But all his serious thoughts had rest in Heaven :
As some tall cliff that lifts its awful form,
Swells from the vale, and midway leaves the storm ;
Though round its breast, the rolling clouds are spread,.
Eternal sunshine settles on its head.
The Chief-Justice was during the progress of his
career the recipient of numerous testimonials of the high
esteem in which he was held. It was not only after his
life had closed, as so often is the case, that men began
to discern his worth, and pronounce eulogies upon his-
character ; but while he was still living and taking
an active part in public affairs. This fact imparts
significance to those documents in which his course of
conduct is lauded and his character admired.
Amongst many other tokens of respect and esteem-
shown to him was one on which he must have set a
high value, because of the persons from whom it
emanated, and the high honor which it conferred on
him. The members of the Bar resolved on asking his
permission to have his portrait taken, and hung in that
SIR BREKTON HALLIBURTON. 189
Council Chamber in which he had so long sat as a
member, and afterward as President. He acceded to
the wish : an admirable likeness was executed by the
artist, and placed beside those of royalty and some of
his predecessors. It is needless, in looking at this
memorial, and the distinguished position which it
occupies, to speak of the estimation in which he was
held by those who saw him most and knew him best as
a public man.
A pleasing custom was introduced by the members of
the Bench and Bar, during the latter years of the
Chief-Justice's life, of their waiting upon him on his
successive birth days to congratulate him on his con-
tinued health, and the unimpaired state of his faculties.
On these occasions he ever received his brethren, and
the Barristers who accompanied them in a body, with
courtesy and dignity ; while his lively disposition, the
ready wit, and the appropriate anecdote at his com-
mand, rendered these visits most pleasant to his friends.
They usually spent an hour or two with him as guests,
and in his cheerful society renewed their feeling of
affectionate regard for him. His replies to the congra-
tulations offered to him at these times were often in a
touching strain. As he grew older he felt that these
yearly gatherings could not be long repeated ; and the
venerable man, when he referred to the past and
glanced at the future, generally touched a tender chord
at once by the deep pathos of his sentiments and the
earnest tones of his familiar voice.
He was drawing very near the end of his course,
when once more he was to receive tokens of respect and
honor from his fellow-men. This time it was from, the
190 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
fountain from which alone all earthly dignities and
positions of rank in the British dominions, can legiti-
mately flow. Her Majesty conferred on him the honor
of knighthood. It was a fitting climax to all his
testimonials. The greatest was reserved for the last.
Nor could the Sovereign have granted the honor either
to one more worthy to receive it in consideration of his
Ions: and faithful services, or to one in whom there beat
a more thoroughly loyal heart. Many a year before
her Majesty was born, he had served under her royal
father. As we have seen, he " knew and loved him
well." He had seen him much in private as well as
public; and now in the same town in which he had
known the Duke of Kent, some sixty years before, the
aoed man was to receive at the hands of his roval
daughter, a distinguishing mark of her approbation.
At the close of the last century, the Duke had given
him a commission in the regiment. When more than
half the present century had passed away, the Queen
enrolled him amongst her knights.
His friends, the Profession, the Province at large,
expressed pleasure at the act. The Bench and Bar
once more approached him in the language of congra-
tulation : —
"On Monday the 9th of May (1859) the members of
the Bench and Bar, resident at Halifax, waited on Sir
Brenton Halliburton, at his residence, where the Honble.
Mr. Justice Bliss, after a few very appropriate remarks,
presented and read the following address : —
LTo the Honorable Sir Brenton Halliburton, Chief-
Justice of Nova Scotia :
•"It has afforded all the members of the Bench and Bar of
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 191
the Supreme Court over which you have so long presided,
great gratification to learn that your lengthened term of judi-
cial labors, extending over a period of more than half a cen-
tury, and your great ability and rectitude in the discharge of
the duties of your office, which have long secured to you the
respect and esteem of the inhabitants of this Province, have
been recognized by the Imperial Government, and that her
most gracious Majesty has been pleased to confer upon you
the dignity of a Knight of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland.
'While, as admirers of your public and private virtues, we
are much gratified bv this event, we also feel grateful that
this mark of her Royal favor has been bestowed upon the
head of the profession to which we have the honor to belong,
and that her most gracious Majesty has been pleased to ap-
prove of your valuable public services in the high office
which you have so long occupied and adorned.
'Her Majesty could not have adopted a more effective
mode of retaining the affections of her loyal subjects in this
Province, and of making them feel that it forms a component
part of her empire, than by thus conferring her Royal favor
upon one whom they so much honor and esteem.
" Few of us are old enough to recall the time when you
first assumed your judicial duties : but though providence has
blessed you with many more years than are usually allotted
to man, age, we are happy to know, has not impaired those
qualities of mind and heart for which you have been so con-
spicuous, nor weakened those generous and social virtues
which have so endeared you to us. That you may long be
spared to enjoy the honor which her Majesty has conferred
upon you is our sincere and heartfelt wish.'
" To which Sir Brenton Halliburton read the follow-
ing reply : —
• My Brethren of the Bench and of the Bar :
' Accept my heartfelt thanks for the kind and affectionate
address which you have given to me upon her most gracious
Majesty's conferring upon me the dignity of a Knight of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
' Although at my age I ought to be, and I humbly trust I
am, more solicitous to obtain the blessed promises which our
gracious Saviour has made to all believers in his Holv Gos-
192 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
pel, than any earthly honors, yet I value highly the appro-
bation of a Sovereign, esteemed and beloved by her subjects
for her public and private virtues.
4 To our respected Governor his excellency the Earl of
Mulgrave I feel great gratitude for having totally unsolicited
by me, brought my services under her Royal consideration.
to which I attribute the honor that has been conferred upon
me.
' I consider this honor as paid to the profession to which I
belong, and it greatly increases my gratification so to con-
sider it.
• I am much indebted to my brethren of the Bench for the
satisfaction which I learn my judgments have given, for.
generally speaking, it is with their concurrence and approval
that those judgments have been pronounced ; and I am sure
they will join with me in declaring that the labors of the
Bench have frequently been greatly diminished by the in-
dustry and talent of the Bar.
;And now, gentlemen, accept of an old man's affectionate
prayer for your welfare. May you at the close of life feel
the great comfort of having made your peace with God
through the merits of your Saviour. God bless you all.
' (Signed) Brenton Halliburton.
•May 9th, 1859.'
"The members of the Bench and Bar then partook of
the hospitalities of the Venerable Chief-Justice, who
seemed much gratified by the very cordial and unani-
mous feeling of respect and esteem evinced towards him
by the profession over which he has so long presided.
" Robt. Haliburton,
" Secretary of jY. S. Barristers' Society."
Notwithstanding all the homage that was paid him
through a long life, — the continual prosperity which
attended him, — the expressions of approbation which
were constantly offered to him — he remained humble
and affable in his manners. He was not spoiled by
these testimonials. The effect was for good, and not for
evil to his character. He seemed to grow in kindliness
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON. 19,'»
of feeling toward the young, — in benevolence towards
the poor and needy. Known throughout the Province
for a longer period than any other man who ever held
a public office in it, — revisiting each circuit year after
year, and deciding upon all manner of cases brought
into Court by contending people — deciding as he must
do, in favor of one and against another — instead of
alienating gradually from himself the people of the
countrv, their voices were raised almost as the voice of
one man to welcome him when he approached, and at
last to mourn for him when he died. In his connection
with the Bench, the feelings which had been manifested
to him all through his life, were again strongly called
forth at his death. And although perhaps somewhat
anticipating the narrative, the course adopted by the
legal profession on hearing of his departure, can not be
introduced in a more appropriate place.
It was little more than a vear after the last-named
event, that this same Profession once again met for the
special purpose of doing honor to him who had been
their head. It was now to his memory. When a meeting
was called upon hearing of his death, it was most
numerously attended. The Judges specially were
deeply interested, and, as was proper, took the lead in
the solemn business of the day. A resolution had been
prepared by the Plonorable Mr. Justice Bliss, which
was moved by the Hon. Mr. Justice Wilkins, as
follows : —
" Resolved, That the Bench and Bar receive with feelings
of the deepest sorrow and regret the intelligence ot the death
of their Venerable Chief-Justice. Occupying a seat on
the Bench for 53 years — a tenure of office, unexampled in
judicial annals — and for more than half of that period Chief-
194 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
Justice of the Province, he was distinguished by great
ability, a sound discriminating judgment, unwearied patience
and industry, — a strong inherent love of justice, and an
earnest, anxious, faithful attention to the discharge of every
duty. Conscientious, upright and impartial, firm in the
administration of the Law, and ever kind and courteous in
demeanor, he presided over the Court with dignity, and won
the reverential esteem and affection alike of the Bench, of
the Bar, and of all classes of the community. So extended
had been his term of service on the Bench that there is not
now a member of the Bar who did not enter the Profession
since the commencement of his judicial career ; but the
experience of all, whatever their standing, enables them to
bear willing testimony to his eminent qualifications, his
public worth and private virtues. These have endeared him
to their hearts, and will long be retained in their memories.
They have called forth one universal regret for the loss of a
good man, an honest valuable public servant. Whi/e the
Bench and the Bar pay this imperfect tribute of their love
and veneration to him who so long and so ably presided
over them, they beg to offer their very sincere condolence on
this mournful occasion to his sorrowing and afflicted family.
For many years of his life the Chief-Justice and his
family spent some portion of the summer at a country
seat of his own, which was called Margaret ville, situated
in the county of Annapolis. In this neighbourhood the
first Bishop of the Diocese, already alluded to, had
purchased a property to which he resorted much in the
latter period of his life. His son, when he succeeded
to the Diocese, and also to his father's private estate,
retained Clermont (as the place was called) as a sum-
mer retreat for himself and family. This made it plea-
sant for the Chief- Justice and his friends to visit the
country ; they were not altogether without companion-
ship for the two or three months which they spent in
the comparatively quiet abode. To one who led so
busy and anxious a life as he, the quiet and rest which
SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
195
he there enjoyed must have been at once delightful and
healthful. The total change of air, scenery, and em-
ployment, contributed, no doubt, to that cheerfulness of
spirit and vigour of mind, which were characteristic of
him to the end. These pleasant visits were, however,
brought to a close some years previous to his death.
The journey was a long one, and old age rendered it
more prudent and more conducive to the Chief- Justice's
health, to take a less wearisome drive. Thus, for the
remainder of his life he spent the summer season at
his well known residence near the North West Arm,
called " The Bower" ; and it was here that he closed his
lon^ career.
Early in the year 1860 he was warned by various
symptoms that his time of departure was drawing near.
Nature was well-nigh exhausted. He was gradually
losing strength ; however pleasing for his friends his
continuance in their midst might be, for himself it was
but " labor and sorrow." Feeling that the day was far
spent, and that he should soon leave the tabernacle, in
which he had dwelt, and soar into another region of
light and life, he looked forward with joy to the grand
event. As he lay upon the sofa, and listened to the
word of God, when quoted or read, his whole expres-
sion was that of one who drank in of the river of plea-
sures which flowed from the Throne of God. When
he joined in the prayers which were offered at his side,
the intense earnestness which he threw into his own
utterances at the close of each petition was most
marked.
There was something particularly pleasing in the
simplicity of his faith. The promises were, as St. Paul
196 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
expresses it, " all yea and Amen in Christ Jesus." Ho
heard them with gladness ; he laid hold of them with
strength ; he could say, " I know whom I have believ-
ed, and am persuaded that he is able to keep that which
I have committed unto Him till that day."
When the weather had become sufficiently warm, and
nature had again adorned the trees and shrubs abound-
ing in that sequestered place with fresh leaves, and the
fields with new verdure, the family determined to make
their accustomed move. Sir Brenton, however, did no/
at first readily acquiesce, and dreaded the effort. No
doubt he did not feel equal to the exertion and bustle
consequent upon the removal. For, previous to this he
had been very ill ; so much so, indeed, that he thought
himself during one night to be dying. To this impres-
sion he alluded on the following morning when in con-
versation with his physician, adding that such had been
his happiness in resting on his Saviour's merits, and
such the joys which he had experienced, he would not.
barter them for the most robust health.
The urgent wish of his family, and the advice of his
physician, prevailed upon Sir Brenton to try the fresh
air and the quiet of " The Bower." On the 2nd June the
move was accomplished ; and on that day he rallied his
old genial disposition, and joined with lively interest in
the little incidents of the day. The weather was very
fine, and for the first few days he seemed rather to
improve, and apparently to gain strength, and 60 to
enjoy being in his accustomed retreat as much as ever.
This respite, however, was of short duration. On
Saturday the 30th of June he felt himself to be ill, and
unable to go to Church. Had his strength been equal
SIR BRENTOK HALLIBURTON. 197
to it he would no doubt have attended divine service as
usual, but it would have been with somewhat disappoint-
ed feelings, in consequence of the circumstance already
mentioned in reference to his efforts to obtain the seat he
desired. This pain he was spared. But he had two
full services at home, and was — as indeed he always
was — most fervent in the utterance of the responses ;
while he listened with apparent enjoyment, exhausted
though he was, to a sermon by the late John Angell
James, on " Faith in relation to Sanctification."
On Monday he was no better, but yet was able to see
a few friends who called to inquire for him ; and though
he did not leave the sofa much through the day, toward
evening he joined his family in the dining room, and
remained for some little time. During the night he
awoke and calling his son advised him what to do in
case of his death. After a few words of hopeful reply,
Sir Brenton lay down and slept as usual. On the
following morning he rose for the last time, at his
accustomed hour, and went to the breakfast table ; but
he was evidently weaker and unable to endure as much
exertion as the day before. It was on the evening of
this day that he was struck with paralysis, and from
this attack he never recovered. On retiring for the
night, and doubtless now feeling his helplessness in-
creasing, he alluded to the paralytic stroke, saying in a
very mournful though resigned tone, as he pointed to
his right side : " This side dead !" then to the left :
" This side alive !" This circumstance brought to his
recollection an aged friend who had lingered for some
months in this same state ; and he felt somewhat fearful
Inst he should become impatient to die instead of waiting
•>
198 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON'.
in meek submission the divine will. Hence it was his
constant prayer that he might be patient, and wonder-
fully he was strengthened and supported throughout,
and not a murmur escaped his lips. His implicit trust
in his Saviour was never broken, and not for a moment
was he suffered to feel a doubt of his pardon and accept-
ance through the merits of his Redeemer. He was a
remarkable instance of that firm assurance which knows
no wavering. He knew practically the meaning of
those comforting words : " Thou wilt keep him in per-
fect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee, because he
trusteth in Thee." The Holy Spirit bore constant
witness with his spirit that he was the heir of God
and the joint heir with Christ*
Whenever he was able to see a Christian friend, it
afforded him sincere delight ; and oftentimes, when
weary and weak, he was visibly refreshed as he listened
to some consoling truths from the Word of Life, or
united in the prayer offered beside his couch. Day by
day he grew more feeble ; the light nickered, the lamp
was burning out ; and as he realised it, he was humble
as a little child ; he bowed with meekness before his
Father's will, and as he neared his journey's end, al-
though he grew not impatient of the delay, he longed
to reach his Father's House.
The hour came at last. On the 16th July the old
pilgrim finished his course and laid down his staff; the
soldier had fought the fight and received the crown ;
the servant had done his work and lay dotfn to rest.
Thus imperfectly has the writer sketched a brief
memoir of one whose name was a household word in
Nova Scotia ; and he trusts that those who have read
SIR BREN'TON HALLIBURTON. 199
thus far will do him the justice to read that which fol-
lows. He had intended to have written at some length
the " Life and Times" of Sir Brenton Halliburton ; and
for this purpose a rough outline was conceived of the
internal history of the Province, from the year of the
"Declaration of. Independence," until the middle of the
present century. It was purposed to write the various
chapters, which would constitute such a book, in " lei-
sure horn b." These, however, gradually became so few,
that he was compelled to abandon the first project, and
content himself with compiling a short running memoir,
linking together some of the chief events of his life,
though omitting many that might have been made very
interesting to those who know anything of Colonial life
in general, and of this Province in particular. A
lawyer might have entered largely into his career as a
Judge, — analysed his legal knowledge, — discussed his
judgments pronounced upon the Bench, — and following
him through his circuits, lightened it all with many an
amusing anecdote, and many a witty saying which he
uttered. There were scenes, adventures, and conversa-
tions in which he was an important element, that would
have rendered a sketch of his life an object of interest
to many who would without them deem it dull and
wearisome. A politician might have scrutinized the
opinions which he held, — and examined at length the
principles he maintained, — or have gone fully into the
questions affecting local interests. The compiler had
not the power to do this, and certainly had not the
wish. Even the point towards which he aimed he wa?
obliged to change — and rest satisfied with a very super-
^00 SIR BRENTON HALLIBURTON.
ficial narrative, and the rescue of some of the produc-
tions of Sir Brenton's mind from oblivion.
It is due to the writer himself to add that the few
pages which compose this memoir, have been written
for the most part in the midst of many and pressing
avocations, which left but little time for a recreation of
the kind. The high and holy duties of the ministr)*
are paramount to all others; and he who is entrusted
with the message of salvation to his feliow-ineii feels
that though, when he requires rest, he may perhaps
thus best unbend the bow, yet that the occupation must
never infringe on the time that ought to be directly
given to God, — or interfere with the special obliga-
tions of his sacred calling. And such has been the con-
stant pressure for the last eighteen months upon his
thoughts and time, that had it not been for the fact that
he had already gathered some information on the
subject, — possessed some papers most kindly entrusted,
to him — he would have thrown it aside altogether,
when, perhaps, some abler hand would have written
a more worthy memoir of Sir Brenton Halliburton.
APPENDIX.
A day or two previous to my delivering in Halifax a
lecture, entitled " The Life and Times of the late Sir
Brenton Halliburton," I received a highly interesting letter
from Mr. Robert G-. Haliburton, F. S. A. It was too late
to make use of it on that occasion, but I carefully put it by
for reference, so that if at any future day I should publish
a pamphlet containing a sketch of Sir Brenton's life, I might
be enabled to draw from its resources.
Having some months since, as stated in my Preface, been
requested by the Messrs. Bowes, to allow them to publish
the manuscript read by me at the Temperance Hall, together
with any addition I might see fit to make, and having
acceded to their wTish, I determined to ask leave of Mr.
Haliburton to publish entire the greater part of his letter,
rather than mar it by making extracts. The author of
"The Festival of the Dead," is so well known in the Liter-
ary world as an accomplished scholar, and his research into
all matters of history is so thorough, and his information so
accurate, that any annotations of his on such a subject are
invested with a value proportioned to his acknowledged at-
tainments.
"January 15th, 18G2.
"Dear Mr. Hill, —
" As you are going to give a lecture on Sir Brenton Hallibur-
ton's Life, &c, which you may at some future time put into a
more permanent form, the following remarks concerning his fami-
ly history, may not be uninteresting to you, though they will
hardly serve you in your present undertaking. These farts
were, I believe, unknown to Sir Brenton himself.
14
02 APPENDIX.
" There was a work published privately by Sir Walter Scott,
entitled, ' Memorials of the Haliburtons.' Sir Walter was con-
nected with that family, through his grandmother. As none of
the name survived in Scotland in his time, he claimed to repre-
sent it by right of his grandmother ; and was ' duly served heri-
tor of St. Mary's Aisle in Dryburgh Abbey.' the burial place of
the Haliburton family. His wife was buried there, and subse-
quently Sir Walter, as well as his son-in-law Lockhart, and the
last Baronet, Sir Walter. There is a Latin inscription in the
aisle, which I remember reading, which says that as the heir of
that family Sir Walter Scott became possessed of the aisle.
kt ' The Memorials' were commenced (Sir Walter says) by his
father, in reply to some inquiries ma le by Mr. W. Haliburton,
of Halifax, N. S., (my great grandfather) about the year 1793.
I had in my possession all the original correspondence, relating
to a claim to property made by Mr. W. Haliburton, as the
nearest heir to his uncle. A person named Robertson from near
Melrose, who was then living at Windsor, N.S., advised Mr. W.
Haliburton to write to Mr. Brown of Melrose, (who is mentioned
in the ; Memorials,') and also suggested that he had better write
to l Mr. Walter Scott, a very respectable writer of the Signet,
whose mother he thought was a Haliburton.' This Walter Scott
was the father of the immortal Sir Walter Scott. Old Walter
Scott in his portion of the ' Memorials' (which were afterwards
enlarged for publication by Sir Walter, his son,) mentions all
of the name (1793 — 179G) who were then living in Scot-
land. Among the rest he mentions ' a very worthy gentleman,
Dr. John Haliburton, of Haddington.' Now Sir Brenton's
father was Dr. John Haliburton, who came from that place.
We may, therefore, conclude, that he was a son, or at least a
near relative of the gentleman referred to in the ' Memorials.'
I am very sorry that my copy of the ' Memorials' and all the
original correspondence were burned. Mr. Robert Chambers
told me the work could not be bought, but that he might get me a
MS. copy of it: but I have delaved writing to him, as I have
been in hopes that I shall be able to procure a copy without
troubling him.
" Walter Scott, senr., mentions among others, the Rev. Simon
Haliburton, minister of Ashkirk. I have found out, that the
APPENDIX. 203
late Mrs. Forrester, who was a Davidson, was a grand-
daughter of his. The Rev. Dr. Forrester has now the Bible
of old Mr. Simon Haliburton in his possession. The Davidsons
were connected with the Scotts, as well as with the Hali-
burtons; and I can remember that the title to the property
claimed turned upon a dispute as to an Elizabeth Davidson, who
had been in possession of property claimed by Mr.W. Haliburton,
somewhere on 'the Borders.' Sir Waiter sent a copy of the
' Memorials' to Mr. Alexander Haliburton, the father of my bro-
ther-in-law, Alexander F. Haliburton ; and some old relatives of
theirs pointed out that there was some mistake as to the account
of Elizabeth Davidson. They were not aware that she had been
a subject of controversy between old Walter Scott and my great
grandfather — and of a correspondence which led to the com-
mencement of the 'Memorials.' This work of Sir Walter Seott
is referred to by Loekhart, in his life of Sir Walter ; and is
constantly quoted from, in a little work I have by Sir Davis
Erskine, called 'Memorials of Drvburgh Abbev.'
" Sir Brenton's family crest, as well as that of my brother-in-
law's family, is a Moor's head. Sir Waiter mentions that the
Border familv of Haliburtons, were strong allies of the great
Earls of Douglas ; one of the family was the favorite companion
and Standard-bearer of the Earl of Douglas.*
" You remember the historical death of the friend of Robert
Bruce. He was entrusted by the Bruce, as he was dying, with
the duty of having the heart of his King buried in the Holv
Land. With a large concourse of Knights and retainers he left
* Loekhart in his Life of Sir Walter Scott, T. oh. 2, says : " From the gene-
alogical deduction in the Memorials, it appears that the" Haliburtons of New-
mains were descended from and represented the ancient and once powerful
family of Haliburton of Mertoun, which became extinct in the beginning of
the eighteenth century. The first of this latter family possessed the lands
and barony of Mertoun by a charter granted by the Earl of Douglas and
Lord of Galloway (one of those tremendous lords whose coronets counter-
poised the Scottish crown) to Henry de Haliburton, whom he designates as
his standard-bearer, on account of his service to the earl in England. On
this account the Haliburtons of Mertoun and those of Newmains, in addition
to the arms borne by the Haliburtons of Dirleton (the ancient chiefs of that
once great and powerful, but now almost extinguished name) — viz. or, on a
bend azure, three mascles of the first — gave the distinctive bearing of a
buckle of the second in the sinister canton. These arms still appear on vari-
ous old tombs in the abbeys of Melrose and Dryburgh, as well as on their
house at Dryburgh, which was built in 157-J." — MS. Memorandum, 1820. Sir
Walter was served heir to these Haliburtons soon after the date of this
Memorandum, and thenceforth quartered the arms above described with
those of his pat ernal family.
204 APPENDIX.
Scotland for Palestine ; but unfortunately, while in Spain, on
Lis way, he was tempted to join in a battle between the Moors
and Christians ; and being surrouaded, he flung the heart of the
Bruce, which was in a golden casket, among the enemy, exclaim-
ing, 'lead on thou gallant heart, as thou wert wont!' The
Douglas was killed, but his companions recovered the heart of
the Bruce, and carried it to Palestine. We cannot doubt
that the favorite knight, and Standard-bearer of the Doug-
las accompanied him ; and I think we may conclude that the
Moors head, used as a crest bv some branches of the family,
is in some way connected with an event that is the most noted
occurrence in the history of Scottish chivalry.
" In an Army list for 1801, I find Sir Brenton's name entered
among the Captains of the 7th Eusileers, as follows : ' B. Hali-
burton, 25th Ja. '98.' lias that family changed the mode of
spelling their names ? Sir Walter Scott says that members of
the same family frequently spelled the name differently : k Hali-
burton, Halliburton, Halyburton, and Hallyburton.' I have an
ancient silver spoon that belonged to some of my ancestors,
which has the name spelled Hallyburton. which is decidedly an
improvement on the present mode. Mr. Walter Scott spells
Dr. John Haliburton's name with one I, which, however, does
•
not conflict with my inferences.
" In looking over my note to you, I find nothing to add except
an odd occurrence that recently took place, which may interest
persons of the name. Sir Walter mentions that the Border
family which have resided near Dry burgh since 1250, were
vounger cadets of the Earl of Dirleton's family, a title that has
been extinct since the time of the Reformation in Scotland.
" Sir Walter supposed that the well known Earl of Gowrie,
was the last representative of the Dirleton branch.* There
is. however, in Scottish history an account of several noble
families, among whom were the Haliburtons, who in consequence
* In Constable's Miscellany, vol. I.. History of Remarkable Conspiracies,
by John Parker Lawson, 31. A., p. 228, the following passage occurs: "The
iirst Karl of Gowrie was, however, connecter! with the Royal family with-
out that alliance. His grandfather William, second Lord Ruthven, married
Janet Haliburton, eldest daughter and co heiress of Patrick Lord Haliburton.
of Dirleton, in East Lothian, by which he obtained that Barony. This lady
was of royal abstraction, as Lord Haliburton's ancestor, Sir Walter Halibur-
ton, married Lady Isabel Stuart, eldest daughter of Robert Duke of Albany,
lb gent of Scotland, and third son of King Robert II.
APPENDIX. 205
of the Reformation, emigrated to Poland. Nothing further con-
cerning this fact has hitherto been known. Recently, my
father received a letter from a Polish gentleman named Joseph
Haliburton, mentioning that his family at the time of the
Reformation emigrated to Poland, where the head of the family
owns several villages, and is one of the Polish nobility. The
family archives brought from Scotland are still in possession of
the head of the Polish branch. He wished to make inquiries in
Scotland as to his family history prior to the Reformation.
" Besides the Polish branch and the two families in Nova
Scotia, there are onlv three others that I have ever heard of,
which are represented respectively by the Honourable James D.
Halyburton of Virginia, de facto Chief-Justice of the Confederate
States ; by my brother-in-law, A. F. Haliburton, Esq., of Whit-
ly near Wigan, and of Grafton, Torquay ; and by the Halibur-
tons (or Burtons) of St. Leonards on the Sea.
" In India the family has been strangely connected with the
rise and fall of the Sepoy power. Mill, in his history of India,
says that a gentleman of the name of Haliburton first organized
the Sepoys. He was murdered by a native ; but the name, Mill
says, was long remembered by the Madras Sepoys. A century
after. Major Haliburton, brother of A. F. Haliburton, was mor-
tally wounded while commanding the 78th Highlanders when
they led Havelock's army into Lucknow, an event from which
we may date the downfall of the Sepoy power in India.
" If you wish to make use of any of these facts they are at
your service. I have made this letter as full as possible, so that
you may select such portions as you think will be interesting to
the friends of Sir Brenton Halliburton.
" Yours verv trulv,
" Robert G. Haliburton."
There is no doubt that the original spelling of Sir Bren-
ton's family surname was with one 1 ; and the change, or
additional letter 1, came about as follows : When bis father
entered the Navy, his name was recorded in the official books
Halliburton. On discovering this he determined to adopt
£06 APPENDIX.
that spelling, in order to avoid any trouble that possibly
might arise, from his signature being different from that
which was known at the Admiralty.
G. W. H.
APPENDIX. 207
Ext. History Rhode Island.
" William Brenton was a native of England, and previous to
his removal, was a respectable merchant of Boston. He came
to Rhode Island soon after the first settlement. He was Deputy
Governor from 1640 to 1646 ; President of the Colony from 1660
to 1662, and Governor from 1665 to 1669. He was one of the
largest proprietors of land on Rhode Island, and owned the
whole of the land called Brenton's Neck. He died in 1674, at
an advanced age, leaving three sons and four daughters."
" Jahleel Brenton, was the eldest son of Governor William
Brenton, and inherited most of the estate. He was the first
Collector appointed by the King. In 1699, in consequence of
some personal difficulty with Sir William Phipps, the Governor
of Massachussetts, he went to England, when he and others pre-
pared charges against the Governor, who, in consequence, was
summoned to Whitehall, to answer for his conduct. Governor
Phipps died of fever soon after he had arrived in England, and
before the trial could take place. Mr. Brenton was soon after
appointed Agent for the Colony of Rhode Island, and as such
remained in England several years. He returned from England
with a commission from the King, appointing him Surveyor-
General of the Customs of the American Colonies. He owned
all the land in Newport, which is now known as Brenton's neck,
where he had his residence : he also owned a large tract of land
in Narragansett, being one of the original Pettoquamsett pur-
chasers. He died in Newport, on the 8th of November, 1732,
aged 77 years, without issue. He was buried on his own land,
in that part which is now the site of Fort Adams. By his will
he gave all his lands in the neck, known as the Hammersmith
and Rocky Farms, to his nephew, the second Jahleel Brenton.
In 1720, he built the house in Thames Street, now in the pos-
session of Simmons S. Coe. Among his descendants, was the
gallant Jahleel Brenton, Admiral of the British Navy, and the
Hon. Brenton Halliburton, of the Supreme Court of Nova
Scotia, both natives of Newport."
In addition to those writings of Sir Brenton, which are
published in the foregoing memoir, there are several which
it was thought would not prove uninteresting to some of his
friends, and which are hereby printed in this, which is
strictly a private edition. One is a humorous article written
previous to the Canadian rebellion, with serious notes ap-
pended ; another contains a few touching thoughts on the
death of a Grandchild ; and the third is a Poem on " Pass-
ing Events," written by him when over eighty years of age.
John Hull and his OlaliTS.
(Written Previous to the Canadian Rebellion.)
All the world have heard of John Bull ; some of his
Calves have made a little noise too. John had a fine
drove of thirteen of them in a large pasture to the west-
ward of the Lake which divides his estate, and as he
had been put to a great deal of trouble and expense in
fencing the pasture and keeping Master Frog's folks
from devouring the stock and destroying the herbage,
he thought when the Calves had grown up, that he was
entitled to a portion of their milk. The tenants on this
part of the Farm did not absolutely deny the justice of
the claim, but they insisted upon it that no one should
milk the heifers but their own ribs, and that John
should be satisfied with the portion of milk which they
allotted to him. Whether John thought that these
dames would give him nothing but skim milk or butter-
milk, or perhaps if they got into their tantrums, no milk
at all, he vowed that Mrs. Bull should milk them,
and take as much milk as she thought reasonable : the
upshot of which was that John Bull had a great row
with his more than half-grown Calves, and though he
knocked them head over heels whenever he got a fair
run at them in the open field, yet they worried him so
much from behind the trees with which the pasture was
covered, bit his tail, gored his flanks, and were off in
the woods again ere he could well turn round, that at
last he gave a tremendous roar, dashed into the lake,
swam home, and left them to themselves.
He had still, however, a few young Calves on the
north side of the pasture, who had not taken part in the
squabble. One of these was a queer creature ; it was
not of John's own breed ; he had harried it from the
4 JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES.
Frogs in one of his scuffles, but he treated it just as if it
was one of his own begotten Calves, and often used to
flatter himself that the poor thing would soon forget all
about the Frogs, and feel himself a Bull from head to
foot. But these feelings flowed from John's heart
rather than his head. He might have known that the
Fros: blood would never mix well with the Bulls. As it
grew up, however, John did succeed in licking it a
little into shape ; the head began to look rather Bullish,*
but the body, legs and feet were still Frog all over.
It was really a curious looking animal, and was in fact
more of a Bull-Frog than a Bull ; it made a tremendous
noise, but that noise was more of a croak than a roar.
It was, however, a great pet, and in process of time
John proposed to Mrs. Bull to provide a wife for it.
Some of the family thought that this might as well have
been left alone, but wives were all the fashion about this
time.f Old Frog himself had just taken one who soon
set all his family by the ears, and made the old gentle-
man kick the bucket before the honey-moon was half
over.
A wife, therefore, it was decided that young Bull-
Frog should have. Well, then, said those who
thought he would do just as well without one, if he
must have a wife let her be of the Bull breed, and not
of the Frog : let her roar rather than croak, for mercy's
sake. But fashion decides every thing, and it was the
fashion then for those who knew little to leave all
matters to the decision of those who knew less ; and
these wiseacres determined that Master Bull-Frog
should choose a wife for himself. Now, as I said
before, although his head had begun to look a little
Bullish, he was still more than three-fourths Frog,
and it was therefore natural for him to cohabit more
with the Frogs than the Bulls. As might be supposed,
then, he took unto himself a most thorough-going Frog
* British inhabitants in the towns. f 1791.
JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES. 5
for a wife, who soon set up such a croaking that there
was no peace in the pasture.
John and Mrs. Bull had had the marriage articles
drawn up under their own superintendance, and had taken
every care, as they supposed, of that part of the estate.
John's overseer still continued to superintend the farm,
and he had trustees* to join with him and Mrs. Bull-
Frog in the management of it.
There was enough to be done; it was a fine property
to be sure, and if well cultivated would soon have
enriched all who dwelt upon it ; but when the overseer
and trustees, wanted to drain off the stagnant poolsf
and render it wholesome and productive, like John's
farm on the other side of the lake, Mrs. Bull-Frog set
up such a croaking that not a word which the overseer
or trustees said could be heard. She did not want the
pools drained — not she — she wanted none of their
Bullish improvements. Improvements indeed ! She
knew well enough what they meant. If the marshes
and meadows were all drained, these lordly Bulls would
stalk over them and crush her poor dear Frogs under
their feet. She wanted no interference with nature,
which had provided these delightful fens for the Frogs
to luxuriate in ; and if the Bulls did not like them, why
let them leave them. Fair and softly, Mrs. Bull-Frog,
replied the overseer and trustees, if the Bulls don't like
them, why let them leave them, forsooth ! do you forget
that they belong to the Bulls ? Did'nt they take them
from old Frog after many a hard day's fighting ? and
did he not surrender all his right to them to old Mr.
Bull ; and are those who are thorough-bred Bulls to
abandon what would soon become rich and beautiful
meadows, merely that you and your tadpoles may
have your dirty mud-holes to squeak and croak in ?
Had old Master Frog wrenched one of John Bull's
* Legislative Council.
f Wanted to introduce English Laws for the encouragement of
Commerce.
6 JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES.
farms from him, and been able to keep it, I'll be bound
he never would have -given us the chance that we have
given you ; and therefore if you wish to live in the land,
live in it and welcome — no one shall hurt you — but you
must live in it as our land, and not as yours.
This seemed to be reasonable enough, but not so
thought Mrs. Bull-Frog ; she continued to croak, croak,
and as the marriage articles prohibited the overseers and
trustees from adopting any measure without her consent,
no improvement could be effected. But the mischief
did not end in merely preventing improvements. Mrs.
Bull-Frog soon began to assert that she was as great a
woman on this side of the Lake, as Mrs. Bull was on
the other, and that no one but herself should handle the
purse-strings. At first good old John Bull laughed at
her attempting to raise a storm in her puddle, and went
on paying for the performance of the ordinary work as
usual. But when the old gentleman became a little
hipped and thought himself too poor to pay the labourers
upon his out-farms, he offered to give up all the rents
and profits of this part of the estate to Mrs Bull-Frog,
provided she would engage to keep it in order, and pay
the overseer and workmen their accustomed wages.
Mrs. Bull-Frog joyfully assented to receive the rents
and profits for ever, and consented to pay the wages so
long, and in such proportions, as she pleased. John
was so much occupied with matters nearer home, that he
did not notice the difference between his- offer and
Madame's acceptance of it ; but rubbed his hands and
congratulated himself upon having got rid of that
troublesome concern.
In a short time, however, John, like most folks who
want to shove off their business upon others, instead of
attending to it themselves, found that matters had got
into a sad state on this part of his property. Madame
Bull-Frog having got hold of the key of the money -
chest, thrust it into her under-petticoat pocket, and
swore that neither overseer or labourers should have a
JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES. 7
farthing to feed or clothe themselves, until they would
just do her bidding. The overseer and trustees did all
they could, to bring her to reason, but the more they
coaxed, the more she croaked, and they found that the
farm was going fast to ruin, and that those who worked
it were on the verge of starvation.
John after rubbing his eyes a little, looked over the
letters and accounts which the overseer sent to him, but
he was so harassed and perplexed with the homestead,
that he could not give much attention to affairs on the
other side of the Lake ; and as Madame Bull-Frog
complained so much of his overseer, he thought, without
enquiring further into the matter, that he might as well
send her another, he therefore selected one Ramsay*
who had managed a neighbouring farm to his heart's
content, and that of all who lived on it also. Ramsay
was an honest, noble fellow, whose heart was just in the
right place ; he would neither do nor suffer wrong.
John thought he had hit on the very man to satisfy
Madame Bull-Frog, let her be ever so capricious. But
poor John knew little of Madame's freaks ; he thought,
poor simple soul, that she merely wished to be well
governed. But Madame did not wish to be governed at
all ; and as she knew that Ramsay would do nothing
that she could find fault with, unless she got his temper
up, she set herself to work to insult him.
Mrs. Bull-Frog knowing that she had not an honest
face to show, had long thought it politic to wear a
mask — she had recently attached to it a hideousf pape r
nose, which being a very prominent feature, and attract-
ing great attention from all who looked upon her, she
soon acquired the habit of speaking through it in a most
offensive manner. She had, however, no right to wear
it, without the overseer's consent, and as she had, upon
several occasions snuffled very abusive language through
it against Ramsay, he twisted it off and threw it in her
face. Oh ! what an uproar the old woman made.
* The Earl of Dalhousie. f L. J. Papineau, Speaker H. of A.
8 JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES.
Ramsay told her to go to the and shake herself,
and as she did not know how to behave, and Mr. Bull
did not know how to make her, he left them to settle
the matter between them. Well, says John, when it
was told him that Ramsay had wrung the old woman's
nose off, I'll try her with another overseer ; there is
Jemmy Thorough-work,* who has managed the farm
Ramsay had once in hand, so well, that all the tenants
were delighted with him. I'll send him to her. Away
went Jemmy to see how he could manage Madame ; but
there was a terrible difficulty in Jemmy's way upon the
very threshold : Ramsay had pulled off Madame's
paper nose. Now Madame contended that Ramsay
had no right to pull it off, and therefore she said that it
was not pulled off at all. Still there lay the paper nose ;
it was'nt on Madame's face, and as she had acquired
such a habit of speaking through it, that she could'nt
speak without it, how was she to say a single word to
Jemmy until this organ was replaced ! this dilemma
perplexed them both sadly, for Jemmy was very
anxious to put matters to rights if he could, and that
was impossible without having some intercourse with
Mrs. Bull-Frog ; and she was equally anxious to
recommence her manoeuvres, not caring- much whether
she cajoled or abused Jemmy ! but one or the other she
longed to do.
As both sides, therefore, were desirous to have the
paper nose replaced, after some consultation in the back
chamber, it was agreed that Madame should make it
adhere again with a little spittle, present herself to
Jemmy as if nothing had happened, and request his
leave to wear it — without taking any notice of Ramsay's
having wrung it off. Jemmy made her a neat little
bow, told her, it was very becoming to her, that he
admired it much, and gave his consent, as a matter
of course, in order to open a communication with her.
John next selected an honest, open-hearted sonf of
* Sir James Kempt. t Lord Aylmer.
JOH^ BULL AND HIS CALVES. 9
Paddy Bull's, who told Madame at his first interview
with her, that he could not sleep a wink for dreaming
of doing her good ;* but it was not long before he
discovered that whatever g^ood he mi^ht be dreaming
of she dreamt of nothing but evil. She had for some-
time made a terrible uproar about the infringement of
the marriage articles. The articles themselves, she said,
were the best possible articles ;f all she wanted, poor
woman, was the full benefit of them, which she insisted
was most shamefully withheld from her. Mrs. Bull said
this must be looked into, and directed Pat to enquire
fully into the affair. Pat sent for Madame, and bcsfged
to know what infringements she complained of, and,
" Come, my dear Madame Bull-Frog," said he, squeez-
ing her hand, and giving her one of those kind a-lances
with which Paddy's sons are in the habit of softening
the hearts of the sex, " tell me frankly, now, who has
abused you, and by the hand of my lady, my jewel, I'll
be the man to right you wherever you've been
wronged. Let us have the whole story, darlint, that
we may put all to rights at once, and leave no old sores
without a plaster."
But Mrs. Bull -Frog had no notion of this wholesale
dealing ; she was a retailer of grievances, and knew it
would be the ruin of her to part with her whole stock, in
trade at once. Evading, therefore, Pat's kind offer of a
panacea for all complaints, she fell to abusing the
trustees, said John had appointed no one but Bulls, who
trampled upon the Frogs most cruelly, and that the
farm would never flourish until John dismissed the
Bulls and appointed Frogs in their place.
By the powers, says Pat, this is a pretty story ; here
are you Madame (without whose consent we cannot stir
a step) Frog both head and heart, and yet my master, Mr.
* My first thought each morning, was, " What can I do for
Canada ?"
f See the first petitions, which lauded the Constitution conferred
by the Act 31st Geo. 3rd and only complained of their not enjoying
the full benefit of it.
16
10 JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES.
Bull, is to be deemed guilty of a breach of the marriage
articles because he appoints a few Bulls to take care of
the interests of that part of the family. Appoint Frogs
trustees, indeed ! faith, he's appointed more than's good
of them already, and if he appointed any more, it's my
notion they'll be a greater curse than they were in
Egypt of old, and make snch a croaking that not a Bull
■will be able to enjoy any peace in the country. I tell
you, Mrs. Bull-Froo- it's no infringement of the marriage
articles ; hasn't Mr. Bull a right to appoint trustees
under the articles themselves ?
Sucre, she exclaimed, with a horrible grin, then the
marriage articles arc cursed bad articles, and I will
never rest contented until I and my dear Frogs have
the appointment of the trustees ourselves !
Wheugh ! whistled Pat, why you old ; but
stop, said he, drawing his breath, and endeavouring
to regain his composure, did'nt you yourself say, my
dear Madame, not five minutes ago, that the articles were
the best of all possible articles, and that all you wanted
was the fulfilment of them ?
What if I did, you blathering blockhead ! roared she,
don't people grow wiser as they grow older ! and I now
think that the articles are the vilest articles that ever
were drawn ; and unless Mr. and Mrs. Bull consent to
alter them, and let the Frogs choose the trustees, I'll —
but I'm not going to tell you what I shall do ; let old
Bull remember how his other calves served him, that's
all — that's all, Master Pat; and away she dashed.
Pat was at his wits' end to know how to deal with
such a termagant ; he had a real desire to improve the
property, but Madame could not allow a penny to be
expended upon it ; and of course matters went from bad
to worse. Now, though she would not give a farthing for
the necessary expenses of the farm, she had the impu-
dence to ask Pat to consent to her taking a large sum out
of the chest to purchase coals, and candles, and brooms,
and scrubbing brushes, for her own room. Pat thought
JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES. 11
that the beldame wanted fuel enough to set the town on
fire from the sum she demanded ; but in the hope of
bringing her into good humour, he complied with her
request, and soon after in the gentlest manner possible,
he begged her to take into consideration the wants of
the farm and the state of the workmen, who had been
left so long without their wages.
Would you believe it, that the vixen not only turned
a deaf ear to his kind suggestions, but refused even to
give him a receipt for the money he had advanced to
her ; and flouncing out of the room in a rage, vowed
she'd scratch the eyes out of any one who would
venture to touch the chest in her absence. The poor
workmen were left with freezing fingers and empty
stomachs, and were altogether in such a piteous plight,
that Mr. Bull, though his present wife hauled him over
the coals whenever he expended an extra penny,
consented, upon Pat's earnest entreaty, to advance
thirty pounds to dole out among them, just to keep
soul and body together.
At their very next meeting, with unparalleled effron-
tery, Madame applied to Pat for a much larger sum of
money than before, to squander away on bad company,
under the pretext that she wanted it merely to keep
her room in order ; but independent of the extravagant
amount she demanded, and which he knew woidd be
applied to the most mischeivous purposes, he reminded
her of her refusal to give him a receipt for what he had
advanced before, without which he could'nt settle his
accounts, and he therefore civillv gave that as a reason
for his non-compliance with her request. She dashed
off in a furious passion, slammed the door behind her
so that it nearly flew off the hinges, and swore that she
would never speak a word more with Pat about the
concerns of the farm.
John Bull might have seen with half an eye, if he
had chosen to open either of them so far, that it was
useless to yield any longer to such a capricious creature ;
12 JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES.
but, good easy man, he thought that concession would
at last bring her about, so he recalled Pat, and sent out
one Mr. Goose-Frog * as overseer, with two assistants
to oversee him, as some folks thought.
There was a "Teat to do on both sides of the Lake
about sending out Mr. Goose- Frog and his assistants ;
they were to set all matters to rights in a trice, and
make the Bulls and the Frogs dwell together like
brethren. How this was to be accomplished puzzled
folks not a little, for the Bulls liked to range in well
thoroughly drained meadows, which produced abun-
dantly ; while the Frogs preferred squatting them-
selves down in the dirty pools and fens, where the
Bulls would be mired if they came near them.
However, it was an age of wonders, John Bull had
within a few years made a great discovery at home that
the best way to keep his house in order was to allow all
the disorderly vagabonds in the country to send who-
ever they pleased into the parlour, to toss the fire about
the room, and then break the windows to let the wind
blow it out. In short, the political millenium had
commenced. The great lion Dan O'Hell, had already
lain down with John's Lamb, and in the warmth of his
love had twisted his tail so fast round the neck of the
innocent creature that he couldn't utter a bleat except
when Dan chose to ease off a little. John thought after
this miracle he might easily reduce the Bulls and the
Frogs to the same state of harmonv.
Soon after Goose-Frog's arrival, Madame began to
poke her Paper nose about him, to smell out his plan
of proceeding and satisfied herself that the Frogs would
be left in full enjoyment of their fens, and that the
Bulls might roar away to their hearts content. Upon
the first intimation that he was ready to receive her,
she walked up to him in presence of the trustees, with
her mask on, and her prominent Paper nose, which he
* Lord Gosford, Sir Grey, and Sir George Gipps.
JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES. 13
stroked as kindly as a friendly Esquimaux could have
done, vowed that Slawkenbunnns could never have
found its equal in the whole promontory, and begged
her to wear it for his sake.
Madame pretended to be quite delighted with this
polite gentleman, and listened with apparent attention
to a long speech which he addressed to her and the
trustees. He assured them that Mr. Bull took the
greatest interest in their welfare, and had commanded
him to compel the Bulls and the Frogs to live together
in peace and prosperity ; that as to money for the fuel,
and furniture, &c, &c, &c, which they might want for
their respective rooms, Mr. Bull had desired him to
give both the trustees and Madame whatever they
might require, giving as he uttered this a significant
glance to Madame Bull-Fro"*, as much as to sav, I shall
not investigate your items very strictly.
He then very feelingly deplored the distressed state
of the workmen, trusted that their just claims would be
attended to, and that all would unite to make the farm
flourish, called upon Madame to repay Mr. Bull the
thirty pounds he had advanced to keep the workmen
from starving, — and reminded her that the poor gentle-
man was at his wit's ends for money himself, — that as
to Madame's complaint that the overseers had employed
more Bulls than Frogs to superintend the affairs of the
farm, he assured her that Mr. Bull would in the future
sanction no such proceeding ; that although he could
not deny that the farm belonged to the Bulls, no
invidious distinctions were to be made ; that for his own
part, he always thought it was of the first importance
for foremen to make themselves acceptable to the work-
men they were appointed to superintend ; and that no
person was fit to be school-master who would not grant
the boys a holiday whenever they desired it. Then
turning round with a low and graceful boM' to the
Frogs : Do not fear, said he, that there is any design to
disturb the form of society under which you have so
14 JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES.
long been contented and prosperous.* However differ-
ent vou mav be from Mr. Bull's other calves, he cannot
but admire the arrangements which have made you so
eminently virtuous, and which have secured to you
* " Do not fear that there is any design to disturb the form of
society under which you have so long been contented and prosper-
ous."
It will perhaps occasion some little surprise in Old England when
they learn that the first thing that has struck the Chief Commissioner,
who has been sent out to enquire into causes of discontent and dis-
turbance which (according to the representations of Mr. Papineau
and his adherents) have so long disturbed Canada, is the peaceful
and happy state of the French Canadians.
Those who are acquainted with the real state of things in that
country will feel no astonishment at this. It would be difficult to
find in any part of the world a body of people more contented, gay,
and amiable, than the inhabitants of Lower Canada; satisfied with
little, their small farms fully supply their wants ; although fond of
intercourse with each other, they wish not for any extension of their
social circle. That circle includes all that they love, respect, and
reverence ; and they seldom trouble themselves with aught beyond
it. Engrossed with their own harmless occupations, they leave all
their greater temporal cares to the Notary of the village, as they
unreservedly confide their spiritual concerns to their spiritual pas-
tors. Thus relieved from all serious anxiety respecting their politi-
cal rights in this world, or their future happiness in another, they
pass their lives in as much serene enjoyment as can well fall to the
lot of man.
We cannot wonder that his Excellency the Governor-in-Chief has
expressed so much satisfaction at " the good conduct and tranquil
bliss" which he finds has been created, preserved, and handed down
from generation to generation among this people; but we think his
Excellency must have wondered at finding this state of things when
he had been sent out to redress the grievances under which they
were stated to labour, and to allay the ferments which were sup-
posed to prevail among them to an extent which endangered the
public peace.
That those in whom these amiable, uneducated people, confide,
have abused their confidence, is undoubted; and that the influence
which has been acquired over them may be still more mischievously
exerted, is highly probable, particularly if his Majesty's ministers
continue to increase the consequence of the demagogues who de-
ceive them by paying more attention to their statements than they
do to the King's Representative. But still, as the people are, in
point of fact, happy and contented, — as they do not practically feel
any oppression, it may be doubted whether they would leave their
peaceful homes to follow Mr. Papineau to the field, if he were dis-
posed to lead them there, although they will doubtless continue to
sign any petition that he or his satellites prepare for them.
JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES. 15
that happiness and tranquil bliss which your numerous
petitions of grievances, and the ninety-two resolutions of
your amiable mother, proclaim that you possess. Mr.
Bull will protect and foster the benevolent, active and
pious teachers, under whose care and guidance you have
been conducted to your present happy state. Your fens
shall be preserved to you ; the pools in which you de-
light to recreate yourselves shall be handed down from
generation to generation. Let not the name of Bull
alarm you, for although the Bulls did once possess
themselves of the country, and their title has not yet
been formally extinguished, it is my desire to secure to
you the peaceful possession of this land, and no Bull
shall approach your happy dwellings, except the Rom-
ish Bulls, which you so much admire and reverence.
Then drawing himself up with great dignity, and wheel-
ing round to the Bulls, he exclaimed : Of the Bulls, and
especially those who require the draining of the fens
and marshes,* I would ask, is it possible you should
suppose there can be any design to sacrifice your inter-
ests, when it is clear to all the world that it was bv
draining his marshes, fencing his fields, opening roads
to the market-town, and bringing his farms into their
present high state of cultivation, that Mr. Bull attained
the prosperity to which he has advanced himself. It
was for the express purpose of making his farms on this
side of the lake like those on the other, that he has set-
tled and cultivated them at a vast expense. Rely upon
it that he will not abandon that purpose on Frogland
Farm, to which he has encouraged you to remove, but
with that constancy and good faith which has eve]* cha-
racterised him, he will not fail to sustain on this part of
his property that system which has so long been held
out as a boon to all his children, and as an inducement
to you to remove here, and here to embark your hopes
of wealth and happiness.
* The commercial classes. (See the Speech.)
16 JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES.
Why, what the are we to make of all this blow-
ing hot and cold ? said the Bulls, as they passed out of
the hall.
I know what I shall make of it, snuffed Madame,
through her Papernose : I shall take what I like of it,
and toss what I don't like to the winds.
As soon as the beldame returned to her own room,
she whipt off her mask and displayed her own hideous
visage. She retained, however, her darling Papernose,
which she had so long been accustomed to croak through
that she could not part with it. She then plainly
stated that it was all nonsense to talk of altering the
marriage articles, of choosing their own trustees, or of
any other of the long rigmarole hobgoblin tales, with
which she had been accustomed to amuse, and some-
times half scare the children, while she wore her mask,
that it was now high time to burn the marriage articles,
kick the trustees off the farm, and plainly tell Mr. Bull
that if he did not keep his overseers at home, she would
tar and feather them. She added, however, that, as
she had'nt yet matured all her plans upon this matter,
it would be as well, for form's sake, to give Goose -Frog
an answer to his speech, just to tell him that if he did
everything she desired, perhaps she would 'nt pull his
house about his ears at present ; that she considered it a
great impertinence in Mr. Bull to interfere between her
and her workmen ; and that as to repaying the money
she had advanced, she would take it into consideration
with the same views and sentiments, with which she had
always considered subjects of this kind. That as to the
Bulls and Frogs dwelling together in peace and har-
monv, she assured him that she should conduct herself
with the same impartiality towards them, that she had
heretofore done (which was as much as to tell the Bulls
to look out for squalls), that the farm would be a mighty
pretty farm if managed to her mind, that she confidently
expected to get the whole control over it herself, and
hoped, from what she had seen of Goose-Frog, that he
was the verv man to help her do so.
JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES. 17
Goose- Frog, in reply, thanked he for the kind and
nattering manner in which she had spoken of him, and
assured her that he should adhere faithfully to the line
of conduct he had already intimated to her ; but which
of the two opposite lines he meant, the Bull line or the
Frog line, he did not explain.
Immediately after this denial to repay Mr. Bull the
money he had advanced to the poor labourers, she ap-
plied to Goose-Frog for a round sum to defray the ex-
pense of bribing some of John's renegade sons, to aid
her to ride rough shod over the Bulls Goose-Frog
opened both his eyes as wide as he could, raised the
lids of them, and stared her full in the face, for he could
scarcely believe she could seriously make such a request,
when she had left the whole of John's servants without
a farthing to bless themselves ; but perceiving that she
urged it with all due gravity, he exclaimed, well
me if I don't admire your impudence, tip us your daddle
my old dame, I'll do it cheerfully.
Madame pocketed the money, gave three cheers for
the three G's.* and walked off singing —
" Goosey, Goosey, Gander."
Indeed she now feels that she has a carte blanche,
not only to walk up stairs and down stairs and in my
ladv's chamber, but to so wherever she chooses, to do
whatever she likes and to say whatever she pleases ; but
as neither her sayings nor doings will give much satis-
faction to honest folks, we will pursue her history no
further, but just wind up with a word or two of advice
to old Mr. Bull.
And first, my good sir, you have brought all this
trouble upon yourself.
After you obtained possession of Frogland, you pub-
licly proclaimed to all your children that it was to be-
come part of the Bull estate, and that the farm was to
be managed according to the Bull system. f It is true
* G— f— d, G— y, G— ps. ~
f See the proclamation issued from St. James', 7th Oct., 1703.
17
18 JOHN BILL AND HIS CALVEs.
that you agreed with old Mr. Frog", that the Frogs on
it might either hop off to him, or stay on it with you,
but saving their privilege of going to purgatory, which
was fully preserved to those who remained, they were,
in all respects, to conduct themselves like Bulls.* Now
before you let Master Bull-Frog out of leading strings,
you should have ascertained whether he could walk;
before you consented to give him a wife you should
have considered whether he was capable of managing
one : you should have drawn the marriage articles in
such a way as would have secured the cultivation of that
part of your property on your own system. You should
have insisted upon it that the children should be brought
up to speak your own language, f and instead of any
* See the articles of capitulation, dated September 8, 1760, particu-
larly the 41st: and the treaty of Paris, February 10th, 1763, article 4th.
t Never was a greater mistake made than in permitting the French
language to be used in the legislative debates in Canada. The French
inhabitants of that country had not a shadow of claim to this indulgence.
They were not entitled to a Representative Branch in the Legislature,
either under the articles of capitulation in 1760, or under the treaty of
Paris in 1763, by which Canada was ceded to the British Crown. It is
true that by the proclamation issued from St. James'^on the 7th of Oct.,
1768, for the encouragement of the settlers of the British possessions
in America generally, his Majesty stated that so soon as the state and
circumstances of the Colonies therein mentioned, should admit of it,
the Governor with the consent of tl e respective Councils, should sum-
mon General Assemblies. But this was a proclamation from the King
of Great Britain to his subjects, announcing to them that they should
enjoy the rights of Englishmen wherever they settled, so soon as the
state of the Colonies in which they should settle would admit of it.
The King's subjects in Canada, whether of British or French origin,
had a right to expect that in due time this engagement would be ful-
filled. But it was only as British subjects that they had a right to
expect it.
The Canadians had no right to claim a Representative Branch as
Frenchmen, nor to demand that the French language should become
the language of a British Legislature. It is not an honest fulfillment of
this proclamation to give a Colony to which Englishmen had been en-
couraged to remove, a Legislature in whose proceedings they can take no
part, unless they qualify themselves to do so by acquiring the use of a
foreign tongue. Surely if one or the other must submit to the incon-
venience of learning a different language from that in which they had
first been taught to speak, it was more reasonable that in a country be-
longing to England, the French should qualify themselves to enjoy the
JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES. 19
farasro about liberality to the Froo-s, you should have
remembered that both justice and poliey required that
on every part of John Bull's property, John Bull's sons
should have the predominance.* Had you done this
privilege of Englishmen by learning English, rather than that the Eng-
lish should be excluded from th se privileges unless they learned French.
Intelligent men of French extraction would soon have learned to express
themselves with sufficient facility in the language of the country to
which they had transferred their allegiance, by remaining in Canada
after it became a British Province, when they had the option of remov-
ing from it with their effects; and those whose incapacity disqualified
them for this easy task would have been no loss to a Legislative Body.
Had the boon of an English constitution been accompanied with the
reasonable condition, that all discussions respecting the pi'ivileges it
conferred were to be conducted in English, no measure would have
been more effectual in accelerating the introduction of English feelings
among the Canadians. A knowledge of our language would have led
to an acquaintance with our literature and laws among the upper-
classes, from which the happiest results would have followed. At pre-
sent the inhabitants of British and French extractions are as much
estranged from each other as they were at the period of the conquest.
The French majority in the House of Assembly now claim as a right
what was improvidently granted them as an indulgence. A large por-
tion of them understand French only, and the few English who can find
their way into that Body are reduced to the humiliating necessity of
abandoning their mother tongue, in order to make themselves under-
stood by their auditors. The privilege of using one language or the
other at the will of the speaker is an utter absurdity. The devisers of
such a scheme would, we may suppose, have recommended the builders
of Babel to have persisted in their audacious attempt, after the confu-
sion of tongues had been inflicted upon them. One language or the
other must of necessity be exclusively used, and as the French party are
so completely lords of the ascendant in the Canadian House of Assembly,
Englishmen are compelled to forego the use of their own, in their fruit-
less attempts to stem the torrent of resolution, into which these ingrates
are endeavouring to force the country.
* Little could the gallant Wolfe have supposed that the fruits of that
conquest, which he purchased with his life, were to be enjoyed by the
conquered, instead of the conquerors, — that the noble Province which
his valour wrested from our ancient enemy, and added to the British
dominions, was quietly to be surrendered to the vanquished French.
For is it not a surrender of it to them, when, while they adhere most
pertinaciously to their old prejudices, and continue to cherish French in
preference to British feelings, they are told by the King's representa-
tive, " That in every country, to be acceptable to the great body of the
people, is one of the most essential elements of fitness for public
station.'"
As they still form a large majority of the inhabitants of Canada, what
is it but to tell them that Frenchmen ought to rule the country in
20 JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES.
it would have been the ambition of every Frog to have
swelled himself into a Bull before this time. All that
were worth receiving, would have succeeded, and if a
future, for with the prejudices which are so carefully instilled and pre-
served among them by their leaders, none but Frenchmen will be
acceptable to them. The declaration means this or it means nothing.
If acted upon, Britons in a land that belongs to Britain are to be ex-
cluded from all authority. If not acted upon, the majority of the in-
habitants of that land are told by their Governor that power is withheld
from those who alone possess the ?nost essential elements of fitness for
the exercise of it.
Much is it to be regretted that the subject of national origin has been
introduced into the speech of the King's representative.
That the French party possessing ail the power which the elective
branch can exercise, has long made it a subject of complaint that
Frenchmen are not selected for official situations, we know; and if, not-
withstanding their own exclusive conduct, the government were aware of
any instance in which the just claim of a person of French origin had
been overlooked, and an Englishman of inferior qualifications preferred,
it was its duty to set that matter right; not on the ground of origin,
but on the ground of the superior fitness of the individual for the office.
But among these qualifications, an attachment to our institutions,
English feeling, and a preference of the British constitution over that of
any other country, should ever stand foremost. That man is not worthy
of the name, nor can he possess the feelings of a Briton, who could de-
bar a fellow-subject from the fullest enjoyment of all his rights (and the
right to hold offices of trust and emolument, when duly qualified for
them, is a valuable one), merely because his origin could be traced to a
different source from his own. But if those of foreign descent choose to
preserve themselves as a distinct race, to cherish feelings that are not
British, — refuse to become our brethren, and avow their hostility to us,
our language, and our laws, then they never can be — I will not say so
well qualified as Britons — they never can be in any degree qualified to
hold offices of trust and confidence under a British government.
Shall Mr. Papineau, who, five years ago, publicly denounced the
House of Lords as a nuisance; who, within these few weeks, has pro-
fessed his admiration of republican institutions, and called upon his col-
leagues in the Assembly to prepare the minds of the people for the in-
troduction of them; shall he, with these hostile feelings in his heart,
and this treasonable language upon his tongue, be entrusted to serve a
Monarch whom he would dethrone; or selected to sustain a Constitution
that he would destroy ? Surely, surely, neither Mr. Papineau nor his
adherents could ever be deemed worthy of the confidence of their
Sovereign, or qualified to hold any office under the British Crown.
Do I mean to denounce the whole French population of Lower Canada,
to hold them practically to be aliens, and to declare them unworthy of
the confidence of the Government under which they live ? Far from it.
I have in a previous note expressed my opinion- of the great body of the
Canadian inhabitants, and concurred in the admiration which their
orderly conduct has excited in the Governor-General.
JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES. 21
few of them had burst in the attempt, no great harm
would have been done. But by your neglecting these
matters your own children have been sacrificed. The
conquerors have been laid at the feet of the conquered.
Your own system of cultivation has been prohibited,
and a vicious one, under which the Bulls can never
thrive, has been retained. The Frogs, instead of emu-
lating the Bulls, presume to dictate to them ; instead of
feeling it an honour to form part of your noble family,
they disclaim you and boast that they are Frogs, and
that FroiHand is their own.* They tell the Bulls, that
if they do not like to submit to their sway over the
land, they may leave it, and instead of chastizing them
for such insolence, you have truckled to them and have
actually directed your overseers to prefer Frogs to Bulls
in the selection of workmen. Instead of supporting the
authority of your overseers, you have listened to every
captious and unfounded complaint against them. After
selecting men whose hi°rh character was a sufficient
pledge for their good conduct ; men whose names were
respected and whose services were gratefully appreciated
by all who bore the name of Bull ; men who were inca-
pable of any act of oppression or injustice — you have
not only submitted to hear these men maligned and
defamed in the most opprobrious manner, but you have
encouraged the Frogs to persist in such conduct by re-
Contented with their lot, we should look in vain into their peaceful
cottages, for the aspirants to office. No determination of ours will
exclude them from what they will never dream of seeking. It is their
leaders, who should be excluded. — men who possessing the confidence of
this simple people (and who, for obvious reasons, will continue to possess
it), use it only to deceive them, — vaulting through the means of this
ill-deserved confidence into the Assembly, and carrying with them in-
veterate prejudices against the conquerors of the country. They can
ill brook the sway of the descendants of those conquerors. They long
to destroy their power and influence, and to regain by art what their
ancestors lost by arms.
Shall the British Government lend itself to these views? Shall they
bestow offices of trust and confidence with equal complacency upon those
who would support, and upon those who would subvert the King's
authority in the Country ? Verily this is liberality with a vengeance.
* La Nation Canadienne.
22 JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES.
calling them and sending one overseer after another
merely to induce an increase of abuse, until vituperation
has exhausted itself, and they now audaciously tell you
that they mean to have nothing to say to you nor your
overseers.
And now, Mr. Bull, what are you to do? In the first
place, you and Mrs. Bull must decide whether it is
worth your while to retain your property on this side of
the lake or not — for depend upon it, if you lose Frog-
land your other farms will soon follow.* If upon due
consideration you should convince yourself that vou
may as well abandon them — then for heaven's sake say
so. Do not set the tenants on this side of the water to
cutting each other's throats, in a contention whether
* It is the consequences that must follow if the turbulent demagogues
in the Canadian Assembly should succeed iu severing that Province
from the British Empire, that renders the dissensions there so interesting
to the inhabitants of British America generally. It is true that differ-
ence of origin will not be the cause of discontent in the other Provinces,
but there never was a country yet in which a few out of power did not
wish to dispossess the few that were in it, and there are not wanting
characters in each of the British Provinces, who would gladly follow the
example of the Canadian Patriots. If the Government of Great Britain
timidly surrender the prerogative of the Crown to the popular idols in
Canada, they may depend upon it they must also bow the knee to Baal
in every other Province.
I mean not to state that there is any discontent among the inhabitants
of British America; on the contrary, I think that as there are few people
who have more cause to be satisfied with their lot, so are there few more
generally contented with it. But there are no faultless constitutions or
Governments, any more than there are faultless individuals in this
world, and if those who sigh for power in the other Provinces are en-
couraged by the success of the demagogues in Canada to attempt to
wrest it from the hands in which the laws of the land have placed it,
they will not fail to follow the example. Contented as the great body of
the people may be, if every little defect which may be discovered or im-
agined in our institutions, or every trivial mismanagement or mistake in
the administration of public aifairs is dwelt upon and dinned into their
ears by brawlers who see little prospect of success by other means, — and
those who pursue this course, are not discountenanced by the Govern-
ment at home, then that discontent so natural to man, will soon be
generated, and the cause of that dissatisfaction, which every man more
or less feels with his actual state, will be attributed to misgovernment,
when in fact it is only the lot of humanity and proceeds from what —
"Neither Kings nor Laws can cure."
JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES.
they shall continue your tenants or not, if you really do
not desire to retain them. This would not be fair
dealing with your best friends on this part of your pro-
perty. Many here are most warmly attached to you,
and would grieve to part with you ; but if you wish to
part with them, they would see that nothing was left for
them, but to submit to your decision, and endeavour to
make the best of their lot. There are a few young
calves perhaps who are impatient of control, and Avould
like to take a frisk with those with whom you quar-
relled some years ago ; but the greater number while
they admit that those who scampered off when you at-
tempted to milk them, have thriven wonderfully well
since, think that there are some indications of their be-
ginning to gore each other,'* and therefore deem it
would be just as prudent to stick to you until they see
a little more clearly howT the others get on by themselves.
* The neighbouring States are frequently alluded to by our patriots
as models for our imitation. No man whose head or heart is rightly
placed, will join in the senseless clamour against them, in which some
of our ultras indulge. When the connexion between them and the
mother country was severed, nothing remained for them but to create
Republican institutions, and substitute the people for the Crown as the
source of power; the state of society rendered any other course imprac-
ticable, and I envy not that man his feelings who does not wish them
success in the attempt that they are making to regulate social inter-
course and to advance social happiness with the least possible interfer-
ence with the private conduct of the individuals composing the com-
munity. It still, however, remains an experiment, and some of the
wisest men among them, staunch friends to freedom too, cannot at all
times repress a fear that order cannot be preserved without a greater
infusion of power into their system of Government, and that it will be
difficult to induce the people to clothe their rulers with as much author-
ity as the preservation of the public peace may require.
With the tumults which have arisen in many of their large cities, and
the conflicting interests of the various states of the Union before our eyes
with the angry contentions and menacing language of the slaveholding
and non-slaveholding States ringing in our ears, surely mere prudence,
independent of all higher feelings, should induce the inhabitants of
British America to rejoice that the) still form a part of the noble Em-
pire of Great Britain, under whose powerful protection their rights and
liberties are secured to them, without their being involved in that mo-
mentous experiment, on the result of which our neighbours have all
that is valuable to man at stake.
24 JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES.
Therefore Mr. Bull, if you desire to retain your
farms on this side of the lake, you will have no great
difficulty in doing it, but then you must plainly remind
Mrs. Bull that a great estate cannot be rendered pro-
ductive without continued outlays. Your milk seekers
lost you a fine property before, take care that your milk
savers don't lead you into the same scrape now. If you
do not think that the advantages you derive from sup-
plying your out-farms with what they do not raise and
supplying yourself from them with what you cannot
raise, compensate for the expense of providing overseers
&c. &c, then give them up in peace and leave them to
shift for themselves ; but if you wish to retain these ad-
vantages, you must not begrudge paying the cost of
them.
While you fed the overseers, things went on pretty
smoothly, their authority was recognized, and all their
efforts for the improvement of the property were cheer-
fully forwarded. But when you began to suck the
calves instead of feeding them, they began to kick up
their heels and splash mud instead of milk into the
mouths of your half-starved bailiffs.
Now depend upon it this notable scheme of yours will
never answer.
If the overseers are to continue your servants to take
care of your interests, and to see that the regulations
you make to secure the benefit of supplying these farms
to yourself are adhered to, then you must continue to
bear the expense of maintaining them. If they are not
worth it, say so, and have done with them.
But independent of the preservation of your own
authority, Mr. Bull, you owe something to your child-
ren whom you have encouraged to settle in Frogland,
and who, by your indiscretion, have been subjected to
the tyrannous caprices of Mrs. Bull Frog.
That vixen not content with the power which she has
already usurped over the Bulls, wishes to dispossess them
of the little protection which the trustees may afford to
JOHN BULL AND HIS CALVES. 25
them, and has required you to allow the Frogs to name
trustees. Now, as the appointment of them was se-
cured to you by the marriage articles, exercise that right
then not as the beldame wishes but as justice requires.
Reconsider and amend them so as to secure to vour own
at
children those rights to which they are entitled, on
every part of your property ; let them not while dwelling
in your own laud, be subjected to those who voluntarily
continue foreigners. The task is not an easy one, per-
haps, but let the performance of it be confided to honest,
intelligent and diligent men, and it will no doubt be ac-
complished ; let no invidious distinctions be made, let all
your children, whether by descent or adoption be ad-
mitted to a full participation of your paternal care and
affection, but let no spurious feeling of liberality induce
you to sacrifice your own family to those who abhor
both you and them.
Comply, then, with Mrs. Bull-Frog's request to alter
the marriage articles, but do it in a spirit which will
make her feel that, "She seeks for justice more than
she deserves."
18
ADDRESSED TO
LOUISA COLLINS,
Who died at Margarktvillk. !6th of Oct., 1834, aged 1 year and 5 months
Sweet babe, into the room where thy little corpse
now lies, wert thou borne each morning in the arms of
thy mother or thy nurse, and when wearied even with
so lovely a burthen they asked, "who will take the
Baby?" how many kind voices exclaimed " I will, bring
her to me," how many kind arms were extended to fondle
and caress thee, and when thou didst draw back, cling
round thy .mother's neck, and lay thy dear little head
upon her bosom, thy sweet expressive smiling counten-
ance, looked not a refusal but only said — and oh how
plainly did those eyes bespeak thy feelings — " I love to
be here."
But the question "Who will take the Baby?" has been
put by a Voice we heard not, and He who said " Suffer
little children to come unto me and forbid them not," has
said, " I will." Let His Will be ever done, let no mur-
muring voice arise to dispute it. Dare we wish to snatch
her back from Him who even here took little children in
His arms and blessed them.
Perhaps the sweet little Angel Anna, who when thy
feeble voice first expressed its moans in this world of
pain and sorrow, so sweetly soothed thee, — perhaps she
who first so fondly drew thee to the arms of thy earthly
father, hovered over thy death bed, soothed thy dying
agonies, and accompanied thy blessed Spirit in its flight
to the Throne of thy Heavenly Father, for
The World so calmly did'st thou leave
So quietly thy Spirit fled,
We watched to see thy bosom heave,
When thou wer't numbered with the dead.
28 ADDRESS.
Let thy mourning mother remember that she is now
the mother of three Angels, who may perhaps be em-
ployed by her Almighty Father to minister more to her
happiness even here, than they ever could have done
had they remained in this world ; but however it may
please Him to dispose of or employ them, of this she
may be assured — and let that assurance be her consola-
tion— they are happy, eternally happy, with Him and
only through Him who died to purchase happiness for
them.
The following lines were suggested to the writer by reading
Goldsmith's beautiful Poem of " The Traveller." He has had a
few copies printed for circulation among his friends, whose partia-
lity will induce them to view it favourably as the production of an
Octogenarian,
REFLECTIONS ON PASSING EVENTS.
A Pilgrim, wandering through this world of woe,
Struggling with sin and sorrow as I go,
Where sinful passions in our bosoms reign,
And sinful pleasures ever lead to pain : —
Where can the soul find comfort or relief?
Where safely seek a solace for its grief?
Where gain that peace for which it vainly yearns ? —
Until from earth's delusive joys it turns,
Fixes its thoughts on Thee, Great God of Heaven,
And seeks the bliss by Thee so freely given
To all who fly for refuge to Thy Son,
And say, what e'er betide, "Thy will be done."
" Where'er I roam, whatever change I see,"
May my glad heart for ever turn to Thee :
Still to my Saviour turn, with ceaseless praise,
And seek Thy guidance thro' life's devious ways.
Blessed be that Book, which guides me to my God,
And makes my soul submissive to Thy rod ;
That teaches me that blessings ever flow
From Thee, e'en when they come in guise of woe.
O ! let me not, with vain presumption, dare
To doubt the wondrous truths it does declare,
Nor bring Thy mysteries to reason's test —
On which proud man would fainly have them rest.
He asks why Power Supreme permitted ill ?
And vainly asks, for none his doubts can still, —
Yet ill abounds, where'er he turns his eyes,
Thro' every region underneath the skies.
He seeks a remedy ; — Thy Blessed Word
Would turn the sinner to his dying Lord, —
Bids him a remedy for sin to see
In Him who bled on the accursed tree.
But faith, alone, o'er humble hearts bears sway, —
And the proud sceptic turns in scorn away,
While humble sinners listen to the call,
And cast their cares on Him who cares for all.
S2 REFLECTIONS.
Thus humbly trusting in Thy Blessed Wordv
And fearing only Thee, I look abroad
On the dread scenes which now assail our race,
And from all bosoms peace and comfort chase, —
Save those, who feel Thy Providence can still
Surpassing good produce from passing ill.
Amazed, we see a Christian host arrayed
To save the Turk from Russia's threatening blade.
Well-meaning but short-sighted men deplore
That Britain's sons their precious blood should pour
In such a cause. " No! let the accursed power
Of the False Prophet sink for evermore !"
But He who seeth not as man doth see —
He, from whose eyes all mists forever flee —
May, and we trust He will, our fears becalm,
And guided on by His Almighty Arm,
Our Christian hosts his Blessed Word may spread,
Where'er His arm that Christian host may lead.
Then, not alone, shall Mahomet be hurled
From that fair portion of our fallen world,
Which by his ruthless sword th' Imposter gained, —
But those sad errors which pure truth hath stained,
And both the Greek and Roman Church defile,
Shall draw a cleansing stream from Britain's Isle,
Where pious men of God in bands unite
To spread His Word e'en 'mid the raging fight.
For not alone the Soldier with his sword
Rushes to battle, — but Thy Holy Word,
A precious burthen, in his pack he bears,
To rouse his courage and to calm his cares.
Well tutored by its sacred lore, he knows
No fears while struggling with his country's foes.
If from the field in triumph he returns,
With Britain's glorious deeds his bosom burns ;
If death o'ertake him in the fearful strife,
The foeman's steel but opes the Gate of Life.
Thus Vicars felt — Vicars, the Soldier's friend —
Who, with his comrades, oft his prayers did blend ;
Daily, with them, he pours his soul to God,
'Till, in his Country's cause, he pours his blood.
No lingering agony his course impedes, —
Soon, freed from mortal coil, he upward speeds,
REFLECTIONS. 33
From fields of carnage in this world of woe,
Where peace and joy around God's Throne e'er flow.
What wondrous change then meets his ravished sight, *•
To fill the Christian Hero with delight !
No longer listening to War's dread alarms,
He sinks in glory in his Saviour's arms.
Buf when before, in War's disastrous train,
Went forth that priceless cure for all our pain ? —
When did we see the Ministers of Peace —
And may their blessed number soon increase —
'Mid want and suffering, gather in the Camp,
To sick and wounded men to show the lamp
Of God's own Word, — their saddest wounds to heal,
And to their souls the blessed truth reveal,
That the keen pains their bodies now endure
May of immortal souls produce the cure,
And all their sufferings may but blessings prove,
If they will turn them to the God of Love.
Say, thro' what source did He, Who works by means,
Send forth such comforts to those dismal scenes ?
Yes, 'twas the work of His Almighty hand,
Which, years long passed, stirred up a little band
Of Christian men, His blessed Word to spread,
Of Christian men, now numbered with the dead ;
But e'er the hand of death liad closed their eyes,
They looked, with grateful wonder and surprise,
At the vast work that little band had wrought,
Thro' Him whose favor and support they sought.
Long may that work His blessed aid receive,
'Till all mankind his blessed Word believe.
No note or comment from the pen of man,
They sought, to explain the great Creator's plan ;
Trusting on Him, they sent His Word abroad,
Pure as it issued from the lips of God.
That little band, now grown a mighty mass,
Striving each year the former to surpass
In works of love to bless the race of man,
And cause them thro' God's Word his works to scan,
Now to the battle field thai Word they speed,
To soothe the soldier in his hour of need.
Strange it may seem such messenger to send —
Where blood and carnage on its steps attend ;
11)
34 REFLECTIONS.
But wist ye not the blessed Prince of Peace
Declares the Christian warfare ne'er shall cease ;
Nor must the Christian warrior ever yield,
Or in the tempting court, or tented field, —
For in the court, or in the camp, 'tis meet
The Word of God should guide our wandering feet.
O ! that that blessed Word may do its work,
And reach the feelings of the sensual Turk !
0 ! that its piercing truths with power may seek
The subtle bosom of the wily Greek !
That crowds of Christian converts soon may come
Forth from the darkness of benighted Rome ;
And Turk, and Greek, and Roman, seek the Cross,
And learn all other gain is only loss !
If 'tis His will — such blessings may ensue
From deeds which every human heart must rue ;
But tho' His good assume the shape of ill,
We bow submissive to His Holy Will.
See yonder stalwart form, his mother's pride,
With manly step towards the foe now stride,
Into the thickest of the fight to dash ; —
Alas ! he falls ! oh ! what a fearful gash !
The majesty of manhood now lies prone, —
One dreadful blow has brought that warrior down :
His comrades lift him from among the slain,
And bear him senseless to his tent again.
Say, does the sleep of death those eyelids close ?
Nay — he's but sinking in a fitful dose, —
For soon he lifts again his throbbing head,
And sees an angel kneeling at his bed.
What orentle hand is that which smoothes his brow.
And bathes his temple, — ''Florence, is it thou ?
" Is it thy gentle step, which softly glides
"From couch to couch where misery resides, —
" Where mangled limbs and gaping wounds abound,
" And death, in direst form, is hovering round?
" Thou ! born to wealth, to luxury and ease,
" How earnest thou 'mid scenes of woe like these ?
u'Twere fitter far thy menials should bestow
" Such toilsome care?' Sweet Florence answers — tk No-
"Tho' born to wealth, to luxury and ease,
"I feel my duty lies in scenes like these.
REFLECTIONS. 35
"Did not my Saviour quit the realms' of Bliss
"To wander through a world of woe like this,
" To seek the wretched, — and has made us know,
" We please Him best, when we are soothing woe ?
" Does not my Sovereign, 'mid the cares of State,
" Feel deepest interest in the Soldier's fate, —
" Haste to the shore, to welcome his return ?
"And while with pain his fevered frame may burn.
" Her woman's heart pants to bestow relief,
"And sweetly sympathises in his grief;
" And early was my youthful heart embued
" With the sweet 'luxury of doing good.' "
E'en so, fair Florence ; — yes, thy gentle heart
Has wisely fix'd upon that better part
Which Mary chose — which Jesus most approves —
And which should be the choice of all He loves.
Sweet Christian maid — devoted to His Cause —
Guiding thy steps by His most holy laws —
In that dread day, when all shall hear their doom,
Thy Saviour's smile from thee shall chase all gloom.
But while on earth the Christian draws his breath,
Familiarised to scenes of war and death,
He looks to Him, who good from evil draws,
And to His care confides his country's cause.
Yes ! look to Him, and hush each murm'ring sound,
Nor fear no fitting leader can be found
To guide thy gallant sons against the foe,
And Britain's conquering standard once more shew.
He of a hundred fights has left the stage,
Mourned by his country, in a green old age,
By no long sickness to his couch confined, —
No powers impaired of body or of mind,
Ever intent on duty to the last, —
A few short hours — and all life's pains were past.
Who now shall lead our soldiers in the field ?
Who now the sword of Wellington shall wield ?
We hear exclaimed by some, with faltering voice :
The Christian answers, "Leave to God the choice."
Perish the thought that Britain's race is run.
And all her mighty deeds in arms are done !
No murm'ring voice, Britannia shouldst thou raise ;
Naught from thy lips should issue, but the praise
36 REFLECTIONS.
Of Him, who forced thy stubborn foes to flee,
And yield Sebastopol to France and thee.
'Tis true, before they fled, they made thee feel
That they were " foemen worthy of thy steel ;"
The more thy breast with gratitude should glow,
For such a triumph over such a foe.
Thy sons have shewn how Britons can endure
Both cold and hunger, — and of this be sure —
If further lesson must thy foe receive —
They soon shall learn what Britons can achieve.
When from the trenches to the open field —
Where boldest hearts to wisest heads oft yield —
They there shall learn, tho' Well ngton be dead,
His mantle o'er some British Chieftain spread
Shall proudly flow, each gallant heart to cheer,
And lead them on in Victory's career, —
Where future Wellingtons fresh laurels gain,
While future Nelsons triumph on the main.
Preserve the Faith for which thy martyrs died,
Nor fear that God a leader will provide ;
No lust of conquest does this hope inspire —
We fear not War, but Peace is our desire.
Monarch of Russia ! clothed with such vast power-
Think, I beseech thee, of thy dying hour ;
Think of the agonising woe and pain
Which ever follow in War's dreadful train ;
And answer now, as answer then thou must,
If thou art fighting in a cause that's just.
Were but thy hapless country once relieved
From that sad legacy thy Sire bequeathed,
Of ruthless War, — and gentle Peace once more
Shed its soft influence from shore to shore,
No longer listening to ambition's voice,
But well directed to a better choice,
Thy savage hordes now striving to improve,
And teaching them both God and man to love :
Say, were not that a far more glorious plan
Than that long cherished by that wondrous man —
Half savage and half sage — his country's pride —
(O let him not remain his country's guide).
Let not his lust of conquest still prevail,
Which leads thee every neighbour to assail.
REFLECTIONS. 37
Thy power extending o'er a world so wide,
From Neva's banks to Amoor's mighty tide,
Might well suffice. Then be it thy desire,
With love of peace and knowledge to inspire
The millions who are placed beneath thy sway,
Nor add to those who now thy will obey.
But mildly strive to soften each rude heart —
To spread and cultivate each peaceful art ;
Teach them their savage passions to subdue,
And the bright path of science to pursue,
This were a God-like work for man to do.
Oh ! that War's trumpet its sad blasts might cease,
And Europe's sons once more might rest in peace :
But let not British blood be spilt in vain,
Nor heroes fall, a treacherous truce to gain.
If Muscovy does really rue the hour
When she defied both France and England's power ;
If hen' brave sons at length have learnt to feel
That vainly they contend against their steel, —
And real Peace again its head uprear,
Blessing alike the Peasant and the Peer, —
Then welcome, oh ! how welcome were the voice
Of smiling Peace, — then should all hearts rejoice ; —
Princes and People, then their thanks should raise,
And to the King of Kings give all the praise.
But what dark cloud is that we now descry,
Casting its shadow o'er the western sky,
And lowering as it points to Britain's shore,
As if the trump of wrar might blow once more ;
Calling Britannia's and Columbia's sons,
Against each others breasts to point their guns ?
O ! can it be, Columbia, that thy sword
To Russia's Despot now will aid aiford ?
Why do thy freeborn sons, alas ! appear
Inclined to aid a tyrant's mad career ?
Is it that tyrants in thine own loved soil,
Afric's dark sons of freedom still despoil ?
4Twas a sad legacy that did remain,
When valiantly thou didst thy freedom gain
From British rule, which Britain to thee left,
Of men, whom she of freedom had bereft ;
But she has long wiped off the shameful stain.
38 REFLECTIONS.
Whilst thou art lengthening the dreadful chain
To regions where the freeborn red man's race
Then sought support and pleasure in the chase.
That hapless race, yielding to His decree,
Which dooms the savage from the sage to flee,
Hath left that fertile region in thy hand
That thou mightst there fulfil the great command —
Increase and multiply man's race on earth —
But let not that fair land to slaves give birth.
If, in the sickly South, fair freedom pine.
And the poor slave must there all hope resign
Of his chain loosening 'till he sink in death —
Taint not the western breeze with slavery's breath.
Sons of the North, whose earliest breath was drawn
Where first your country's freedom had its dawn,
Be ye united in one gallant band.
From slavery's curse to save Nebraska's land.
Will not your pilgrim sires start from their graves,
If ye shall people such a land with slaves ?
Oh ! would those men, who this sad course pursue,
Think of the day when they that course may rue !
When looking up from that dire gulf below,
Which parts them from the sainted soul of Stowe,
How will they then lament, her thrilling tale
Of misery (which ever must prevail
Where slavery uprears its cursed head),
Did not on their hard hearts its influence shed,
Ere they were doomed for evermore to dwell,
The slaves of Satan, in the realms of Hell.
But think not, friends of freedom, I would urge,
(Much as I may deplore this cruel scourge
Still stains your land), that ye the sword should draw
Against your brethren ; — may that blessed law,
Which binds thy States in one confederate band,
The rudest shock of discord still withstand. (1)
Let not thy fields be stained by civil war,
The direst ill which man on man can draw ;
Still strive in peace that evil to remove,
And leave the issue to the God of Love.
Farewell, Columbia ! This my parting prayer —
That all whose hearts the Saxon blood may share,
May live in peace, and harmony, and love,
REFLECTIONS. . 39
And only strive each other to improve.
" And now my humble muse would spread her wing.
*' Softly where Britain courts the eastern spring,
u Where every peasant boasts his rights to scan,
*' And learns to venerate himself as man."
Land of the Free, where floats on every gale
An air too pure for slavery to inhale, —
The darkest slave that e'er left Afric's shore,
Once touch thy soil and he's a slave no more, —
Spurning alike his master and his chain,
And praising God, he stands erect again.
True he may feel the doom of man, for there
Of thorns and thistles earth must have its share ;
And he, alas ! may daily learn to know
Man's bread is bought by labour of his brow ;
But still, however scanty be his fare,
He proudly feels no lordly master dare
Against the freeman raise his cruel hand,
Nor threat the lash shall fall at his command.
4'True, he may see some palace raise its head,
uTo shame the meanness of his humble shed, —
4i And costly lords the sumptuous banquet deal,
uTo make him loathe his vegetable meal;"
Yet even then, the soothing thought delights,
That all around are bless'd with equal rights, —
The proud man's castle, and the poor man's cot —
However different may be their lot,
This consolation may the owners draw
That both may claim the care of England's Law.
And tho' the brawling demagogue declare —
All are entitled to an equal share
Of this world's goods — he knows the task were vain
To strive such dangerous doctrine to maintain.
Enough for him, that on fair freedom's soil
Each may enjoy the fruit of his own toil ;
This England's boast — her equal laws secure
Alike the property of rich and poor, —
Altho', as erst her SAveetest bard confessed —
4i Some are, and must be, greater than the rest."
In that blest land, may order long prevail,
And vainly may the demagogue assail
That glorious fabric, which, from age to age,
40 REFLECTIONS.
Has been improved by statesman and by sage ;
Still vainly strive to part the Church and State
And from their stations drive the good and great ;
Long may all orders in the realm be seen
To join in prayer for our beloved Queen.
May every virtue which adorns a throne,
Victoria's royal bosom ever own,
And all that could an humbler station grace.
Glow in her breast and beam upon her face.
Her God to honour and Her people bless,
Be the first wishes which her heart possess !
May She of those insidious wiles beware,
And guard her subjects from the dangerous snare,
With whioh Rome strives the heedless to entrap.
And once more seat them in its dangerous lap.
May those fair Isles which own her gentle sway,
Never again the Papal power obey.
Could Erin's gallant sons be once released
From the debasing tyranny of priests,
And stand erect in Erin's fertile Isle,
Then peace and plenty round each cot would smile ;
No longer bowing down to Priest or Pope,
But on the Saviour placing all their hope, —
Learning His will from His most Holy Word,
From which, alas ! they've been so long debarred.
Then Celt and Saxon kneeling at one shrine,
Would offer up joint prayers for thee and thine,
And the deluders and deluded share
The supplication of that earnest prayer. (2).
Be it the love of power, or love of pelf,
That prompts the priest to turn upon himself
That reverence which to God alone is due,
Oh ! may that gracious God his heart renew !
Reclaim him from the error of his ways,
To teach his flock their God alone to praise,
Nor longer pour the ill-directed prayer
To Saints, who once were fellow-sinners here !
Would their warm hearts to that pure Church were led,
Which owns Victoria as its temporal head,
Whose beauteous liturgy a prayer provides
For all the ills which human life betides,
In that plain language which all understand,
REFLECTIONS. 41
Throughout the length and breadth of Britain's land !
Over that Church may Sumner long preside,
His precepts teach, and his example guide
Prelate and priest God's Sacred Word to search,
Nor for the Saviour substitute the Church.
Daughter of Edward ! such the warm desire
Of one who knew and loved thy Royal Sire !
What tho' his martial discipline was stern
Himself submitted to each -rule in turn, —
But when from his stern duties he sought rest,
No kinder heart ere beat in human breast, —
No tale of woe was poured in Edward's ear,
But ever found a ready listener there : —
Witness, when down his manly cheek the tear
Flowed freely, Thomas, on thy mournful bier ; (3).
Witness, when that sad catalogue of grief,
Which overpowered thee, Goldsmith sought relief,
How readily he did relief extend,
And to thy dying hour remained thy friend.
Long were the tale to tell of all the good,
Which from that royal hand so freely flowed.
Tho' fourscore years have cooled my youthful blood,
Thanks to the gracious Giver of all good
I still, in age, His mercies can enjoy, —
Still, in His service, would my hours employ.
With friends, and family, and plenty, blest,
And waiting calmly, till I sink to rest
In those kind arms, where sinners seek repose
When all life's anxious cares in death shall close.
Oft on my early years does memory dwell,
Reminding me of one I loved so well, —
Thy faults, thy virtues, rising to my mind,
Nor to the one nor to the other blind, —
I bring this tribute from the shrine of truth, —
To Thee, the Friend and Patron of my youth.
20
NOTES.
(i)
Although I infinitely prefer the construction of society in Eng-
land to that which prevails in America, and think that respect for
those who are born to high station quite consistent with manly self-
respect in those who pay it, while it generally stimulates those who
receive it to cultivate the high and honorable feelings which dignify
our race and extend their influence to all classes of society, I am not
so blinded by my attachment to the noble institutions of my own
couutry, as to be insensible to what is admirable and praiseworthy
elsewhere.
The circumstances under which civilized succeeded to savage life
in America, precluded the establishment of an order of nobility
there ; and any attempt to introduce one, either at the termination of
the Revolutionary War, or at any time before or since, would have
been impracticable and absurd.
If America were cut off from all communication with the rest of
the civilized world, she would feel the want of such an order very
sensibly, and would probably find that she had purchased her ple-
thoric liberty at the expense of the loss of most of the refinements of
life : — but that communication has ever subsisted. The ocean, so far
from dividing mankind from each other, now rapidly facilitates their
intercourse ; and though separate governments will probably long
continue to exist, man is daily becoming more familiarised with man
and each country may borrow from the other much of good, and
alas ! much of evil too.
Viewing, then, the American Confederation, without reference to
my predilections as a British subject, and considering the circum-
stances under which it was formed, I cannot but entertain great
respect for those who framed it. It was a noble attempt to regulate
social intercourse and to increase social happiness, with the slightest
possible interference with individual liberty, and I heartily wish
them success in the great experiment which they are trying — to pre-
serve and diffuse the principles of self-government throughout the
extensive region over which they now exercise some authority.
Difficulties, great difficulties, they unquestionably have to encounter,
and as their numbers increase, these difficulties, it may be feared,
will increase with them ; the turbulent and the lawless may require
a stronger force than law to control them, and that force may clothe
the ambitious with power to violate liberty. But let them not
despond, — they are growing up under their institutions, and may
learn to enlarge or contract the power of those who govern as cir-
cumstances may require. Much, oh ! how much, is involved in the
44 XOTES.
preservation of that Confederation. While it subsists, the conflict-
ing interests of the different States will continue to be the subject of
discussion in the national and state Councils, and the dread appeal
to the sword will not desolate the fertile fields of North America,
and spread misery there, as it has lately done among the families of
Europe. I envy not that man his feelings, who can look upon the
result of this experiment of self-government, which so many
millions of our Saxon brethren are making, without wishing them
success. Would that Europe could secure its inhabitants against the
recurrence of the horrors of war, by some institution similar to that
of the American Confederation. But of that, alas! there is little
prospect. America has my best wishes for the perservation of her
Congress, — not for the good that it has done, but for the evil that it
may prevent.
Independent of those generous feelings which human beings
should feel for the welfare of the human race, Britons may contem-
plate the prosperity and unexampled progress of America with some
glow of pride. From us they have inherited their love of freedom
and their spirit of enterprise, — from us they learnt to reconcile the
preservation of order with the preservation of liberty,— and though
with them, as with the manly race from whom they are descended,
order is sometimes endangered,
" And by the bonds of nature feebly held,
Minds combat minds, repelling and repelled,
Ferments arise, contending factions roar,
Kepressed ambition struggles round the shore,
'Till overwrought, the general system feels
Its motions stop — or phrenzy fire the wheels."*
Yet, when the danger appears imminent, the friends of order, in
both countries, somehow regain their influence and preserve their
institutions. To what is this owing, but to that combination of the
love of freedom and order, which pervades both countries to a
greater extent than it can be found elsewhere ? Prior to the revolu-
tion, each of the thirteen Colonies possessed a constitution, as
similar as circumstances would permit, to that of the Mother
Country, — and the Colonies were accustomed to self-government.
Subsequent to the Revolution, they retained the same forms, though
the source of power was transferred from the Crown to the People,
Yet, notwithstanding this important change, the love of freedom,
that it in some measure rendered exorbitant, did not annihilate the
love of order, which had previously co-existed with it, although the
latter occasionally received some rude shocks. It still, however,
exists, and exercises much influence throughout the Continent of
North America. A remarkable instance of this occurred in the
recent settlement of California — where the gold mines attracted a
crowd of lawless, reckless men, whose atrocities soon astounded all
who heard of them. It was generally supposed that nothing but a
military force could have reduced such a set of miscreants to any
approach to order, — but in much less time than could have been
supposed possible, civil tribunals were established, and gradually
extended protection to life and property, without the intervention of
military power.
* Goldsmith's Traveller.
NOTES. 45
While every attempt that foreigners have made in Europe and
South America to imitate our Institutions, has hitherto proved
abortive, we see our descendants in North America extending our
language aud our laws from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Ought not,
then, the parent to be proud of the child — and the child to be proud
of the parent? May the demon of discord fail in every effort to
tempt the Anglo-Saxon race to draw their swords upon each other.
(2.)
Yes ? Let our prayers, our earnest prayers be offered up for our
deluded fellow subjects who still profess the Eeligion of the Church
of Rome. There are some who think that Religion is not a term that
should be applied to that Church — but I am not of that number.
Amongst its members have ever been found men whose doctrines
and whose deeds evinced that they were real Christians ; and I trust
there are many, at this hour, who look through the mummery of its
forms, and the multitude of its Saints, to that Saviour through whom
alone cometh salvation. But this is not the general tendency of the
teaching of the Church of Rome ; the truths of the Gospel have been
gradually overlaid with so many forms and ceremonies, some harm-
less and some hurtful, and it accords so much more with the feelings
of our fallen nature, to prefer superstitious rites to pure, spiritual
worship, that the great mass of her members, particularly the lower
classes, rest in these forms alone. To them vital religion is a
stranger ; they place the safety of their souls in the safa keeping of
the Priest, and deem that a rigid compliance with the dictates of the
Church may be substituted for that purity of heart and practice
which Christianity enjoins. The power of the Priest over those who
labor under this delusion is unlimited, and greatly endangers civil as
well as religious liberty.
Let us not lay the flattering unction to our souls that, in these
enlightened days, there is no risk of our becoming again subject to
the tyranny and torture of the dark ages. Rome still grasps eagerly
at power. Witness the daring act by which England was divided
into Papal Sees ? Look at the Concordat between the Pope and the
Emperor of Austria, which places the Protestant subjects of the
Emperor at the mercy of Papal tribunals ! And suppose not that
we are secure because we have our own Representatives to protect
us from such an outrage. It was asserted, many years ago, in the
Quarterly Review, that the power of Popes and Priests might become
more dangerous under a Representative Government, than it had
ever yet been ; that, while Kings and Princes were the depositaries
of civil power, Rome courted them, and ruled through them. But
Kings and Princes were not all equally submissive, and sometimes
contended successfully for the preservation of their rights. But,
when authority emanated from the masses, the Priests would no
longer court, but command ; and it would remain for them to dictate
to their deluded followers who should be selected for our lawgivers,
and what laws such lawgivers should make. Do we not see symp-
46 NOTES.
toms of a realization of this prediction on both sides of the Atlantic ?
These observations are made with no spirit of hostility to my
Roman Catholic fellow-subjects ; for their sakes as well as our own,
I wish they were liberated from the thraldom which endangers both.
They do not appear aware of the immunity they enjoy where the
civil power is in the hands of Protestants. They may slavishly
submit, if they choose, to the dictation of their Priests, in all matters
civil and religious, but they cannot be compelled to do so. Should
the spirit of enquiry be raised in them, they may open a Bible with-
out being consigned to a dungeon for so doing ; or, if they think the
candidate for whom the Priest orders them to vote not so well
qualified as his opponent, they may exercise their franchise as they
may judge best. Whether they or we may be allowed either privi-
lege, if the Priests directly or indirectly unite all civil and religious
power in themselves, admits of little doubt. Dungeons, as dark and
deep as those in which the Madai were incarcerated, can be sunk
whenever priestly power prevails. They have been emancipated by
Protestant Legislatures from all civil disabilities, and never again may
Protestants attempt to secure their own religious liberty by violating
that of others. Never more may recourse be had to penal statutes,
which can have no other effect upon high-minded men than to raise
a spirit of resistance, and make them cling closer to a cause which,
while so assailed, they would deem it dishonorable to desert. But
should not all the friends of vital Christianity, however they may
differ upon minor points, unite to aid the efforts that are now making
to enlighten our Roman Catholic brethren, and convince them of the
dangerous errors of the Church of Rome, by circulating the Scrip-
tures among them in the language they understand ? The Priests
will doubtless use every art to counteract this pious effort, for their
own power must fall before an open Bible. But let us trust that
prayer and perseverance will overcome all difficulties, and that the
blessing of God will finally rest upon those who give and those who
take His holy Word.
(3.)
Lieutenant Thomas was the son of a respectable loyalist, who, by
the recommendation of His Royal Highness the late Duke of Kent,
obtained a commission in the Royal Fusiliers. He possessed much
of His Royal Highness's confidence and esteem, and was well worthy
of it. While in command of a party in search of deserters, the
accidental discharge of a brother Officer's pistol gave him a wound
which occasioned his death. His Royal Highness was affected even
to tears, when informed of the melancholy event.
Poor Goldsmith,— nephew of Oliver, and son of Henry, — to whom
" The Traveller" was addressed, had served with credit, during the
American Revolution, in the 54th regiment. He was a warm-heart-
ed Irishman, and had formed an inconsiderate marriage with a lady
of great beauty but no money, and, on the termination of the war,
felt it necessary to sell his commission, and devoted what remained
of the money it produced, after payment of his debts, to the erection
NOTES. 47
of mills in New Brunswick, which, with his energy and perseverance
would have afforded a comfortable maintenance for himself and
family; but, just as he had completed an expensive dam, he unfortu-
nately fell upon a broad axe, and received a desperate wound, wbich
confined him to his bed for weeks. In the absence of the master's
eye the work was neglected, and the autumnal rains swept away the
dam before it was completed and rendered secure, as it would have
been but for this untimely accident. Upon his recovery he set to
work with great energy to rebuild the dam. Scarcely was it com-
pleted when the mill took fire, it was reduced to ashes, and he was
reduced to ruin.
When these accumulated misfortunes reached the Duke's ear,
although the sufferer was a stranger to him, the tale went to his
heart. He sent for him to Halifax — found him ready and willing to
exert himself to the utmost in any honest way — appointed him, first,
an assistant Engineer in the works then going on here, and, subse-
quently, procured for him an appointment in the Commissariat which
gave him a comfortable subsistence, and befriended him throughout
his life.
Indeed, it was an admirable trait in His Royal Highness's charac-
ter, that, unless compelled by their misconduct, he never forsook
any whom he had befriended. He was lenient even to their faults,
unless they involved a breach of military discipline — there he was
ever strict.
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