登陆注册
20005500000040

第40章 THE DAYS OF TRIAL(6)

But it was chiefly the world-wide depression that began in his first year of office, 1873, which proved his undoing.Trade was stagnant, bankruptcies multiplied, and acute suffering occurred among the poor in the larger cities.Mackenzie had no solution to offer except patience and economy; and the Opposition were freer to frame an enticing policy.The country was turning toward a high tariff as the solution of its ills.Protection had not hitherto been a party issue in Canada, and it was still uncertain which party would take it up.Finally Mackenzie, who was an ardent free trader, and the Nova Scotia wing of his party triumphed over the protectionists in their own ranks and made a low tariff the party platform.Macdonald, who had been prepared to take up free trade if Mackenzie adopted protection, now boldly urged the high tariff panacea.The promise of work and wages for all, the appeal to national spirit made by the arguments of self-sufficiency and fully rounded development, the desire to retaliate against the United States, which was still deaf to any plea for more liberal trade relations, swept the country.The Conservative minority of over sixty was converted into a still greater majority in the general election of 1878, and the leader whom all men five years before had considered doomed, returned to power, never to lose it while life lasted.

The first task of the new Government, in which Tupper was Macdonald's chief supporter, was to carry out its high tariff pledges."Tell us how much protection you want, gentlemen," said Macdonald to a group of Ontario manufacturers, "and we'll give you what you need." In the new tariff needs were rated almost as high as wants.Particularly on textiles, sugar, and iron and steel products, duties were raised far beyond the old levels and stimulated investment just as the world-wide depression which had lasted since 1873 passed away.Canada shared in the recovery and gave the credit to the well-advertised political patent medicine taken just before the turn for the better came.For years the National Policy or "N.P.," as its supporters termed it, had all the vogue of a popular tonic.

The next task of the Government was to carry through in earnest the building of the railway to the Pacific.For over a year Macdonald persisted in Mackenzie's policy of government construction but with the same slow and unsatisfactory results.

Then an opportunity came to enlist the services of a private syndicate.Four Canadians, Donald A.Smith, a former Hudson's Bay Company factor, George Stephen, a leading merchant and banker of Montreal, James J.Hill and Norman W.Kittson, owners of a small line of boats on the Red River, had joined forces to revive a bankrupt Minnesota railway.* They had succeeded beyond all parallel, and the reconstructed road, which later developed into the Great Northern, made them all rich overnight.This success whetted their appetite for further western railway building and further millions of rich western acres in subsidies.They met Macdonald and Tupper half way.By the bargain completed in 1881the Canadian Pacific Railway Company undertook to build and operate the road from the Ottawa Valley to the Pacific coast, in return for the gift of the completed portions of the road (on which the Government spent over $37,000,000), a subsidy of $25,000,000 in cash, 25,000,000 selected acres of prairie land, exemption from taxes, exemption from regulation of rates until ten per cent was earned, and a promise on the part of the Dominion to charter no western lines connecting with the United States for twenty years.The terms were lavish and were fiercely denounced by the Opposition, now under the leadership of Edward Blake.But the people were too eager for railway expansion to criticize the terms.The Government was returned to power in 1882and the contract held.

* See "The Railroad Builders", by John Moody (in "The Chronicles of America").

The new company was rich in potential resources but weak in available cash.Neither in New York nor in London could purse strings be loosened for the purpose of building a road through what the world considered a barren and Arctic wilderness.But in the faith and vision of the president, George Stephen, and the ruthless energy of the general manager, William Van Horne, American born and trained, the Canadian Pacific had priceless assets.Aided in critical times by further government loans, they carried the project through, and by 1886, five years before the time fixed by their contract, trains were running from Montreal to Port Moody, opposite Vancouver.

A sudden burst of prosperity followed the building of the road.

Settlers poured into the West by tens of thousands, eastern investors promoted colonization companies, land values soared, and speculation gave a fillip to every line of trade.The middle eighties were years of achievement, of prosperity, and of confident hope.Then prosperity fled as quickly as it had come.

The West failed to hold its settlers.Farm and factory found neither markets nor profits.The country was bled white by emigration.Parliamentary contest and racial feud threatened the hard-won unity.Canada was passing through its darkest hours.

During this period, political friction was incessant.Canada was striving to solve in the eighties the difficult question which besets all federations--the limits between federal and provincial power.Ontario was the chief champion of provincial rights.The struggle was intensified by the fact that a Liberal Government reigned at Toronto and a Conservative Government at Ottawa, as well as by the keen personal rivalry between Mowat and Macdonald.

In nearly every constitutional duel Mowat triumphed.The accepted range of the legislative power of the provinces was widened by the decisions of the courts, particularly of the highest court of appeal, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in England.

同类推荐
  • 坐忘论

    坐忘论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 周公解梦

    周公解梦

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 憨休禅师敲空遗响

    憨休禅师敲空遗响

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 蜀轺纪程

    蜀轺纪程

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • This Side of Paradise

    This Side of Paradise

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 最全最全的哈佛经济课

    最全最全的哈佛经济课

    经济学不只是“赚钱的理论”,它也与我们日常生活中所有的经济活动息息相关。在每日的经济活动中,每个人都想要达到“自身利益最大化”,但是我们该怎么做才能获得对自己而言最大的好处?本书就是在这样的灵感启发下产生的。它通过对生活中司空见惯的经济现象,以及那些与我们息息相关的经济事件的生动剖析,让读者在品味趣味的同时,对经济学也能有一个初步而全面的认识,从而把握更加经济的生活。
  • 玄心纪

    玄心纪

    世界阴阳对立,各有修真无数。暗物质面为了统一宇宙,四处制造毁灭。一个无上至尊在反抗战斗中产生了分裂,灵魂破裂,心魔占据上风。灵魂带着一块暗含神秘功法的玉佩转世。寻找失散的记忆,成就无上神通,复活失去的爱人。
  • 苇花飘处

    苇花飘处

    在洞庭湖深处,有一些浮出湖水的陆地,当地人称为“湖洲”,人们世代以渔、樵业为生。它们看似与城市相接,其实一直都有它独特固守的地方。忽然有一天,湖洲跟城市距离更近了,洲上的女孩也都想书写不同于她们父辈的人生。而真实的生活,是否是人生的宿命,还是生命的大合唱?
  • 万能兵王

    万能兵王

    被称为万能兵王的许云天,是一名人见人愁,车见车爆胎传奇人物,他有最强大脑,精通十八国语言,是数学界天才,是医学界怪才,他还是一名化学家、黑客、画家、风水师、相师,无所不能。他一肚子坏水,处处招蜂惹蝶,却让无数美女为之疯狂,他奉命以大道文化集团女总裁未婚夫名义,贴身保护她,没想到等待他的却是一场腥风血雨……
  • 山河扣问

    山河扣问

    山河扣问,是邓涛在叹惋历史文化足迹中,娓娓道出的对生命、对往昔的体验感知;是通过心灵关切探寻着沧桑世道是非曲直的文化捕捞;是用内心独白式的温润对秦砖汉瓦的深情抚摸;是一支秀气的笔,在拨开朦胧,于迷雾中印证自己紧抱不弃的人生信条。
  • 世界政治史速读

    世界政治史速读

    本书分别从世界古代政治史、世界近代政治史、世界现代政治史来介绍世界历史的。
  • 龙珠OV

    龙珠OV

    悟空用巨大元气弹打败魔人布欧后,Z战士终于享受了几年太平的日子。然而,好景不长,仅仅才过了四年,魔界的家伙又蠢蠢欲动,地球再一次迎来了大危机……
  • 异瞳

    异瞳

    一次意外,她有了一双能看见异样物体的瞳孔,能看到人的身上会出现白、灰、黑等颜色的气团,白色是气运,是运气、命数和幸福;黑色是丧气,是只有在人心充满欲望的时候入侵的心魔兽;黄色的气团是她收留的宠物宝儿。她带着宝儿将要和这些心魔兽做怎样的斗争呢?
  • 已失去的年华我们追不回来

    已失去的年华我们追不回来

    此情可待成追忆,只是当时已惘然。一生中我们会拥有很多美好,同样也会有很多遗憾。当我们在老去的某一天回想曾经必然会感慨万分,可惜一切都已成为记忆里的片段想要追寻也早已无处可寻。那些失去的年华无论我们用什么方法,它也已随着时间的沙漏从我们的身边一点一滴的消逝....
  • 六道守护者

    六道守护者

    众生眼中的魔,历经万载的轮回,终在某一刻苏醒。奈何沧海桑田,世人早已忘却当初的承诺。他却突破重重束缚,轮回异界,兑现初时的诺言。