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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of England, Canada and the Great War, by
+Louis-Georges Desjardins
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: England, Canada and the Great War
+
+Author: Louis-Georges Desjardins
+
+Release Date: October 18, 2011 [EBook #37792]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLAND, CANADA AND THE GREAT WAR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Moti Ben-Ari and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive.)
+
+
+
+
+
+[Chapter numbering is as in the original publication, omitting chapter
+numbers XXV and XXVI. (note of etext transcriber.)]
+
+
+
+
+ ENGLAND, CANADA AND THE GREAT WAR
+
+ BY
+
+ Lieutenant-Colonel L.-G. DESJARDINS
+
+ Ex-member of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Quebec
+ and of the House of Commons of Canada.
+
+ QUEBEC
+ Chronicle Print.
+
+ October 1st, 1918
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+Even since the issue, last year, of my book:--"_L'Angleterre, Le Canada
+et la Grande Guerre_"--"_England, Canada and the Great War_"--a second
+edition of which I had to publish, a few weeks later, to meet the
+pressing demand of numerous readers--I have been repeatedly asked by
+influential citizens to publish an English edition of my work.
+
+A delegate from Quebec to the National Unity--or
+Win-the-War--Convention, in Montreal, I had the pleasure of meeting a
+great many of the delegates from Toronto and all over the Dominion. Many
+of them insisted upon the publication of an English edition.
+
+Having written that book for the express and patriotic purpose of
+proving the justice of the cause of the Allies in the Great War, and
+refuting Mr. Bourassa's false and dangerous theories, I realized that
+the citizens of Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto, who strongly
+advised an English edition to be circulated in all the Provinces,
+appreciated the good it could make.
+
+I consider it is my imperious duty to dedicate to my English speaking
+countrymen this volume containing all the substance matter of my French
+book, and the defense a truly loyal French Canadian has made of the
+sacred cause of Civilization and Liberty for the triumph of which the
+glorious Allied Nations have been so heroically fighting for the last
+four eventful years.
+
+As I say, in the Introduction to this work, I first intended to write
+only an English resumé of my French book. But once at work writing down,
+the questions to consider were so important, and the replies to the
+Nationalist leader's inconceivable theories so numerous, that I had to
+double and more the pages I had thought would be sufficient for my
+purpose. I realized that many points, to be fully explained, required
+more comments and argumentation that I had at first supposed necessary.
+
+Moreover, since writing my French book, most important events have taken
+place. To have the present English volume up to date, I had to consider
+recent history in its very latest developments, and reply to the
+Nationalist leader's last errors, which by no means were not the least.
+When once a man has run off the path of reason and sound public sense,
+he is sure to rush to most dangerous extremes, unless he has the moral
+courage to acknowledge that he was sadly mistaken.
+
+I trust that the English speaking readers of this book, will not, for a
+single moment, suppose that I am actuated by the least ill-feeling
+against Mr. Bourassa personally, in the severe but just denunciation it
+was my plain duty to make of his deplorable Nationalist campaign.
+
+For many years past, I have ever been delighted in welcoming promising
+young men to the responsibilities of public life. I remember with a
+mixed feeling of pleasure and regret the occasion I first heard Mr.
+Bourassa, then a youth, addressing a very large public meeting held on
+the nomination day of the candidates to a pending bye-election for the
+House of Commons of Canada: Pleasure at the recollection of what I
+considered a fairly successful beginning of a political career; deep
+regret at the failure to justify the hopes of his compatriots and his
+friends through an uncontrollable ambition always sure to deter, even
+the best gifted, from the safe line of duty, well understood, and
+firmly, but modestly, performed.
+
+Passion, aspiring and unbridled, is always a dangerous counsellor. Mr.
+Bourassa could have had a useful political life, if he had realized that
+public good cannot be well served by constant appeals to race
+prejudices, and by persevering efforts to achieve success by stirring up
+fanaticism.
+
+The result of the unpatriotic course he has followed, against the advice
+of his best friends, has been to sow in our great and happy Dominion the
+seed of discord, of hatred, of racial conflicts.
+
+Unfortunately, for the country, for his French Canadian compatriots, and
+for himself, he was deluded to the point of believing that the war would
+be his grand opportunity.
+
+Instead of using his influence to promote the national unity so
+essential under the trying circumstances with which Canada and the whole
+British Empire was suddenly confronted, he exerted himself to the utmost
+to prevail on his French Canadian countrymen to assume a decisive
+hostile stand to the noble cause which Britain had to fight for, in
+order to avenge the crime of the violation of Belgium's territory, to
+protect France from German cruel invasion, and to prevent Autocratic
+power from enslaving Humanity.
+
+Such a misconception of a truly loyal man's part was most detrimental to
+the good of Canada's future, to the destinies of the French Canadians,
+and to the political standing of the publicist who was its willing
+victim.
+
+And to-day he finds himself in this position that he has no other choice
+but that of pursuing, at all hazards, his unwholesome campaign against
+all things British, or, boldly retracing his steps, to go back on all he
+has said and written to support inadmissible views, vain ideas, and
+passionate prejudices.
+
+The latter course would certainly be the best to follow in the interest
+of his country, of his French Canadian countrymen, and of his usefulness
+as a public man. But, however much to be regretted, he seems utterly
+unable to overcome the prejudices which have taken such deep root in his
+heart and mind.
+
+Prejudice, constantly cultured, soon develops into blind fanaticism,
+closing the intellect to the light of sound logic, to the call of duty,
+to the clear comprehension of what is best to do to promote the public
+good.
+
+However seriously guilty he may be, the public man, so swayed by a
+fanatical passion, is sure not to rally to the defense of the superior
+interests of his countrymen when they are threatened by a great
+misfortune.
+
+I cannot help deploring that after giving good hopes of a life
+patriotically devoted to the increasing welfare of Canada, by doing his
+share in promoting the best feelings among his countrymen of all races,
+classes and creeds, one of my kin, really gifted to play a much better
+part, has been so sadly mistaken as to exhaust his activities in forcing
+his way to the leadership of a group of malcontents unable to overcome
+their racial antipathies and listen to reason, even when their country
+and the Empire to which they have sworn allegiance are destructively
+menaced.
+
+He has nobody else to blame but himself for the failure of his political
+career, due to his misguided efforts in thwarting the happiness and
+prosperity which our great Dominion would certainly derive from the
+persevering union of all the citizens enjoying the blessings of her free
+British institutions, to work out her brilliant destinies by their
+intelligent labours, their hearted patriotism in peace times, and with
+their undaunted courage and their self-sacrificing devotion in war
+days.
+
+After a somewhat prolonged spectacular display in the House of Commons,
+as member for the electoral division of Labelle, he felt instinctively
+that he had exhausted what he considered his usefulness, and was doomed
+to a dismal failure. He retired from the Dominion political arena, to
+try his luck in the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Quebec. No
+wiser a man by experience, he challenged the Leader of the parliamentary
+majority to a truly duellist struggle on the floor of the House. He
+thrusted at his opponent with the vigour of a combatant certain to
+conquer. All those who witnessed this encounter, must remember how
+completely overbearing confidence, proudly asserted, was overcome by
+calm and superior argumentative power, sound and clear political sense.
+True parliamentary eloquence easily brought to reason pedantic and
+bombastic oratory. The first throw--_le début_--went decidedly against
+the Nationalist leader. A beaten fighter from this very first day, he
+met with as complete a failure in the provincial political arena as he
+had done in the federal one. Wisely indeed, he retired from
+parliamentary life, after realizing that debating power cannot be
+acquired by demagogic speaking.
+
+The Nationalist leader next limited his efforts to the tribune, to the
+public platform. All remember the time when he was periodically calling
+great popular meetings held in _Le Monument National_, Montreal, where
+he preached his Nationalist gospel with vehement talking. This new
+experiment could not last. It soon subsided. And the Nationalist leader
+is since addicted to pamphleteering of the worst kind as I will show in
+this book.
+
+Deeply moved by the dangers of a most mischievous campaign, I considered
+it my bounded duty to do my utmost efforts to prove how utterly wrong
+were the views which those pursuing it with passionate energy wanted to
+prevail, and to show the sad consequences it was sure to produce.
+
+Having first addressed myself to my French Canadian compatriots to
+persuade them how much detrimental to their best future the Nationalist
+campaign was sure to be, I am to-day laying the case before my English
+speaking countrymen, at the urgent request of many of them, in order to
+fully acquaint them with the refutation I have made, to the best of my
+ability, of Mr. Bourassa's erroneous theories and wild charges against
+England and all those who patriotically support our mother country in
+the great struggle she has had to wage after doing all she possibly
+could to maintain the peace of the world.
+
+I ardently desire that the reading of the following pages, will
+contribute to the restoration of harmony and good will, for a while
+endangered by the Nationalist campaign, in our wide Dominion, to whose
+happiness, prosperity and grandeur we, of both English and French
+origins, must devote our best energies and all the resources of our
+unwavering patriotism.
+
+ L. G. DESJARDINS.
+ Quebec, October 1st, 1918.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ Chapter Page
+ --INTRODUCTION 1
+ I --WHO ARE THE GUILTY PARTIES? 25
+ II --THE PERSISTENT EFFORTS OF ENGLAND
+ IN FAVOUR OF PEACE 29
+ III --THE CALL TO DUTY IN CANADA 40
+ IV --RECRUITING BY VOLUNTARY SERVICE 46
+ V --INTERVENTION OF NATIONALISM 49
+ VI --WHAT DO WE OWE ENGLAND? 51
+ VII --CANADA IS NOT A SOVEREIGN STATE 55
+ VIII --GERMAN ILLUSIONS 67
+ IX --THE NATIONALIST ERROR 68
+ X --HAD CANADA THE RIGHT TO HELP ENGLAND? 71
+ XI --THE DUTY OF CANADA 74
+ XII --THE SOUDANESE AND THE SOUTH AFRICAN
+ WARS 77
+ XIII --BRITISH AND GERMAN ASPIRATIONS
+ COMPARED 87
+ SUB-TITLE--CONSTRUCTION AND SUPPLY 93
+ " --TRANSPORT 97
+ " --THE AIR SERVICE 98
+ " --THE FINANCIAL EFFORT OF
+ GREAT BRITAIN 100
+ " --ACHIEVEMENTS OF DOMINION,
+ COLONIAL AND INDIAN
+ TROOPS 101
+ XIV --THE VERITABLE AIMS OF THE ALLIES 104
+ SUB-TITLE--THE ONLY POSSIBLE PEACE
+ CONDITIONS 111
+ XV --JUST AND UNJUST WARS 116
+ SUB-TITLE--A "NATIONALIST" ILLOGICAL
+ CHARGE AGAINST ENGLAND 125
+ " --OTHER "NATIONALIST" ERRONEOUS
+ ASSERTIONS 128
+ " --INCREDIBLE "NATIONALIST"
+ NOTIONS 131
+ " --CANADIAN FINANCIAL OPERATIONS
+ IN THE UNITED STATES 134
+ XVI --"NATIONALIST" VIEWS CONDENSED 139
+ XVII --LOYAL PRINCIPLES PROPOUNDED 143
+ SUB-TITLE--UNJUST "NATIONALIST"
+ GRIEVANCES AGAINST ENGLAND 150
+ XVIII --IMPERIALISM 164
+ XIX --AMERICAN IMPERIALISM 177
+ XX --BRITISH IMPERIALISM 189
+ XXI --THE SITUATIONS OF 1865 AND 1900-14
+ COMPARED 194
+ XXII --BRITISH IMPERIALISM NATURALLY
+ PACIFIST 198
+ XXIII --BRITISH IMPERIALISM AND POLITICAL
+ LIBERTY 207
+ XXIV --IMPERIAL FEDERATION AND "BOURASSISM" 216
+ SUB-TITLE--CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
+ OF INDIA 227
+ XXVII --THE FUTURE CONSTITUTIONAL RELATIONS
+ OF THE EMPIRE 231
+ SUB-TITLE--NO TAXATION WITHOUT
+ REPRESENTATION 235
+ " --COLONIAL REPRESENTATION 236
+ " --THE FAR OFF FUTURE 247
+ " --A MACHIAVELLIAN PROPOSITION 251
+ " --A TREASONABLE PROPOSAL 259
+ XXVIII --OUTRAGES ARE NO REASONS 267
+ XXIX --HOW MR. BOURASSA PAID HIS COMPLIMENTS
+ TO THE CANADIAN ARMY 277
+ XXX --RASH DENUNCIATION OF PUBLIC
+ MEN 288
+ XXXI --MR. BOURASSA'S DANGEROUS PACIFISM 302
+ XXXII --A MOST REPREHENSIBLE ABUSE OF
+ SACRED APPEALS TO THE BELLIGERENT
+ NATIONS 307
+ XXXIII --A CASE FOR TRUE STATESMANSHIP 321
+ XXXIV --AFTER-THE-WAR MILITARY PROBLEM 324
+ XXXV --THE INTERVENTION OF THE UNITED
+ STATES IN THE WAR 334
+ XXXVI --THE ALLIES--RUSSIA--JAPAN 348
+ XXXVII --THE LAST PEACE PROPOSALS 357
+ XXXVIII --NECESSARY PEACE CONDITIONS 372
+ XXXIX --CONCLUSION 383
+ APPENDIX--A 411
+ APPENDIX--B 421
+
+
+
+
+ England, Canada and the Great War
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+Canada, as one of the most important component parts of the British
+Empire, is going through the crucial ordeal of the great crisis which
+will determine her destinies jointly with those of the whole world.
+Instantly put under the strain, four years ago, by the outrageous
+challenge of Germany to human civilization with the criminal purpose of
+universal domination, she was fully equal to her unbounded duty.
+Conscious of her sacred rights, she at once realized that the
+constitutional liberties which she enjoyed in the freest Empire of all
+times, could not be more patriotically exercised than for the defence of
+the sacred cause which united in a gigantic effort England, France and
+Russia, soon to receive the support of Italy. By an almost unanimous and
+enthusiastic decision she rallied to the flag around which all the
+Dependencies of the Empire gathered from the five continents. Never a
+more inspiring array of loyal subjects, owing allegiance to a
+Sovereignty, was witnessed in the wide world.
+
+Through the trying days of four full years of the greatest war which
+ever saddened the life of the human race, Canada has nobly, gloriously,
+done her duty. Several hundred thousands of her devoted sons have rushed
+to the front to fight the battle of Liberty, of Right, of Civilization.
+Thousands of them have heroically given their lives for the triumph of
+the cause which, if finally triumphant, will brighten with freedom,
+prosperity, human happiness and undying glory, the destinies of many
+generations.
+
+The struggle is not over. The battle is not yet won. Victory is in sight
+but unfortunately still so far distant, that it is still calling forth
+the undaunted exertions of all those who have pledged their faith to
+rescue the world from the cruel thraldom of German militarism.
+
+Two years ago, at the critical period which culminated in the undecided
+military operations which, though rendered illustrious by the glorious
+defence of Verdun, made it plain to the Allies that success would only
+be the reward of a much more prolonged effort of untold sacrifices, I
+undertook to write the book entitled in French: "_L'Angleterre, le
+Canada et la Grande Guerre_."
+
+Several of the most influential and widely circulated News-papers of
+Montreal, Toronto and Quebec, have kindly published highly appreciative
+Reviews of the French Edition of my book, concluding with the request of
+the publication of an English Edition, which, they affirmed, would be
+conducive to the public good. I have received many letters and verbal
+demands to the same purpose.
+
+It is my duty to answer to a call daily becoming more pressing.
+
+I now offer to the English reading public a condensed edition of my
+work, with the title "_England, Canada and the Great War_." I concluded
+not to issue a complete English Edition of the French volume. Instead of
+translating my book, I considered it more advisable to write an English
+synopsis of its contents. Undertaking such a work, I realized more than
+ever how important it is for the Citizens of Canada to be able to speak
+and write the languages of the two great races of the Dominion. Knowing
+well my own deficiency in this regard, I hoped, however, to write the
+following pages with enough clearness to have my views well understood,
+trusting to the kindness of my readers to excuse the inadequacy of my
+command of English.
+
+A few words explaining the reasons that prompted me to write the French
+book will, I am confident, be kindly appreciated by my readers. A close
+observer of the daily impressions which the events developed by the war
+were creating in Canada, I felt more and more deeply grieved at the
+persistent and unpatriotic efforts of the leaders of the Nationalist
+school of the Province of Quebec, and their henchmen, to sway my
+French-Canadian countrymen from the clear path of duty. I undertook
+earnestly to do my best to stem the threatening wave of disloyal
+sentiments and racial conflict they were stirring up throughout the
+land. "_England, Canada and the Great War_" was the result of the very
+careful study of the numerous questions therein considered and of the
+patriotic impulse which led me to publish it.
+
+I dedicated the volume to my French-Canadian countrymen by a letter from
+which I translate the following:
+
+"It would surely be vain to conceal how serious was the situation
+imposed upon our country by the sudden outbreak, in August, 1914, of the
+greatest war of all times. It was dominated by the supreme fact that
+Canada was a component part of one of the most powerful Empires whose
+destinies were to be determined, for good or ill, for many long years,
+by the terrible conflict suddenly opened, but, for a prolonged period,
+prepared by those who dreamt of conquering the world."
+
+"Great Britain, our Sovereign Metropolis, had done her utmost to protect
+Humanity against the misfortunes which endangered her future, for the
+maintenance of peace. She had failed in her noble efforts. At the very
+moment when, against all the most critical appearances, she was still
+hopeful, she had, all of a sudden, to face the terrible alternative,
+either to submit to national dishonour by complying with the violation
+of solemn treaties which bound her as much as Germany, or to unite with
+France and Russia to avenge Justice outrageously violated, sworn
+international Faith, Civilization perilously threatened."
+
+"Could she hesitate for one single moment?"
+
+"Our Mother Country has done that which her most imperious duty
+commanded her to do. She accepted the challenge of Germany with the
+patriotic determination inspired by the most sacred cause. All the loyal
+subjects of the British Crown have applauded her decision to rush to the
+defence of invaded Belgium and France, to reclaim their national honour
+and her own, and to protect her Empire against the German armies."
+
+"With the most inspiring unanimity and admirable courage, all the
+British Colonies have rallied around the flag of their Sovereign
+Metropolis to share the glory of the triumph of Right and Justice. At
+the very front rank, Canada has nobly done her duty. Her decision was
+most spontaneous and decisive. She was not deterred by fallacious
+subtilties, deducted from pretended conventions, out of age and
+opportunity, to hinder her laudable and patriotic course. Throughout the
+length and breadth of her vast territory, all minds shared the same
+view, all hearts were united and beating with the same powerful
+sentiment."
+
+"The decision of Canada to participate in the present war was taken by
+the constitutional government of the country, sanctioned by Parliament,
+approved by public opinion, glorified by the hundreds of thousands of
+brave volunteers who courageously answered the call of duty."
+
+"Views with which I cannot concur have been expressed and given full
+publicity. They challenge discussion. It is my undoubted right to
+criticize them."
+
+"Since the beginning of the present war, Mr. Henri Bourassa, in addition
+to the daily publicity of his journal "_Le Devoir_", has developed, in
+two principal pamphlets, the theories of his "_Nationalism_". They are
+respectively entitled: "_Que devons-nous à l'Angleterre?_" "_What do we
+owe England?_" and: "_Hier, Aujourd'hui, Demain_" "_Yesterday, To-day,
+To-morrow_"."
+
+"In earnestly searching out the real causes of the war, the
+responsibilities of the belligerent nations, their respective
+aspirations, the duty imposed by the irresistable course of events upon
+the British Empire and consequently upon Canada, I was incessantly
+called upon to consider the very strange propositions contained in those
+pamphlets."
+
+"It was with great surprise that I read, for instance, as the heading of
+one of the chapters, the utterly false proposition that: "_The
+Autonomous Colonies are Sovereign States._"
+
+"And these most extraordinary affirmations that the _King of England has
+not the right to declare the State of war for Canada, without the assent
+of the Canadian Cabinet; that Canada could have participated in the
+present war as a Nation_."
+
+"It is my bounden duty to affirm that almost all the propositions
+contained in the two above mentioned pamphlets are wrong according to
+international law and to constitutional law, erroneous in their
+historical bearings, contrary to the true teachings of the past."
+
+"Mr. Bourassa persistingly trying to convince his readers that the
+precedents of the Soudanese and the South-African wars have forced the
+British Colonies to participate in the present one, I considered it my
+duty to make, in two separate chapters, a special study of those
+military campaigns which, in both cases, were so felicitously terminated
+for all parties concerned."
+
+"I cannot close this letter without expressing my profound regret that
+Mr. Bourassa has thought proper to use most injurious language adding
+outrage to the falsity of his opinions. At page 121 of his pamphlet:
+"_Yesterday, To-day, To-morrow_", any one can read, no doubt with
+astonishment, that Mr. Bourassa charges our countrymen of the British
+races with being _ignorant, assuming, arrogant, dominating and rotten
+with mercantilism_."
+
+"Such ridiculous and insulting words to the address of our countrymen of
+the three British races are surely not calculated to increase Canadian
+harmony."
+
+"This book, written for the express purpose of assisting you to form for
+yourselves a sound opinion about the terrible events so rapidly
+developing, was inspired by my loyalty to the Empire whose faithful
+subject I glory to be, by my devotion to Canada and to my countrymen, by
+the affectionate recollection of France I will cherish to my last day.
+
+"During the last fifty years, either as a private or as an officer of
+the Canadian Militia--my service as such having lasted more than forty
+years--as a member of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of
+Quebec, and as a member of the House of Commons of Canada, I have often
+taken the oath of allegiance to the Sovereign of Great Britain. From my
+early youth, I had learned that under the ægis of the British Crown, the
+citizen of the Empire could be true to his oath, and enjoy the precious
+liberty of expressing his opinion. But I had also soon realized that
+during the lifetime of a Sovereign State, days of peril might occur. I
+had easily come to the conclusion that in those trying moments the loyal
+duty could be very happily reconciled with the most sincere love of
+political liberty.
+
+"In defending with the most sincere conviction the sacred cause of the
+Allies, I am doing my duty as a free subject of the British Empire, as a
+citizen of Canada and of the Province of Quebec, as a son of France, as
+a devoted servant of Justice and Right. I am true to my oath."
+
+I desire to call the special attention of my readers to the complete
+sense of the last paragraph just quoted. I most decidedly wish its
+meaning to be fully understood by all, as I intended to convey it to my
+French Canadian compatriots. I have never concurred in the subtle
+distinction so often made between the several notions entertained by
+many respecting their duty towards the Empire and Canada separately.
+Having witnessed, for the last fifty years, the admirable evolution and
+natural growth of the British constitutional system over a fourth of the
+globe, developing into the freest Empire that ever existed, my mind was
+more and more impressed with the conviction that loyalty to the
+Sovereignty presiding over such a magnificent national heritage could
+not be of two different kinds. A free British subject, whether living in
+the United Kingdom, or in any one of the Dependencies of the Crown,
+cannot be at once loyal to the Empire at large and disloyal to any of
+its component parts; or, _vice versa_, loyal to the particular section
+of the State where he is living and at the same disloyal to the Empire.
+Such a false conception of the duties of loyalty, if it could be spread
+successfully throughout the Empire, would undoubtedly lead to its rapid
+dissolution and complete destruction. Genuine loyalty cannot agree with
+exclusive and rampant sectionalism, with local, racial or religious
+prejudices and fanaticism.
+
+The few lines of the preceding closing paragraph of my letter dedicating
+the French edition of my book as aforesaid, express my own conception of
+the true loyalty of a faithful subject of the British Sovereignty, who
+has the clear vision of the meaning of his oath of allegiance. In
+consequence, first, I affirm my duty as a subject of the British Empire;
+second, as a citizen of Canada; third, as a citizen of my own Province
+of Quebec. And then, taking a wider range of the duty of any man towards
+his ancestors' lineage, I declare that under the cruel circumstances of
+the case, I also consider it is my duty to defend France against her
+deadly enemy. Further enlarging the vision of duty to its fullest
+extent, I say that I am bound to defend the cause of the Allies by
+proving that I am a loyal servant of Justice and Right.
+
+Surely I could not emphasize in terms more pregnant my loyalty to the
+cause of the British Empire, of France, and their Allies, of Liberty and
+Civilization. I confidently hope they will persuade my readers that this
+book was written with the most sincere and patriotic desire to help
+rallying my French Canadian compatriots to the defence of the British,
+French and Canadian flags, which must together emerge triumphant from
+the gigantic fight against the most threatening wave of barbarism the
+world has ever had to contend with at the cost of so great and heroic
+sacrifices.
+
+When the first French edition of this book was issued, in January of
+last year, matters respecting the prosecution of the war had not yet
+required the serious consideration by Parliament and the country of the
+question of conscription to maintain to their proper efficiency the
+Canadian divisions on the firing line. Consequently, I was not then
+called upon to consider that most important subject. When I had to
+decide about publishing a second French edition--the first being
+entirely exhausted--I at first thought of adding to my work a few
+chapters respecting the most notable events developed by the gigantic
+struggle shaking the world to its very basic foundation. Foremost
+amongst them were the Russian sudden Revolution, the solemn entrance of
+the United States into the great fight, the imperious necessity of the
+military effort of the Allies far beyond that which had been foreseen,
+in order to achieve the final victory which will be the only adequate
+reward of their undaunted determination not to sheathe the sword before
+Germany will agree to restore peace upon the only possible conditions
+which will efficiently protect humanity from any other attempt at brutal
+universal domination. The question of conscription in Canada was the
+natural outcome of the progress of the deadly conflict between
+Civilization and barbarism, constitutional Freedom and despotism,
+democratic institutions and autocracy.
+
+I soon realized that I could not properly do justice to such grave
+subjects in a few pages added to my first book. After mature
+consideration, I considered it was my duty to undertake to write a
+second volume. I have so informed the public in the _Advertisement_
+which prefaces the second French edition of the first. This second
+volume I will soon issue, also intending to publish an English synopsis
+of it, if that of the first volume meets the kind appreciation I hope of
+my English speaking countrymen.
+
+However, pending the publication of the second volume, I think it is my
+duty to express now my views, in a summary way, on that much discussed
+question of obligatory military service. Let me preface by saying that
+they are not new, having originated in my mind more than thirty years
+ago. The military necessities of the present war have, of course, given
+them more precision and clearness.
+
+Deeply conscious of the sacred duty of all truly loyal British subjects
+through the present prolonged world crisis for the life or death of
+human Liberty, I had to consider conscription from the double
+stand-point of a free citizen of Canada and of my military experience
+acquired in the course of a service of over forty years.
+
+Most strongly and convincingly opposed to the militarism of the
+atrocious German type--the curse of Humanity--I have always
+believed--and do still more and more believe--imbued, I hope, with the
+true sense and principles of democratic institutions, that the greatest
+boon that could be granted the world would be that the admirable
+Christian law of peace and good-will amongst men would prevail for all
+times, and save the nations from the cruel obligation of keeping
+themselves constantly fully armed at the great cost of the best years of
+manhood, and of their accumulated treasures. But unfortunately it has
+not yet been the good luck of man to reach the goal of this most noble
+ambition. Instead of a steady advance in the right direction, he has,
+for the last fifty years, experienced a most dangerous set back by the
+predominating influence of German militarism, developed and mastered by
+the most autocratic power to the point of threatening the liberties of
+the whole world.
+
+Need I say that, as a purely philosophical question of principle, I most
+sincerely deplore that the political state of the world has been and is
+such that national safety cannot be, in too many cases, properly assured
+without the law of the land calling upon the manhood of a country to
+make the sacrifice of part of the best years of enthusiastic youth, and
+requiring from the nation, as a collective body, the expenditure, to an
+untold amount, for the purposes of defence, of the accumulated savings
+of hard work and intelligent thrift.
+
+Fortunately, the two continents of America, so abundantly blessed by
+Providence, had, until the present war, been able to pursue their
+prosperous and dignified course free from the entanglements of European
+Militarism.
+
+Even England, in all the majesty of her Imperial power, her flag
+gloriously waving over so many millions of free men, protected as she
+was by the waves which she ruled with grandeur and grace, had succeeded
+in avoiding the curse of continental conscriptionism.
+
+Between permanent conscription, despotically imposed upon a nation under
+autocratic rule, and temporary military compulsion freely accepted by a
+noble people for the very purpose of saving Humanity from military
+absolutism, there is, every one must admit, a wide difference. I have
+been, I am, and will be, to my last day, the uncompromising opponent of
+autocratic conscription, which I consider as a permanent crime against
+Christian Civilization, and the ready instrument of barbarous
+domination. To temporary compulsion I can agree, as a matter of
+patriotic and national duty, if the circumstances of the case are such
+that without its timely use, my country which has the first and
+undoubted right to my most patriotic devotion, at the cost of all I may
+own and even of my life, for her defence, would fall the prey to
+despotism which would bleed her to death to sway the world.
+
+Such is the ordeal through which Canada, the British Empire, in fact
+much the greater part of the universe, are passing with torrents of
+blood shed to rescue Mankind from the domination of German militarism.
+
+If Germany could have her course free; if she could reach the goal of
+her criminal ambition, nearly the whole world would be, for many long
+years, in the throes of the most abominable conscriptionism.
+
+If after the enthusiasm of voluntary military service has exhausted
+itself from the very successful result of its patriotic effort, is it
+not a duty for all loyal citizens to accept temporary compulsion, to
+save their country from the horrors of defeat at the hands of the most
+cruel enemy which has ever shamed the light of the sun since it shines
+over the Human race blessed with Christian principles and moral
+teachings.
+
+To the present generation of young men, strong, healthy, brave, let us
+say: be worthy of the times you live in, be equal to the great task
+imposed upon you, accepting with patriotism the sacrifices you are
+called upon to make, never forgetting that temporary compulsion for you
+means freedom from permanent conscription for your children and
+children's children in years to come.
+
+It is from the very height of such lofty considerations that I have made
+up my mind about this much vexed question which will, we must all
+earnestly hope, be more and more well understood and eventually settled
+to the everlasting good of the country once for all delivered from the
+exasperating menace of German despotism.
+
+I must reserve for the second volume of this work, the fuller expression
+of my views of what should be the military system to be maintained in
+Canada, after the very wide experience we will have derived from the
+present great war. All I will add now is that ever since the early
+eighties of the last century, after many years of voluntary service in
+the Canadian Militia, I had fully realized that it is no more possible
+to make a real soldier by a few days yearly training, for three years,
+than you can make a competent lawyer of a young man studying law for a
+fortnight in the course of three consecutive years.
+
+Since the federal Union of the Provinces we had spent much more than a
+hundred million of dollars for the training of our militia, with the
+appalling result that when came the day of getting ready for the fray,
+we had not two thousand men to send at once to the firing line. The
+first thirty thousands of the brave men who enthusiastically volunteered
+to go to the front had to be trained, at Valcartier and in England,
+several months before being sent to face the enemy whose waves of
+permanent divisions of armed men had overrun, like a torrent, Belgium
+and northern France. Of course, our boys fought and died like heroes,
+but nevertheless we at last learned, at our great cost, that soldiers no
+more than lawyers, doctors, merchants, transportation managers, bankers,
+business men of all callings, farmers, sailors, etc., can be qualified
+in a day.
+
+When the time shall come to consider what will be the requirements of
+our military organization, after this terrible struggle is over, I hope
+none will forget that war is a great science, an awful and very
+difficult art, so that we shall not deceive ourselves any longer by the
+illusion that an army can be drawn from the earth in twenty four hours.
+
+Our most efficient military commander cannot entertain the foolish
+delusion of Pompey, so crushingly beaten by Cæsar, at Pharsalia, that he
+can raise legions by striking the ground with his foot.
+
+If our future national circumstances turn out to be such, after the
+restoration of peace, that we will not be called upon to make heavy
+sacrifices for defence--let Providence so bless our dear country--it
+will then be much more rational to save our money than to squander it on
+a military system which cannot produce military efficiency.
+
+The future can be trusted to settle favourably its own difficulties. For
+us of the present generation, we have to attend to the imperative and
+sacred duty of the hour. Let no one shirk his responsibilities, waver in
+the heavy task, falter before the sacrifices to be patriotically and
+heroically accepted. To deserve the everlasting gratitude of future
+generations, we must secure to them the blessings of permanent peace in
+a renovated world freed from the tyranny of autocratic despotism.
+
+Surely, I will be permitted to say that, undertaking to write _England,
+Canada and the Great War_, I fully realized my bounden duty to study all
+the questions raised by the terrible struggle, unreservedly, absolutely,
+outside of all party considerations, of all racial prejudices. A party
+man, in the only true and patriotic sense of the word, during the
+twenty-five years of my active political life, as a journalist and a
+member of the Quebec Legislature and of the Parliament of Canada, it
+became my lot in the official position which I was asked to accept and
+which I loyally filled, to all intents and purposes, for many years, to
+train my mind more and more to judge public questions solely from the
+point of view of the public good. I do not mean to say that partyism,
+well understood and patriotically practiced, is not productive of good
+to a country blessed with free institutions. But certainly in the course
+of a progressive, intelligent and eventful national life, ennobled by
+Freedom happily enjoyed, times occur when it behooves every one to rise
+superior to all other considerations, however important they may be, to
+serve the only one worthy of all sacrifices: the salvation of the
+country. Never was this principle so true, so imperative, than on the
+day when the world was so audaciously challenged by Germany to the
+deadly conflict still raging with undiminished fury.
+
+That most important question of military obligatory service, brought up
+by the pressure of the imperious necessities of military operations,
+lengthening and intensifying to unforeseen proportions, was for many
+weeks considered by Parliament. Surely, no one for a single moment
+entertained the idea that, however desirable and imperative it was for
+the representatives of the people to be of only one mind so far as the
+prosecution of Canada's share in the war was concerned, constant
+unanimity of opinion was possible respecting the various measures to be
+adopted to that end. Parliament sitting in the performance of its
+constitutional functions, with all its undoubted privileges, could not
+be expected not to exercise its right to debate all the matters
+constitutionally proposed for its concurrence and approval. I must
+certainly and wisely refrain from any comment whatsoever upon the
+lengthy discussion of the Military Service Act in both Houses in Ottawa.
+Having received the Royal Assent, the Bill is now the law of the land.
+All will patriotically rejoice to see that without waiving their right
+to pronounce upon the deeds and the views of those who are responsible
+to them, the free citizens of Canada will cheerfully accept the new
+sacrifices imposed by the obligation of carrying the war to a successful
+issue, praying to God to bless their patriotic efforts, and even with
+the true Christian spirit, to forgive guilty Germany if she will only
+repent for her crimes, and agree to repair a reasonable part of the
+immense damages she has wrought upon trodden and martyred nations.
+
+I hope,--and most ardently wish--that all my readers will agree with me
+that next to the necessity of winning the war--and, may I say, even as
+of almost equal importance for the future grandeur of our beloved
+country--range that of promoting by all lawful means harmony and good
+will amongst all our countrymen, whatever may be their racial origin,
+their religious faith, their particular aspirations not conflicting with
+their devotion to Canada as a whole, nor with their loyalty to the
+British Empire, whose greatness and prestige they want to firmly help to
+uphold with the inspiring confidence that more and more they will be the
+unconquerable bulwark of Freedom, Justice, Civilization and Right.
+
+After having so fully expressed my profound conviction of what I
+consider to be my sacred duty as a loyal British subject, I feel sure I
+will be allowed to ask my English-speaking countrymen not to judge my
+French compatriots by the sayings and deeds of persons, too well gifted
+and too prone to injure their future and that of the whole country
+itself, but utterly disqualified and impotent to do them any good.
+
+Need I affirm that my French Canadian compatriots are loyal at heart, a
+liberty loving and peaceful people, law-abiding citizens, fairly minded,
+intelligent, hard working, industrious. They have done, they are doing,
+and will do, their fair share for the progress and the future greatness
+of our wide and mighty Dominion. To all those who desire to appreciate
+their course in all fairness and Christian Justice, I will say: do not
+fail to take into account that like all other national groups they are
+liable, in overtrying circumstances, to be in a certain measure wrongly
+influenced by deficiencies of leadership, but depend that they cannot
+be, for any length of time, carried away by unscrupulous players on
+their feelings. Some of them were deceived by persistent efforts to
+persuade them that England was, as much as Germany, guilty of having
+precipitated the great war which has been the curse of almost the whole
+world for the last four years. The accumulated remembrance of their
+staunch loyalty and patriotism during more than a century and a half
+will do much to favour the harmonious relations of all Canadians of good
+will who, I have no doubt, comprise millions of well wishers of the
+glorious destiny of our country.
+
+May I be allowed to conclude by saying that my most earnest desire is to
+do all in my power, in the rank and file of the great army of free men,
+to reach the goal which ought to be the most persevering and patriotic
+ambition of loyal Canadians of all origins and creeds.
+
+And I repeat, wishing my words to be reechoed throughout the length and
+breadth of the land I so heartily cherish:--I have always been, I am and
+will ever be, to my last breath, true to my oath of allegiance to my
+Sovereign and to my country.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+WHO ARE THE GUILTY PARTIES?
+
+
+Any one sincerely wishing to arrive at a sound opinion on the great war
+raging for the last four years, must necessarily make a serious study of
+the causes which led to the terrific struggle so horribly straining the
+energies of the civilized world to escape tyrannical domination. The
+case having been so fully discussed, and the responsibilities of the
+assailant belligerents so completely proved, I surely need not show at
+length that the German Emperor, his military party, the group of the
+German population called JUNKERS, are to the highest degree, the guilty
+parties of all the woful wrongs imposed upon Mankind and of the
+bloodshed unprecedented in all the ages.
+
+The German Empire had for many years decided that it would not alone
+attempt to dominate the world. It wanted a partner to share the
+responsibility of the crime it was ready to commit at the first
+favourable opportunity, but a docile partner which she could direct at
+will, command with imperious orders, and crush without mercy at the
+first move of resistance. That plying tool was found in the complicity
+of Austria-Hungary, for years under the sway of Berlin diplomacy.
+
+No sane man, if he is sincere, if he is honest, can now, for a single
+moment, hesitate to proclaim that between Germany and Austria-Hungary,
+and the group of nations henceforth bearing the glorious name of THE
+ALLIES, Right and Justice are on the side of England, of France, of the
+United States, of Belgium, of Italy, of Canada.
+
+Where is the man with a sound mind, with a strong heart, beating with
+the noble impulses of righteousness, with a soul dignified by lofty
+aspirations, who ignores to-day that for fifty years previous to the
+declaration of war, in August 1914, Germany had been perfecting her
+military organization for a grand effort at universal domination?
+
+All my life a close student of History, I was much impressed by the
+constant Policy of England to maintain Peace during the last century.
+When the World emerged from the great wars of the Napoleonic Era, she
+firmly took her stand in favour of peaceful relations between the
+nations, trusting more and more for the future prosperity of them all to
+the advantages to be derived from the permanency of friendly
+intercourse, from the ever increasing development of international
+trade, prompted by the freest possible exchanges of the products of all
+the countries blessed by Providence with large and varied resources. Her
+statesmen, so many of them truly worthy of this name, however divided
+they may have been with regard to questions of domestic government and
+internal reforms, were most united about the course to be followed
+respecting foreign relations. Perhaps more than all others having a say
+in the management of the world's affairs at large, they fully realized
+that no nation could prosper and successfully work out her destinies by
+systematically trying to injure her neighbours. No independent country
+can become wealthier, happier, and greater, by spreading ruin and
+devastation around her frontiers.
+
+The most convincing evidence that England was constantly favourable to
+the maintenance of peace amongst the great Powers of the World, for the
+last hundred years, is found in her permanent determination not to be
+drawn into the vortex of European continental militarism, so powerfully
+developed by Prussianism. She could have organized a standing army of
+millions of men. She would not. True, during the few years which
+preceded the present hurricane, some of the most eminent of England's
+military officers, notably, foremost amongst them, Lord Roberts, seeing,
+with their eyes wide open, the aggravated dangers accumulating on the
+darkening horizon, warned their countrymen about the threatening waves
+which menaced the future of the world. But British public opinion, as a
+whole, would not depart from her almost traditional policy of
+"_non-intervention_". For nearly a century, Great Britain maintained her
+"_splendid isolation_", trusting to the sound sense which should always
+govern the world to protect Mankind against the horrors of a general
+war. Never was this great national policy better exemplified than during
+the long and glorious reign of Her Majesty Queen Victoria. For more than
+fifty years, she graced one of the most illustrious Thrones that ever
+presided over the destinies of a great Empire, with sovereign dignity,
+with womanly virtues, with motherly devotion, with patriotic respect of
+the constitutional liberties of her free subjects. When she departed for
+a better world, she was succeeded by the great King and Emperor--Edward
+VII.--who, during the few years of his memorable reign, proved himself
+so much the friendly supporter of harmony and good will amongst the
+nations that he deserved to be called "THE KING OF THE PEACE OF THE
+WORLD."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE PERSISTENT EFFORTS OF ENGLAND IN FAVOUR OF PEACE.
+
+
+In 1891, Lord Salisbury, then Prime Minister of England, witnessing the
+constant progress of Prussian militarism on land and sea, and fully
+conscious of the misfortunes it was preparing for Humanity, ordered an
+official statement to be made of the extravagant cost of the European
+military organization, and sent it confidentially to the German Kaiser,
+who took no notice of it.
+
+In 1896, Lord Salisbury lays before the Czar of Russia all the
+information he has obtained on the question of militarism in Europe. On
+the 28th of August, 1898, the Emperor of Russia addressed to the world
+his celebrated Manifesto in favour of peace. It urged, first, the
+necessity of a truly permanent peace; second, the limitation of military
+preparation which, in its ever increasing development, was causing the
+economic ruin of the nations.
+
+The conferences of The Hague in favour of an international agreement for
+the maintenance of peace were the direct result of the initiative of the
+British Prime Minister, who foresaw the frightful consequences for
+Humanity of the enormous development of militarism by the German
+Empire.
+
+All the great Powers of Europe and America, together with the secondary
+states, at once heartily concurred with the proposition of the Czar of
+Russia. Unfortunately, there were two sad exceptions to the consent to
+consider the salutary purpose so anxiously desired by those who valued
+as they should all the benefits the world would have derived from an
+international system assuring permanent peace. Germany and Austria, the
+latter already for years dominated by the former, opposed the patriotic
+move of the Emperor of Russia, suggested to him by Great Britain. They
+agreed to be represented at the Conferences for the only object of
+thwarting the efforts in favour of a satisfactory enactment of new rules
+of International Law to henceforth protect the world against a general
+conflagration, and to free the nations from the crushing burdens of a
+militarism daily developing more extravagant.
+
+Ministerial changes in Great Britain in no way altered this part of the
+foreign policy of the Mother Country. In 1905, Mr. Campbell-Bannerman
+became Prime Minister of England. He was well known to be an ardent
+pacifist. Deprecating the mad increase of unchecked militarism, he said,
+in his ministerial program:--
+
+"_A policy of huge armaments keeps alive and stimulates and feeds the
+belief that force is the best, if not the only, solution of
+international differences._"
+
+On the 8th of March, 1906, Lord Haldane, then Minister of War, declared
+in the British House of Commons:--
+
+"_I wish we were near the time when the nations would consider together
+the reduction of armaments.... Only by united action can we get rid of
+the burden which is pressing so heavily on all civilized nations._"
+
+The second Conference of The Hague which took place in July and October,
+1907, was then being organized. Russia was again its official promoter.
+Well aware of the uncompromising stand of Germany on the question of
+reduced armaments, she had not included that matter in the program she
+had decided to lay before the Conference. The British Government did all
+they could to have it placed on the orders to be taken into
+consideration. A member of the Labor Party, Mr. Vivian, moved in the
+House of Commons, that the Conference of The Hague be called upon to
+discuss that most important subject. His motion was unanimously and
+enthusiastically carried.
+
+Informing the House that the Cabinet heartily approved the Resolution,
+Sir Edward Grey, Secretary for Foreign Affairs, said:--
+
+"_I do not believe that at any time has the conscious public opinion in
+the various countries of Europe set more strongly in the direction of
+peace than at the present time, and yet the burden of military and naval
+expenditure goes on increasing. No greater service could it (the Hague
+Conference) do, than to make the conditions of peace less expensive
+than they are at the present time.... It is said we are waiting upon
+foreign nations in order to reduce our expenditure. As a matter of fact,
+we are all waiting on each other. Some day or other somebody must take
+the first step.... I do, on behalf of the Government, not only accept,
+but welcome such a resolution as this as a wholesome and beneficial
+expression of opinion._"
+
+In July, 1906, a most important meeting of the Inter-Parliamentary Union
+took place in London. Twenty-three countries, enjoying the privileges,
+in various proportions, of free institutions, were represented at this
+memorable Congress of Nations. In the course of his remarkable opening
+speech of the first sitting, Mr. Campbell-Bannerman, Prime Minister,
+said:--
+
+"_Urge your Governments, in the name of humanity, to go into The Hague
+Conference as we ourselves hope to go, pledged to diminished charges in
+respect of armaments._"
+
+A motion embodying the views so earnestly pressed by the British
+Government was unanimously carried.
+
+On the fifth of March, 1907, only four months before the opening of the
+Second Hague Conference, Mr. Campbell-Bannerman, affirming the bounden
+duty of England to propose the restriction of armaments, said, in the
+British House of Commons:--
+
+"_Holding the opinion that there is a great movement of feeling among
+thinking people in all the nations of the world, in favor of some
+restraint on the enormous expenditure involved in the present system so
+long as it exists.... We have desired and still desire to place
+ourselves in the very front rank of those who think that the warlike
+attitude of powers, as displayed by the excessive growth of armaments is
+a curse to Europe, and the sooner it is checked, in however moderate a
+degree, the better._"
+
+Unfortunately, German hostility to reduced armaments prevented any good
+result from the second Hague Conference in the way of checking
+extravagant and ruinous military organization. There was sad
+disappointment in all the reasonable world and specially in England at
+this deplorable outcome. Mr. Campbell-Bannerman expressed it as
+follows:--
+
+"_We had hoped that some great advance might be made towards a common
+consent to arrest the wasteful and growing competition in naval and
+military armaments. We were disappointed._"
+
+Unshaken in her determination to do her utmost to protect Civilization
+against the threatening and ever increasing dangers of German
+militarism, England persisted with the most laudable perseverance in her
+noble efforts to that much desired end. But all her pleadings, however
+convincing, were vain. Germany was obdurate. Finally, on the 30th of
+March, 1911, speaking in the Reichstag, the German Imperial Chancellor
+threw off the mask, and positively declared that the question of
+reduced armaments admitted of no possible solution "_as long as men were
+men and States were States_."
+
+A more brutal declaration could hardly have been made. It was a cynical
+challenge to the World. Times were maturing and Germany was anxiously
+waiting for the opportunity to strike the blow which would stagger
+Humanity.
+
+Through all the great crisis of July and August, 1914, directly
+consequent upon the odious crime of Sarajevo, England exhausted all her
+efforts to maintain peace, but unfortunately without avail.
+
+Knowing very well how much England sincerely wished the maintenance of
+peace, the German Government was to the last moment under the delusion
+that it could succeed in having Great Britain to remain neutral in a
+general European war. They were not ashamed to presume they could bribe
+England. Without blushing they made to the British Government the
+infamous proposition contained in the following despatch from Sir E.
+Goschen, the British Ambassador at Berlin, to Sir Edward Grey, the
+Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs:--
+
+ Sir E. Goschen to Sir Edward Grey (Received July 29).
+ Berlin, July 29, 1914.
+ (Telegraphic.)
+
+ I was asked to call upon the Chancellor to-night. His Excellency
+ had just returned from Potsdam.
+
+ He said that should Austria be attacked by Russia a European
+ conflagration might, he feared, become inevitable, owing to
+ Germany's obligation as Austria's ally, in spite of his
+ continued efforts to maintain peace. He then proceeded to make
+ the following strong bid for British neutrality. He said that it
+ was clear, so far as he was able to judge the main principle
+ which governed British policy, that Great Britain would never
+ stand by and allow France to be crushed in any conflict there
+ might be. That, however, was not the object at which Germany
+ aimed. Provided that neutrality of Great Britain was certain,
+ every assurance would be given to the British Government that
+ the Imperial Government aimed at no territorial acquisitions at
+ the expense of France should they prove victorious in any war
+ that might ensue.
+
+ I questioned his Excellency about the French colonies, and he
+ said he was unable to give a similar undertaking in that
+ respect. As regards Holland, however, his Excellency said that,
+ so long as Germany's adversaries respected the integrity and
+ neutrality of the Netherlands, Germany was ready to give His
+ Majesty's Government an assurance that she would do likewise. It
+ depended upon the action of France what operations Germany might
+ be forced to enter upon in Belgium, but when the war was over,
+ Belgian integrity would be respected if she had not sided
+ against Germany.
+
+ His Excellency ended by saying that ever since he had been
+ Chancellor the object of his policy had been, as you were aware,
+ to bring about an understanding with England; he trusted that
+ these assurances might form the basis of that understanding
+ which he so much desired. He had in mind a general neutrality
+ agreement between England and Germany, though it was of course
+ at the present moment too early to discuss details, and an
+ assurance of British neutrality in the conflict which present
+ crisis might possibly produce, would enable him to look forward
+ to realisation of his desire.
+
+ In reply to his Excellency's inquiry how I thought his request
+ would appeal to you, I said that I did not think it probable
+ that at this stage of events you would care to bind yourself to
+ any course of action and that I was of opinion that you would
+ desire to retain full liberty.
+
+ Our conversation upon this subject having come to an end, I
+ communicated the contents of your telegram of to-day to his
+ Excellency, who expressed his best thanks to you.
+
+To the foregoing outrageous proposition, the Government of Great Britain
+gave the proud and noble reply which follows, for all times to be
+recorded in diplomatic annals to the eternal honour and glory of the
+Ministers who incurred the responsibility of, and of the distinguished
+diplomat who drafted, that memorable document:--
+
+ Sir Edward Grey to Sir E. Goschen.
+ (Telegraphic.)
+ Foreign Office, July 30, 1914.
+ Your telegram of 29th July.
+
+ His Majesty's Government cannot for a moment entertain the
+ Chancellor's proposal that they should bind themselves to
+ neutrality on such terms.
+
+ What he asks us in effect is to engage to stand by while French
+ colonies are taken and France is beaten so long as Germany does
+ not take French territory as distinct from the colonies.
+
+ From the material point of view such a proposal is unacceptable,
+ for France, without further territory in Europe being taken from
+ her, could be so crushed as to lose her position as a Great
+ Power, and become subordinate to German policy.
+
+ Altogether, apart from that, it would be a disgrace for us to
+ make this bargain with Germany at the expense of France, a
+ disgrace from which the good name of this country would never
+ recover.
+
+ The Chancellor also in effect asks us to bargain away whatever
+ obligation or interest we have as regards the neutrality of
+ Belgium. We could not entertain that bargain either.
+
+ Having said so much, it is unnecessary to examine whether the
+ prospect of a future general neutrality agreement between
+ England and Germany offered positive advantages sufficient to
+ compensate us for tying our hands now. We must preserve our full
+ freedom to act as circumstances may seem to us to require in any
+ such unfavourable and regrettable development of the present
+ crisis as the Chancellor contemplates.
+
+ You should speak to the Chancellor in the above sense, and add
+ most earnestly that the only way of maintaining the good
+ relations between England and Germany is that they should
+ continue to work together to preserve the peace of Europe; if we
+ succeed in this object, the mutual relations of Germany and
+ England will, I believe, be =ipso facto= improved and
+ strengthened. For that object His Majesty's Government will work
+ in that way with all sincerity and good-will.
+
+ And I will say this: if the peace of Europe can be preserved,
+ and the present crisis safely passed, my own endeavour will be
+ to promote some arrangement to which Germany will be a party, by
+ which she could be assured that no aggressive or hostile policy
+ would be pursued against her or her allies by France, Russia,
+ and ourselves, jointly or separately. I have desired this and
+ worked for it, as far as I could, through the last Balkan
+ crisis, and, Germany having a corresponding object, our
+ relations sensibly improved. The idea has hitherto been too
+ Utopian to form the subject of definite proposals, but if this
+ present crisis, so much more acute than any that Europe has gone
+ through for generations, be safely passed, I am hopeful that the
+ relief and reaction which will follow may make possible some
+ more definite rapprochement between the Powers than has been
+ possible hitherto.
+
+The British Government could not take a more dignified stand and express
+their indignation at the infamous proposal in stronger and more noble
+terms.
+
+Let us now read the indignant protest of Mr. Asquith, the British Prime
+Minister, against the outrageous German proposition, addressed to the
+House of Commons, where it raised a storm of applause, proclaiming to
+the World the dogged determination of England to wage war rather than
+agree to the dishonourable German proposal:--
+
+ What does that amount to? Let me just ask the House. I do so,
+ not with the object of inflaming passion, certainly not with the
+ object of exciting feeling against Germany, but I do so to
+ vindicate and make clear the position of the British Government
+ in this matter. What did that proposal amount to? In the first
+ place, it meant this: That behind the back of France--they were
+ not made a party to these communications--we should have given,
+ if we had assented to that, a free license to Germany to annex,
+ in the event of a successful war, the whole of the extra
+ European dominions and possessions of France. What did it mean
+ as regards Belgium? When she addressed, as she has addressed in
+ the last few days, her moving appeal to us to fulfil our solemn
+ guarantee of her neutrality, what reply should we have given?
+ What reply should we have given to that Belgian appeal? We
+ should have been obliged to say that without her knowledge we
+ had bartered away to the Power threatening her our obligation to
+ keep our plighted word. The House has read, and the country has
+ read, of course, in the last few hours, the most pathetic appeal
+ addressed by the King of Belgium, and I do not envy the man who
+ can read that appeal with an unmoved heart. Belgians are
+ fighting and losing their lives. What would have been the
+ position of Great Britain to-day in the face of that spectacle
+ if we had assented to this infamous proposal? Yes, and what are
+ we to get in return for the betrayal of our friends and the
+ dishonour of our obligations? What are we to get in return? A
+ promise--nothing more; a promise as to what Germany would do in
+ certain eventualities; a promise, be it observed--I am sorry to
+ say it, but it must be put upon record--given by a Power which
+ was at that very moment announcing its intention to violate its
+ own treaty, and inviting us to do the same. I can only say, if
+ we had dallied or temporized, we, as a Government, should have
+ covered ourselves with dishonour, and we should have betrayed
+ the interests of this country, of which we are trustees.
+
+After quoting and eulogizing the telegraphic despatch of Sir Edward Grey
+to Sir E. Goschen, dated July 30, 1914, Mr. Asquith proceeded as
+follows:--
+
+ That document, in my opinion, states clearly, in temperate and
+ convincing language, the attitude of this Government. Can any
+ one who reads it fail to appreciate the tone of obvious
+ sincerity and earnestness which underlies it; can any one
+ honestly doubt that the Government of this country in spite of
+ great provocation--and I regard the proposals made to us as
+ proposals which we might have thrown aside without consideration
+ and almost without answer--can any one doubt that in spite of
+ great provocation the right hon. gentleman, who had already
+ earned the title--and no one ever more deserved it--of Peace
+ Maker of Europe, persisted to the very last moment of the last
+ hour in that beneficent but unhappily frustrated purpose. I am
+ entitled to say, and I do so on behalf of this country--I speak
+ not for a party, I speak for the country as a whole--that we
+ made every effort any Government could possibly make for peace.
+ But this war has been forced upon us. What is it we are
+ fighting for? Every one knows, and no one knows better than the
+ Government the terrible incalculable suffering, economic,
+ social, personal and political, which war, and especially a war
+ between the Great Powers of the world must entail. There is no
+ man amongst us sitting upon this bench in these trying
+ days--more trying perhaps than any body of statesmen for a
+ hundred years have had to pass through, there is not a man
+ amongst us who has not, during the whole of that time, had
+ clearly before his vision the almost unequalled suffering which
+ war, even in just cause, must bring about, not only to the
+ peoples who are for the moment living in this country and in the
+ other countries of the world, but to posterity and to the whole
+ prospects of European civilization. Every step we took with that
+ vision before our eyes, and with a sense of responsibility which
+ it is impossible to describe. Unhappily, if in spite of all our
+ efforts to keep the peace, and with that full and overpowering
+ consciousness of the result, if the issue be decided in favour
+ of war, we have, nevertheless, thought it to be the duty as well
+ as the interest of this country to go to war, the House may be
+ well assured it was because we believe, and I am certain the
+ Country will believe, we are unsheathing our sword in a just
+ cause.
+
+ If I am asked what we are fighting for I reply in two sentences.
+ In the first place to fulfil a solemn international obligation,
+ an obligation which, if it had been entered into between private
+ persons in the ordinary concerns of life, would have been
+ regarded as an obligation not only of law but of honour, which
+ no self-respecting man could possibly have repudiated. I say,
+ secondly, we are fighting to vindicate the principle which, in
+ these days when force, material force, sometimes seems to be the
+ dominant influence and factor in the development of mankind, we
+ are fighting to vindicate the principle that small nationalities
+ are not to be crushed, in defiance of international good faith,
+ by the military will of a strong and overmastering Power. I do
+ not believe any nation ever entered into a great
+ controversy--and this is one of the greatest history will ever
+ know--with a clearer conscience and stronger conviction that it
+ is fighting, not for aggression, not for the maintenance even of
+ its own selfish interest, but that it is fighting in defence of
+ principles, the maintenance of which is vital to the
+ civilisation of the world. With a full conviction, not only of
+ the wisdom and justice, but of the obligations which lay upon us
+ to challenge this great issue, we are entering into the
+ struggle.
+
+The German Government refusing to order their army to retire from the
+Belgian territory it had violated, at midnight, 4th to 5th August, 1914,
+the whole British Empire was at war with the whole German Empire.
+
+Surely, there is not the slightest necessity to argue any more that in
+the terrific war raging for the last four years, Justice and Right are
+on the side of England and her Allies. No war was ever more just, waged
+with equal honour for the triumph of Liberty and Civilization, for the
+protection of Humanity against the onslaught of barbarism developed to
+the cruelty of the darkest ages of History.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE CALL TO DUTY IN CANADA.
+
+
+Every one knows how the news of the State of War between the British and
+German Empires were received in our great Canadian Dominion, after the
+days of anxious waiting which culminated in the rallying of England to
+the defence of the cause of Freedom and Civilization. When the call for
+duty was sounded in the Capital of the British Empire, it rolled over
+the mighty Atlantic, spreading over the length and breadth of Canada,
+being re-echoed with force in our Province of Quebec.
+
+At once called to prepare for the emergency, the Canadian Parliament met
+and unanimously decided that the Dominion would, of her own free will
+and patriotic decision, participate in the Great War. The course of
+events in Canada, for the last four years, is well known by all. It is
+recent history.
+
+My special object in condensing in this book the defence which I
+considered it my duty to make of the just and sacred cause of the
+British Empire, and her Allies, in the great war still raging with
+undiminished fury, being to show how I did, to the best of my ability,
+try to persuade my French Canadian Countrymen where was the true path
+of duty, and how false and disloyal were the unscrupulous theories of
+"Nationalism", I must first review the successive movements of public
+opinion in the Province of Quebec.
+
+In the preceding sentence, I have intently affirmed that the cause of
+the Allies was that of the whole British Empire. Surely, it should not
+be necessary to say so, as no truly loyal British subject would for a
+moment hesitate to come to that patriotic conclusion. Still, however
+incredible it is, the duty of the British colonies to rally to the flag
+to defend the Empire and participate in the deadly struggle between
+Civilization and barbarism, was challenged by the leaders of the
+"Nationalist school" in the Province of Quebec. Of course, that school
+never represented more than a small minority of thought and numbers.
+But, sad to admit, a fanatical minority, in days of trying sacrifices,
+can do a great deal of injury to a people by inflaming national and
+religious prejudices. We, French Canadians, have had much to suffer from
+the unpatriotic efforts of a few to bring our countrymen to take an
+erroneous view of the situation.
+
+At the opening of the war, the general opinion in the Province of Quebec
+was without doubt strongly in favor of Canada's participation in the
+struggle. Any student of the working of our constitutional system knows
+how the strength of public opinion is ascertained, outside of a general
+election, in all cases, and more specially with regard to measures of
+paramount importance when the country has to deal with a national
+emergency.
+
+The Parliament of Canada is the authorized representative of the
+Country. Called in a special session, at the very outbreak of the
+hostilities, they voted unanimously that it was our duty to participate
+in the war. All the representatives of the Province of Quebec heartily
+joined with those of all the other Provinces to vote this unanimous
+decision.
+
+In the light of events ever since, who can now reasonably pretend that
+the patriotic decision of the Parliament of Canada was not entirely,
+even enthusiastically, approved by the Canadian people? The press, even
+in the Province of Quebec, with only one exception of any consequence,
+was unanimous in its approval of the action of Parliament.
+
+The heads of our Church, the Archbishops and Bishops of the
+Ecclesiastical Provinces of Quebec, Montreal and Ottawa, in their very
+important Pastoral Letter on the duties of the Catholics in the present
+war, positively said:--
+
+"_We must acknowledge it--(nous ne saurions nous le dissimuler--): that
+conflict, one of the most terrific the world has yet seen, cannot but
+have its repercussion in our country. England is engaged into it, and
+who does not see that the fate of all the component parts of the Empire
+is bound with the fate of her arms. She relies upon our support, and
+that support, we are happy to say, has been generously offered to her
+both in men and money._"
+
+No representative of public opinion, of any weight, outside of
+Parliament, professional men, leaders of finance, commerce and industry,
+in the Province of Quebec, raised a word of disapproval at the
+Parliamentary call to arms.
+
+Not one meeting was called, not one resolution was moved, to oppose the
+decision of the Canadian Parliament.
+
+Not one petition was addressed to the two Houses in Ottawa against
+Canada's participation in the war.
+
+Every one in the Province of Quebec knew that participating in the war
+would entail heavy financial sacrifices, and that the taxation of the
+country would have to be largely increased to meet the new obligations
+we had freely decided to incur for the salvation of the Empire and of
+Civilization.
+
+The Government of the day proposed the financial measures they
+considered necessary to raise the public revenue which the circumstances
+required. Those measures were unanimously approved by Parliament. The
+taxpayers of the country, those of the Province of Quebec like all the
+others, willingly and patriotically accepted and paid without complaint
+the new taxes into the public treasury. During more than the three first
+years of the war, I visited a good part of the Province of Quebec, and
+addressed several large public meetings. Everywhere my attention was
+forcibly struck by the prompt willingness of my French Canadian
+countrymen to bear their share of the financial sacrifices Canada was
+called upon to make for the triumph of the cause of the Allies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+RECRUITING BY VOLUNTARY SERVICE.
+
+
+No stronger evidence could be given of the determination of the country
+as a whole, and over all its component parts, to support Great Britain
+and her Allies to final success, than the truly wonderful record of the
+voluntary enlistment of more than four hundred thousand men, of all
+walks in life, to rush to the front.
+
+Recruiting in the Province of Quebec indeed started very well. Several
+thousands of French Canadian youth rallied to the colors. I hope and
+trust that, sooner or later, it will be possible to make a more
+satisfactory statistical record of the number of French Canadians who
+enlisted. I am fully convinced that the total is somewhat much larger
+than the figures usually quoted. It would surely be conducive to a
+better understanding of the case, if such statistical information was
+carefully prepared and made public. It is easily conceivable that the
+pressure of the work of maintaining the splendid Canadian army renders
+it perhaps difficult to attend actually to the details of that
+compilation. So we can afford to wait for the redress of figures which
+may constitute a wrong to the race second in numbers but equal to any in
+patriotism in Canada.
+
+Pending my remarks upon certain causes which have contributed to check
+recruiting amongst the French element in the Province of Quebec, I
+consider it important to mention those which were easy to ascertain and
+comprehend.
+
+It is a well known fact that early marriages are a rule in the Province
+of Quebec much more than in the other Provinces of the Dominion. As a
+natural consequence, the available number of young unmarried men for
+recruiting purposes was proportionately less. I myself have known
+parishes in our Province where half a dozen of unmarried young men from
+twenty years of age and upwards could not be found.
+
+It was easily to foresee that a comparison would be made between the
+number of Canadian-born volunteers in the English-speaking Provinces and
+that from the Province of Quebec. The degree of enthusiasm for
+enlistment in the other Provinces between the foreign born and the
+Canadian born has also been noticed. It has generally been admitted that
+most naturally the young men recently arrived in Canada were more
+strongly appealed to by all the sacred ties still binding them to their
+mother land. When generations have, for more than a century, enjoyed all
+the blessings of peace and lived far away from the turmoil of warlike
+preparations and military conflicts, is it to be much wondered at that
+the entire population is not at once permeated with the feeling of the
+dangers ahead, and do not rise rapidly to the full sense of the duty she
+is suddenly called upon to perform.
+
+My daily personal intercourse with hundreds of my French Canadian
+compatriots allowed me to realize that many of them, even amongst the
+leading classes, were over-confident that the Allies representing at the
+beginning the united effort of England, France and Russia, soon to be
+reinforced by Italy, breaking away from the Central Powers, would
+certainly be equal to the task of being victorious over German
+militarism. Repeatedly, before public meetings and in very numerous
+private conversations, I urgently implored my hearers not to be so
+deluded, doing my best to convince them that it would be a fatal error
+to shut our eyes from the truth, that the military power of Central
+Europe, comprising the two great Empires of Germany and Austria,
+Bulgaria, with the help of Asiatic Turkey, and the undisguised support
+of baneful teutonic influences and intrigues at the courts of Petrograd
+and Athens, was gigantic, and that the terrible conflict would surely
+develop into a struggle for life and death between human freedom and
+barbarism.
+
+This feeling of over-confidence was passing away, when it became evident
+that to triumph over the modern huns and their associates was no easy
+task; that the goal of freeing humanity from the threatening universal
+domination would require the most determined effort of the nations who
+had heroically undertaken to reach it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+INTERVENTION OF NATIONALISM.
+
+
+The great struggle being waged with increased intensity, it was daily
+becoming more and more evident that the Allied nations were bound to
+muster all their courage, perseverance and resources to successfully
+fight their determined foe. It was just at the thick of this critical
+situation, calling forth the devotion and patriotism of all, that the
+"Nationalist" campaign of false theories and principles was launched
+with renewed activity in the Province of Quebec.
+
+Mr. Henri Bourassa, ex-member of Labelle in the House of Commons, was,
+and still is, the recognized leader of the "Nationalist School" in our
+Province, and wherever it finds adherents. His personal organ, "_Le
+Devoir_," is daily expounding the doctrines of that School.
+
+In October, 1915, Mr. Bourassa issued a pamphlet of over four hundred
+pages entitled:--"_What do we owe England?_"--in French:--"_Que
+devons-nous à l'Angleterre?_"
+
+In the long overdrawn and farfetched argumentation of this volume, the
+author's effort is to try and prove that Canada owes nothing to England,
+that all those who favour the Canadian participation in the war are
+"revolutionists," that we are unduly paying a large tribute to the
+Empire.
+
+In 1916, Mr. Bourassa supplemented his first book with a second
+pamphlet, entitled:--"_Yesterday, To-day, To-morrow_," in
+French:--"_Hier, Aujourd'hui, Demain_," in which he amplified the views
+expressed in the preceding volume.
+
+I undertook to read Mr. Bourassa's works, and I must say that I was
+astonished at what I found therein. I felt very strongly that his
+erroneous views--without questioning their sincerity--were bound to
+pervert the opinion of my French compatriots, to enflame their
+prejudices, and to do a great deal of harm in promoting the ever
+dangerous conflict of race fanaticism. Over forty years of experience of
+public life had taught me how easy it is to introduce a prejudice in a
+man's mind, but how difficult it is to destroy it when once it has taken
+root.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+WHAT DO WE OWE ENGLAND?
+
+
+To this question raised by Mr. Bourassa, and argued at length by himself
+in the negative, I answered by a chapter of my book:--"_L'Angleterre, le
+Canada et la Grand Guerre_"--"_England, Canada and the Great War_."
+
+Great Britain, ever since she came to the conclusion that the days of
+the old colonial policy were passed, and agreed that we should freely
+govern ourselves, with ministerial responsibility, within the powers set
+forth in our constitutional charter, has scrupulously respected our
+political liberty. We have administered our own affairs at our own free
+will. The Imperial Government never attempted to interfere with the
+development of our federal politics. They would surely have declined
+such interference, if it had been asked for.
+
+As long as we form part of the British Empire, it is evident that we owe
+to England that loyalty which every colony owes to her mother-country.
+Granted by the Sovereign Power ruling Canada the freest institutions,
+having the best of reasons to be fully satisfied with our relations with
+Great Britain, we are in duty bound to be loyal to her flag. We must be
+true to our allegiance.
+
+We have freely decided to incur the sacrifices we are making for the
+war. We have so decided because we considered it of the greatest
+importance, for the future of Humanity, that the German ambition for
+universal domination be foiled; that the British Empire be maintained;
+that France should continue a first class Power, as expressed by Mr.
+Asquith; that before all, and above all, the eternal principles of
+Right, Justice and Civilization, shall not be trampled upon by the
+terrific assault of teutonic barbarism. Moreover, we are also in duty
+bound to judge with fairness England's part in the great society of
+nations, and, especially, that she plays in the great events of the
+present crisis. Beyond doubt, a truly loyal Canadian must refrain from
+poisoning foreign opinion and that of his fellow British subjects
+against Great Britain in attributing her course to selfish interests,
+wilfully taking no account of her broad and admirable foreign policy,
+ever inspired by the steady desire to maintain peace.
+
+In the first mentioned work, Mr. Bourassa lays great stress on the fact
+that for nearly a century and a half, previous to the South African War,
+Canada did not participate in the wars of the Empire. He extensively
+quotes from the documents and the discussions between Canada's
+representatives and the Imperial Government, respecting the defence of
+our country, and that of the Empire herself. He concludes by pretending
+that the result of all these negotiations and conventions was the
+agreement that Canada would have only to attend to her own defence, and
+that Great Britain was always obliged to protect us against all outside
+attacks. From these pretensions he draws the startling conclusion that
+all those who do not stand by the conventions he did his best to
+emphasize are doing revolutionary work.
+
+The answer to such extravagant notions is rather plain and easy. There
+was not the slightest necessity for the Nationalist leader to multiply
+lengthy quotations to prove what mere common sense settles at first
+thought:--
+
+First:--That any country, whether it be independent or a colony, must
+defend itself when attacked by an enemy.
+
+Second:--That a Sovereign State is bound to defend all the territory
+under its authority and covered by its flag.
+
+But all this has nothing whatever to do with the very different question
+of Canada's participation, outside her own territory, in a war in which
+Great Britain is engaged, which participation Canada has freely,
+deliberately approved and ordered. Such was the case in 1914. The
+Parliament and the people of Canada at once realized that in the
+gigantic conflict into which Germany had drawn all the Great Powers of
+Europe, our future destiny as much as that of England herself was at
+stake. Without the slightest hesitation, unasked and unsolicited by the
+Mother Country, we decided that we were in duty bound to do our share
+to defend the great Empire of which we are a very important component
+part, and to help saving the world from tyrannical domination.
+
+Much too often giving to words a meaning which they positively cannot
+convey, Mr. Bourassa argued at length to prove that the agreements,
+conventions, and understandings arrived at between the Imperial and
+Canadian Governments, at different dates, were a _solemn treaty_.
+
+How false and untenable such a pretention is, surely needs no lengthy
+argument. International Law knows no treaties but those made between
+Sovereign States. It is most absurd to pretend that a Sovereign State
+can make a treaty between herself and its own colony. Where is the man
+with the slightest notion of Constitutional Government who would
+pretend, for instance, that the British North American Act is a treaty
+between Great Britain and Canada. It is an Act passed by the Legislative
+authority of the Sovereign State to which we belong, enacting the
+conditions under which Canada would enjoy the rights and privileges of
+constitutional self-government, participating in the exercise of
+Sovereignty within the limits of the powers enumerated in the Act
+creating the Dominion. It was precisely because we knew we were acting
+within the limits of those powers, that we decided to join with England
+and her Allies in the great war.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+CANADA IS NOT A SOVEREIGN STATE.
+
+
+As long as Canada will remain under the flag of Great Britain--and for
+one I hope it will yet be for many long years,--it is evident that it
+will not be a "_Sovereign State_" in the full sense of the word.
+
+One can hardly believe that the Nationalist leader, at page 17 of his
+pamphlet--"_Hier, Aujourd'hui, Demain_"--"_Yesterday, To-day,
+To-morrow_," opens a chapter with the title: "_Les Colonies autonomes
+sont des Etats Souverains._"--"_The autonomous colonies are Sovereign
+States._"
+
+Mr. Bourassa was evidently led to the grievous error contained in the
+preceding title by a complete misapprehension of the true meaning of the
+word "_autonomous_." He took "_autonomy_" for "_Sovereignty_," being
+under the delusion that the two are synonymous.
+
+Any student of History knows, or ought to know, that after the war which
+culminated in the independence of the United States, England adopted an
+entirely new colonial policy. She was the first Sovereign Power, and has
+ever since remained the only one, to realize that the old system was
+doomed to failure, that it was worn out. Her leading statesmen, who
+always ranked amongst the most eminent the world over, were more and
+more convinced that the only safe colonial policy was that which would
+grant "_self-government_" to the colonies, trained to its harmonious
+working, for their interior management. The true meaning of this new
+policy was that several of the colonies were, by acts of the Imperial
+Parliament, called to the exercise of a share of the Sovereignty, well
+defined in their respective constitutional charters. Canada was one of
+the first British colonies to enjoy the advantages of such a large part
+of the Sovereign rights.
+
+Such "_autonomous colonies_" as Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South
+Africa, Newfoundland, have been, and are to the present day, do not
+transform them into "_Sovereign States_," enjoying full "Sovereign
+powers." They are not "_Independent States_" in the full sense of the
+word.
+
+That Canada is not a Sovereign State is proved beyond doubt by the very
+fact that she could not amend or change her constitutional charter by
+her own power and without a new Imperial law. If the Nationalist
+leader's pretention was sound, any member of the House of Commons, or of
+the Senate, in Ottawa, could propose a bill to repeal the British North
+America Act, 1867, and to replace it by another constitutional charter.
+The very supposition is absurd. Can it be imagined that His Excellency
+the Governor-General could be advised by his responsible Ministers to
+sanction, in the name of His Majesty the Sovereign of Great Britain, a
+bill repealing an Act of the Imperial Parliament? Still it is exactly
+what Mr. Bourassa's theory amounts to.
+
+Our constitutional charter does not only provide what is called our
+Federal,--or National--autonomy, but also the Provincial autonomy. The
+powers of both are well defined in the Imperial Act. The Provinces of
+the Dominion also exercise that share of the Sovereign rights delegated
+to them by the Imperial Parliament. Would the Nationalist leader draw
+the extravagant conclusion that the territory of any one of the
+Provinces cannot be declared in the "State of War" with a Foreign Power,
+by His Majesty the King, without the assent of the Ministers of that
+Province? Still that absurd proposition would not be more so than that
+affirming the necessity of the assent of the Canadian Cabinet, to a
+declaration of War involving Canada in an Imperial struggle.
+
+The Sovereign right of declaring war to, and of making peace with,
+another independent State, is vested in the King of Great Britain,
+acting upon the advice of his responsible Ministers in the United
+Kingdom. To the Imperial Parliament belongs the constitutional authority
+to deal with the Imperial Foreign Affairs.
+
+It is plain that when Great Britain is at War with another Sovereign
+State the whole territory of the British Empire is in the "State of War"
+with that Nation.
+
+It is inconceivable that Mr. Bourassa has seriously pretended that
+Canada was not at war with the German Empire the very moment the British
+Empire was so in consequence of the violation by Germany of Belgian
+neutrality. One can hardly believe that he has propounded the fallacious
+constitutional doctrine that His Majesty "_the King of England hath not
+the right to declare Canada in the State of War without the assent of
+the Canadian Cabinet_."
+
+Where and when has the Nationalist leader discovered that the Canadian
+Ministers have the right to advise His Majesty upon all the questions
+pertaining to the Imperial Foreign Affairs? Any one conversant with the
+constitutional status of Canada knows that the Canadian Ministers have
+the right to advise the representative of the Sovereign only upon
+matters as defined by the British North America Act, 1867, and its
+amendments.
+
+I was indeed very much surprised at the attempt of Mr. Bourassa to use
+the authority of Sir Erskine May in support of his erroneous pretension
+that the autonomous colonies of Great Britain were Sovereign States.
+
+To all the students of the Constitutional History of England, Sir
+Erskine May is a very well known and appreciated writer. I have read his
+works several times over for many years. I was certain that he had never
+written anything to justify the Nationalist leader in quoting him as he
+did.
+
+Here follows the paragraph of May's Constitutional History quoted by Mr.
+Bourassa in support of his own views:--
+
+ Parliament has recently pronounced it to be just that the
+ Colonies which enjoy self-government, should undertake the
+ responsibility and cost of their own military defence. To carry
+ this policy into effect must be the work of time. But whenever
+ it may be effected, the last material bond of connection with
+ the Colonies will have been severed, and colonial states,
+ acknowledging the honorary sovereignty of England, and fully
+ armed for self-defence, as well against herself as others, will
+ have grown out of the dependencies of the British Empire.
+
+I must say that I am absolutely unable to detect one single word in the
+above quotation to authorize Mr. Bourassa to affirm that Sir Erskine May
+was of opinion that "_the autonomous colonies were Sovereign States_."
+The true meaning of the above extract is surely very plain. What does it
+say? It declares, what was a fact, that the British _Parliament has
+recently pronounced it to be just that the Colonies which enjoy
+self-government should undertake the responsibility and cost of their
+own military defence_.
+
+Would the British Parliament have deemed it necessary to express such an
+opinion, if the Colonies had, then, been Sovereign States, consequently
+obliged, in duty bound, to defend themselves _alone_ against any
+possible enemy. Surely not, for the obvious reason that Great Britain
+would have had no more responsibility for the defence of territories no
+longer covered by her flag and under her Sovereignty.
+
+The very fact that the British Parliament thought proper, _under the
+then circumstances_, to say that the Colonies enjoying self-government
+should undertake to defend themselves, is the convincing proof that they
+were not Sovereign States.
+
+The following sentence of May's quotation says:--_To carry this policy
+into effect must be the work of time_.
+
+It is clear that the _policy_ requiring the work of time to be carried
+into effect was not actually existent at the time Sir Erskine May was
+writing.
+
+The extract quoted by Mr. Bourassa concludes by declaring that when such
+a policy _has_ been finally adopted, the Colonies will have developed
+into Colonial States having _grown out of the dependencies of the
+British Empire_.
+
+Evidently, when the Dominions of Canada, Australia, South Africa, New
+Zealand, will have grown out of the dependencies of the British Empire,
+they will no longer be Colonies of Great Britain. But when will that
+very important event take place? Surely, Sir Erskine May could not
+foresee. Even to-day Mr. Bourassa cannot say more than any one else.
+Pending that unforeseen outcome, the Dominions will remain parts of the
+British Empire under her Sovereignty.
+
+The above quotation was taken by Mr. Bourassa from the edition of Sir
+Erskine May's "Constitutional History" published in 1912. But they were
+first edited by the author in 1863. When has the Imperial Parliament
+adopted the above mentioned "_Resolution_"? It was voted in 1862--the
+4th of March--more than fifty-six years ago. Quoted as it has been by
+Mr. Bourassa, it appears to have been only very recently adopted. The
+fact that it is more than half a century old, and was carried before the
+Federal Union of the Provinces, is a convincing proof that it has no
+bearing whatever upon the conditions of Canada's present colonial
+status. By the aforesaid "_Resolution_," the British House of Commons
+was only expressing the opinion that the time had come for the Colonies
+to undertake the responsibility and the cost of their defence. The
+"Resolution" does not say that Great Britain would no longer be called,
+in the exercise of the rights and duties of her Sovereignty, to defend
+her Colonial Empire.
+
+By what reasoning can a mere expression of opinion by the English House
+of Commons be interpreted as at once transforming the Colonies into
+independent Sovereign States?
+
+Any one somewhat conversant with the political events that led to the
+Federal Union of the Provinces knows that in applying to the British
+Parliament for the new Constitutional Charter, the Legislature of United
+Canada had a twofold object:--first, the settlement of the
+constitutional difficulties then pending between Upper and Lower Canada;
+secondly, a broader development of Canada and also of the British
+Empire. Such was the purpose of the coalition government formed in 1864.
+All the members of that Cabinet were strongly in favour of the
+maintenance of Canada's union with Great Britain. I have heard them
+expounding their views on what the future of Canada ought to be. I am
+positive that neither Sir John A. Macdonald, Sir Georges Cartier, the
+honorable Georges Brown, nor any of their colleagues, of both political
+parties, ever said a word which could be construed as expressing the
+opinion that the proposed Federal Union would make of Canada an
+independent Sovereign State. It is incredible that Mr. Bourassa should
+have so erroneously understood their real views so as to pretend that
+they favoured Confederation for that very purpose.
+
+As a proof of his pretension, he quoted the following words of Sir John
+A. Macdonald, in the Legislative Assembly of old United Canada:--
+
+"_With us the Sovereign, or, in this country the representative of the
+Sovereign, can act only on the advice of His Ministers, those Ministers
+being responsible to the people through Parliament._"
+
+Mr. Bourassa used the foregoing sentence in support of his contention
+that the King of England could not declare war without the assent of the
+Canadian Cabinet. It is impossible to understand how such a notion can
+be seriously held and expressed. His Majesty cannot ask nor accept such
+an advice, if it was tendered, for the very reason that the Canadian
+Cabinet has not the constitutional right to advise the King respecting
+the international relations of the Empire. And why? Precisely because
+the Canadian Ministers would not be responsible for their advice to the
+Imperial Parliament and to the electorate of the United Kingdom.
+
+The true meaning of the above quoted sentence of Sir John A. Macdonald
+is very plain. Ministerial responsibility was the fundamental principle
+of the old Constitution, as it is of the Federal Charter. Sir John A.
+Macdonald was perfectly right in affirming that "_in Canada, as in
+England, the Sovereign could act only on the advice of His Ministers,"
+that is to say on the advice of His responsible Ministers within the
+constitutional powers of our Parliament on all matters respecting which
+they had the constitutional right to advise His Majesty_.
+
+Sir John A. Macdonald never said--he could not possibly say--that as
+Prime Minister of Canada, under the new Constitution, he would have the
+right to advise the Sovereign on all matters within the exclusive
+constitutional jurisdiction of the Imperial Parliament, for instance
+respecting the exercise of the Royal prerogative of declaring war
+against, or of making peace with, a foreign independent State. He has
+never propounded such an utterly false constitutional doctrine.
+
+Mr. Bourassa went still further. He quoted the following sentence from
+Sir John A. Macdonald:--"_We stand with regard to the people of Canada
+precisely in the same position as the House of Commons in England stands
+with regard to the people of England_."
+
+I was indeed most astonished to read Mr. Bourassa's inference from those
+words that Sir John A. Macdonald _had affirmed the absolute equality of
+powers of the Imperial and the Canadian Parliaments_.
+
+If the opinion expressed by Sir John A. Macdonald could be so
+interpreted, he would have affirmed--what was radically wrong--that
+under the new Constitution, the Canadian Parliament would have,
+_concurrently with the Imperial Parliament_, absolutely the same powers.
+What did that mean? It meant that the Canadian Parliament, just as the
+Imperial Parliament, would have the right to edict laws establishing
+Home Rule in Ireland, regulating the government of India and the Crown
+Colonies, granting constitutional charters for the good government of
+the Australian and South African Dominions, &c., &c.
+
+Surely it is not necessary to argue at any length to prove that Sir John
+A. Macdonald never for a moment entertained such an opinion. What he
+really said, in the above quoted words, was that within their
+constitutional jurisdiction, within the limits of their respective
+powers, the two Parliaments stood in the same position, _respectively_,
+with regard to the people of England and to the people of Canada. It was
+equivalent to saying--what was positively true--that the British
+Ministers and the British Parliament were responsible to the people of
+England, and that the Canadian Ministers and the Canadian Parliament
+were responsible to the people of Canada,--both of them within the
+limits of their respective constitutional powers.
+
+If the Canadian Legislature had enjoyed all the constitutional powers of
+the British Parliament, she would not have been obliged to pass
+addresses asking the latter to enact a new charter creating the Federal
+Union of the Provinces. She could have repealed her then existing
+constitution and enacted the new one by her own authority. But that she
+could not do. She could not repeal the old, nor enact the new charter.
+
+But the most extraordinary is that Mr. Bourassa went so far as to
+declare that Canada should have participated in the present war only as
+a "_Nation_," meaning, of course, as an independent Sovereign State.
+
+On reading such a preposterous proposition, at once it strikes one's
+mind most forcibly that if Canada had really had the power to intervene
+in the world's struggle as a "Nation," she would have had the equal
+right to the choice of three alternatives.
+
+First:--Declare war against Germany and in favor of the Allies.
+
+Second:--Remain neutral.
+
+Third:--Declare war against Great Britain and fight for Germany.
+
+For it is obvious that all the Sovereign States--and Canada like them
+all if she had been one of them--had the Sovereign Right to fight for or
+against Great Britain, or to remain neutral. Of course, I am merely
+explaining in its entirety the Right of a Sovereign State. I surely do
+not mean to say that Canada, had she really been such a State, would in
+any way have been justifiable in joining with Germany in her dastardly
+attempt to crush Civilization in the barbarous throes of her domination.
+
+What would His Excellency the Governor-General have answered his Prime
+Minister advising him to declare war against England, he who represents
+His Majesty at Ottawa? Would he not have told him at once that the
+Canadian Prime Minister had no right whatever to give him such an
+advice; that Canada, being a British Colony, could not declare war
+against her Sovereign State; that for the Canadian people to take up
+arms against England would be treasonable revolt?
+
+It is absolutely incredible that a public man, aspiring to the
+leadership of his countrymen, can have been so completely lost to the
+sense of the Canadian constitutional situation as to boldly attempt to
+pervert their mind with such fallacious notions. He might as well
+pretend that the State of New York, for instance, has the Sovereign
+Right to declare war against the Government of the United States.
+
+I, for one, cannot help wondering that any one can seriously think that
+a colony, always pretending to remain loyally so, can wage war against
+her Sovereign State. I feel sure that all sensible men do share my views
+on that point.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+GERMAN ILLUSIONS.
+
+
+When Germany threw the gauntlet to the Powers of the "Entente," she
+labored under the delusion that the war would most surely break down the
+British Empire. She was determined to do her utmost to that end. But she
+utterly failed in her criminal efforts.
+
+Strongly bound by ties of affection and constitutional freedom, the
+great autonomous Dominions and Colonies at once rallied with courage and
+patriotism to the defence of the Empire, of Justice, of Right and
+Civilization. India,--that great Indian Empire--to the utter
+disappointment of Germany, has stood admirably by Great Britain ever
+since the outbreak of the War, by her noble contributions of man-power
+and her munificent generosity of very large sums of money, in one
+instance amounting to $500,000,000.
+
+The Crown Colonies have also done their share of duty with great
+devotion.
+
+The admirable result which for the last four years has been shining
+bright and glorious all over the world, is that, contrary to teutonic
+expectations, the war, far from breaking asunder the British Empire, has
+wonderfully solidified her mighty edifice, by an intensity of loyalty to
+her free institutions, to her glorious flag, which the enjoyment of the
+blessings of peace would not have proved so easily possible.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE NATIONALIST ERROR.
+
+
+The leaders of our Nationalist School have for years strenuously
+laboured to pervert the mind of our French-Canadian compatriots by the
+false pretensions that we were, in some mysterious way, coerced to
+participate in the European War. Even previous to the days of the South
+African conflict, they boldly took the stand that Canada should, on no
+account, and under no circumstances whatever, participate in what they
+called the Wars of the Empire--_les guerres de l'Empire_. Canada, they
+affirmed, had only to defend her own territory if attacked.
+
+Fully appreciating how insidious and dangerous such theories were, I
+endeavoured to show, as forcibly as I could, that there had been no
+attempt by England at coercion of this Dominion to help her in the
+struggle against Germany. Of course, as previously explained, Great
+Britain being at war with the German Empire, the whole British Empire
+was at war. But no one in England ever intended to propose to force the
+colonies to engage actively into the fight. The Imperial Parliament
+would certainly not have taken into consideration any such proposition.
+
+But is it not plain and beyond discussion that we, _ourselves_, had the
+undoubted right to intervene in the war to the extent that we would
+consider it our bounden duty to do so?
+
+Evidently we could not remain neutral in the great conflict. At the very
+moment that Great Britain was at war with Germany, Canada, a British
+Colony, was part and parcel of the belligerent Sovereign State, the
+British Empire. By an incredible misconception, the Nationalist leaders
+confounded _neutrality_ with _non-participation_ in the war, if we had
+so decided.
+
+To be, or not to be, neutral, was not within our constitutional rights.
+If Germany, either by land or by sea, had attacked our territory, as she
+had the undoubted belligerent right to do, would it have availed us an
+iota to implore her mercy by affirming that we were neutral? Could we
+have pretended that she was violating neutral territory?
+
+No one with the least notion of International Law would for a moment
+hesitate to give the true answers to those questions.
+
+But the very different question to participate, or not, in the war, was
+for us alone to decide according to our constitutional charter. We have
+freely, deliberately, decided to do our share in the great war. We
+continue and persevere in our noble task, freely and deliberately.
+
+It is admitted by all that under the actual constitutional organization
+of the Empire, the Imperial Parliament could not require the autonomous
+colonies to participate in the war. But no one can assuredly deny to
+that Parliament the right, in the case of an imminent peril, to
+formulate the desire that the autonomous colonies would help Great
+Britain to conjure the threatened calamity.
+
+But, in the present case, the Imperial Parliament has not even been
+under the necessity of expressing such a legitimate wish, for the
+obvious reason that the colonies at once took their patriotic stand in
+favor of the cause of England and her Allies. If the colonies had not so
+decided, of their own free will, it is most likely that the Imperial
+Parliament would not have expressed the wish for the assistance of the
+Dominions overseas.
+
+The hearty support granted by the colonies to Great Britain, to develop
+its full value, had to be spontaneous, enthusiastic. Such it was, such
+it is, and such it will be to the last day of the conflict which
+victorious conclusion we are so strongly determined to achieve.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+HAD CANADA THE RIGHT TO HELP ENGLAND?
+
+
+Not satisfied to do the best it could to persuade our French-Canadian
+countrymen that they had been coerced into the war by England, our
+"Nationalist School" extensively used the argument that Canada had not
+the right to intervene into the European struggle. I refuted this
+erroneous pretension by the following propositions, the very essence of
+our constitutional rights and liberties:--
+
+1.--The Canadian Cabinet had the undoubted constitutional right to
+advise His Excellency the Governor-General to approve the measures to be
+taken to give effect to their decision to participate in the war,
+decision and measures for which they were responsible to the Canadian
+Parliament and to the Canadian Electorate.
+
+2.--The Canadian Parliament had the undoubted constitutional right to
+approve or disapprove the decision and the measures of the Cabinet.
+Parliament approved that decision and those measures, acting within
+their constitutional right.
+
+3.--Even at the time I was writing, it could evidently be affirmed that
+the Canadian Electorate had approved the stand taken by both the
+Canadian Cabinet and the Canadian Parliament according to well known and
+defined constitutional usages.
+
+Was it not proved beyond reasonable controversy, that the Canadian
+people heartily approved the decision of their Parliament to help in the
+great war?
+
+Let me summarize the evidence as follows:--
+
+1.--The war policy of the Cabinet, at the special session called in
+August, 1914, for that very purpose, was unanimously approved by
+Parliament, no Senator and no Member of the House of Commons moving to
+censure the responsible ministers for their decision to have Canada to
+participate in the war. The two great political parties have solemnly
+sanctioned that decision.
+
+2.--Public opinion was also very strongly proved by the almost unanimity
+of the public press patriotically supporting the stand taken by
+Parliament. The exceptions were so few, that, as usual, they contributed
+to emphasize the soundness of the general rule.
+
+3.--During the three years following the decision of the Canadian
+Parliament, a great number of large public meetings were held throughout
+Canada, and addressed by many leading and influential citizens all
+approving the action of Parliament. The meetings enthusiastically
+concurred in the powerful indorsation of the war policy of the speakers.
+
+In a few public gatherings some disapproval was expressed, but not one
+meeting would go to the length of passing "Resolutions" censuring the
+Cabinet and the Parliament of Canada, or declaring that our Dominion
+should not have interfered into the war.
+
+4.--Not one petition against the Canadian intervention into the war was
+addressed to Parliament.
+
+5.--Leading Clergymen, of all denominations; leaders of political
+associations almost of all shades of opinion; financial, industrial,
+commercial leaders, all of them approved the patriotic interference of
+Canada into the war.
+
+6.--The evident general approval of the unanimous decision, taken in
+1916, to extend the Parliamentary term.
+
+7.--The wonderful success of the public loans raised for war purposes.
+
+8.--The enlightened and generous patriotism with which the country has
+accepted and paid war taxation.
+
+9.--But, above all, the voluntary recruiting of four hundred thousand
+men of all social conditions who have rallied to the flag of the Empire
+for the defence of her existence and for the triumph of Civilization and
+Justice.
+
+I, therefore, drew the undeniable conclusion that, contrary to the
+"Nationalist" pretension, Canada was participating in the war in the
+most regular constitutional way, without even the shadow of a breach of
+our Canadian autonomy, of our constitutional rights and liberties.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE DUTY OF CANADA.
+
+
+Having affirmed that Canada had no right to interfere in the war, the
+"Nationalist" leaders at once concluded that she was not in duty bound
+to do so. That most discreditable inference was, of course, the natural
+sequence of the wrong principle aforesaid. They further drew the
+conclusion that it was no part of the duty of Canadians to join the
+Colors to help winning the war.
+
+It was in flat contradiction of those erroneous notions that I
+positively declared, in my letter dedicating my book to my French
+Canadian compatriots, that "_in defending with the most sincere
+conviction the sacred cause of the Allies, I am doing my duty as a free
+subject of the British Empire, as a citizen of Canada and of the
+Province of Quebec, as a son of France, as a devoted servant of Justice
+and Right_."
+
+Very narrow minded indeed is the man who has no higher conception of his
+duty than the one limiting him to the observance of positive and
+negative laws enacted by the legitimate authority to protect society and
+every one of its members.
+
+When England, together with the other leading nations, was brutally
+challenged by Germany, and threatened in her very national existence,
+it is beyond comprehension that Canada, and all the British colonial
+possessions overseas, could so mistake their bounden duty as to refuse
+rushing to help the Mother Country in such a trying occurrence.
+Moreover, have we not, merely as men, duties to perform to protect
+Civilization against the deadly attack of barbarism, to have Justice and
+Right triumphant in international relations?
+
+It is a matter of deep wonder to me that any one could have been so
+blind as not to perceive that in joining with Great Britain to defend
+the cause of the Allies, we were surely defending our own territory, our
+own soil, our own homes. How incredible was the "Nationalist" contention
+that we should have waited for the actual German attack of our land
+before mustering our resources of resistance. Who could not see, at a
+glance, that if Germany had, as it fully expected, easily triumphed over
+the combined forces of France, England and Russia, it would have been
+sheer madness to attempt resisting the victorious onslaught of a few
+hundred thousands of her veteran soldiers, whose valour would have been
+doubled by the enthusiasm of their European conquest.
+
+After mature consideration of the possible results of the disastrous
+defeat of the combined efforts of the Allies, both on land and sea, the
+conclusion was forced upon my mind that Germany, ferociously elated by
+such a wonderful success, would no doubt have exacted from England the
+cession of Canada to her Empire. So that without even firing a gun
+against our territory, our wide Dominion would have been instantly
+transferred from the British to the German Sovereignty. I shuddered at
+such a vision, and still more deeply realized how much we, Canadians,
+were all in duty bound to help the Allies in crushing Prussian
+militarism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE SOUDANESE AND SOUTH AFRICAN WARS.
+
+
+In the two previously mentioned pamphlets, Mr. Bourassa argued at length
+to prove that Canada had been led to intervene in the great European war
+as a consequence of her intervention in the South African War. It is
+well known throughout the Dominion that the South African conflict was
+the occasion chosen by the "Nationalist" leader to proclaim his doctrine
+that the autonomous colonies should have nothing to do with the wars of
+the Empire--LES GUERRES DE L'EMPIRE. He then strongly opposed Canadian
+support of Great Britain in her struggle in South Africa.
+
+In one of his pamphlets, Mr. Bourassa affirmed that the Government of
+Sir John A. Macdonald had, in 1884, refused the request of the Imperial
+Government to interfere in its favour in the Soudanese war. Well aware
+of the events of this struggle, I positively knew that the "Nationalist"
+leader's assertion was not borne out by the facts, and was historically
+false. I considered it my duty, in a special chapter, to explain fully
+the circumstances of the case to my French Canadian countrymen.
+
+It should be well remembered that England was brought into the Soudanese
+conflict on account of her relations with Egypt, which she had delivered
+from the Turkish yoke.
+
+Mr. Bourassa prefaced his above mentioned affirmation by recalling the
+fact that it was in consideration of the Soudanese difficulties that
+"_for the first time in the history of the Colonial Empire of Great
+Britain, offers of armed support were made by the autonomous colonies_."
+
+Is it not evident that if--as was true--such offers were made
+spontaneously by the Colonies, it cannot be pretended that the proffered
+armed support was asked by England. If England did not solicit such
+support, it is plain that Sir John A. Macdonald and his Cabinet could
+not refuse what was never applied for.
+
+What are the true historical facts?
+
+In November 1884, General Laurie, who has represented one of the
+electoral divisions of Nova Scotia at Ottawa, who has also held a seat
+in the British House of Commons, took the initiative to propose to raise
+a Canadian regiment for the campaign in the Soudan. In the regular
+official way, General Laurie's offer was addressed to the Secretary of
+State for the Colonies, Lord Derby. The Imperial Government declined the
+offer.
+
+On the 7th of February, 1885, on hearing the news of the disaster of
+Khartoum, which caused great excitement in England, and naturally
+created a strong public feeling to avenge the outrage, General Laurie,
+always enthusiastic, tendered anew his services. He was not the only
+Canadian officer wishing to go and fight the cruel Soudaneses. A member
+of the Canadian Parliament, Colonel Williams, commanding the 46th
+volunteer battalion of Durham-East, also desired to take part in the
+African campaign with his regiment. On the 9th of February, 1885, he
+tendered his proposition to Sir Charles Tupper, then High Commissioner
+in London, who sent it to the Colonial Office.
+
+On the 10th of February, His Excellency the Governor General, Lord
+Lansdowne, cabled to the Colonial Secretary that the offers of military
+service were very numerous. This spontaneous movement, so rapidly
+spreading, was the forerunner of those of 1899 and 1914. Thirty years
+ago, and long before, there were brave men in Canada. There always have
+been and ever will be.
+
+These news were no doubt very encouraging for the Imperial authorities.
+
+Lord Derby, thanking Lord Lansdowne, begged him to say "_Whether they_
+(the offers of service) _are sanctioned and recommended by the Dominion
+Government_."
+
+On the 12th of February, Lord Lansdowne answered Lord Derby that the
+Dominion Government was ready to approve recruiting in Canada for
+service in Egypt or elsewhere, provided that the men would be enlisted
+under the authority of the Imperial Army Discipline Act, and the expense
+paid by the Imperial Treasury.
+
+It consequently follows from the above despatches that the Soudanese
+campaign offered to many officers of our volunteer Militia the long
+wished for opportunity to freely tender their services to the Imperial
+Government; that the British authorities never applied to the Canadian
+Government, then presided by Sir John A. Macdonald, for armed support in
+Soudanese Africa; that, on being officially informed of the offers of
+service received by His Excellency the Governor General, the Colonial
+Secretary, before accepting or declining them, enquired if the Canadian
+Government sanctioned and recommended them; that the Governor General
+answered him in the affirmative, the recruiting to be made according to
+the Imperial Military Act at the expense of the Imperial exchequer.
+
+On the 16th of February, the War Minister, then the Marquis of
+Hartington, informed the Colonial Secretary that he had come to the
+conclusion to decline with thanks the offers of service from Canada, for
+the reason that it would have taken too long a time to recruit and
+organize the regiments offered by General Laurie and Colonel Williams.
+
+Was I not right, when I refuted Mr. Bourassa's assertion, in saying that
+if a _refusal_ was _then_ given, it was by the British Government who
+had received the freely tendered services, and not by the Canadian
+Government, to whom no demand of armed support had been made by Great
+Britain?
+
+If it is indeed very astonishing that Mr. Bourassa should have taken the
+responsibility to affirm that the Government of Sir John A. Macdonald
+had refused to help Great Britain in the Soudanese campaign, it is easy
+to understand his object in so doing. His purpose was to convince his
+French Canadian readers that the political leaders at the head of the
+Government, in 1899 and 1914, together with the Canadian Parliament,
+had, in a revolutionary way, reversed the traditional policy of Canada
+of non-intervention in the "wars of the Empire"--_les guerres de
+l'empire_. And to achieve his end, so detrimental to the best interests
+of the Dominion, he did not hesitate to draw an absolutely erroneous
+conclusion from undeniable historical facts.
+
+The "Nationalist" leader was very anxious to charge the chieftains of
+the two great political parties with an equal responsibility for what he
+terms a "Revolution" in our relations with the Mother Country. With this
+object constantly in view, he pretended that the intervention of Canada
+in the South African War created the precedent which brought about the
+Dominion participation in the European war, in 1914. In order to stir up
+to the utmost the prejudices of the French Canadians, he boldly
+qualified the South African conflict as an _infamous crime_ on the part
+of England.
+
+Unfortunately, the true history of the difficulties which culminated in
+the Boer War of 1899, was at the time little known throughout Canada,
+and even less particularly in the Province of Quebec. At the outbreak of
+the struggle, wishing to form a sound opinion of the causes of which it
+was the direct outcome, I made an exhaustive study of the South African
+question, beginning at the very inception of the Dutch settlement dating
+as far back as 1652, the year during which the Dutch East India Company
+occupied Table Bay. Six years later, in 1658, French Huguenots reached
+South Africa, joining with the Dutch Reformists, who rather
+energetically did all they could to assimilate them. Still later on,
+besides some few German immigrants, a third group of Europeans settled
+on the African coast. They were Englishmen.
+
+All the Europeans, on landing in South Africa, few in numbers, had at
+once to contend with the black race numbering many millions. The history
+of the long struggle between European civilization, represented by the
+English and Dutch immigrants, and African barbarity, is indeed very
+interesting. Carefully read and studied in all its bearings, it strongly
+impressed upon my mind the conviction that had it not been for the
+timely armed protection they often solicited and received from England,
+the Dutch Boers would certainly have been annihilated by the tribes of
+the black race. They could not hope to successfully resist the
+onslaughts to which they were repeatedly submitted. They were saved from
+utter destruction by the strong arm of Great Britain, occupying an
+important strategical position by her Cape Colony. The British
+Government had favoured the settlement of the sons of England in South
+Africa, for the purpose of assuring, by a powerful naval station, the
+freedom of communication with the great regions soon to develop into her
+vast Indian Empire.
+
+How, and under what circumstances, was British Sovereignty established
+in South Africa? I considered this question the most important to
+ascertain, in order to judge fairly the history of the last century in
+those regions. It was settled by the Peace Congress of Vienna, in 1815.
+All the European nations represented at that congress, have sanctioned
+British Sovereignty in South Africa upon the condition of the payment by
+England to the Kingdom of the Netherlands, of which Holland was then a
+part, of the sum of $30,000,000. Consequently the Sovereign Rights of
+Great Britain in South Africa were henceforth undeniable.
+
+In my French book, I somewhat extensively summarized the development of
+the British and Dutch groups of settlers in South Africa. It is well
+known that the Boers are of Dutch origin. That a rivalry did develop
+between the two national elements, is not to be wondered at by any one
+having some knowledge of the history of the world.
+
+I do not consider it necessary to go at any length in relating the
+vicissitudes of the conflict between the aspirations of the Boer element
+and the undoubted rights of British suzerainty. As a rule they are
+sufficiently well known by my English readers.
+
+But I wish to emphasize the two undeniable facts: first, that throughout
+this protracted contest, England did perseveringly try to favour South
+Africa with the largest possible measure of political liberty. Second,
+that the crisis was finally brought about by the persistent
+determination of the Government of Pretoria to refuse justice to the
+Uitlanders and to the British capitalists who, at the urgent request of
+President Kruger, had invested many millions in the development of the
+very valuable mines recently discovered in the Transvaal territory.
+
+Though England had agreed to the establishment of the two Republics of
+the Transvaal and Orange, she had maintained her suzerainty on those
+territories, which suzerainty the Government of Pretoria had again
+recognized by the Convention of 1884.
+
+The most convincing proof that England did not intend any unfair design
+against the South African Republics, is the fact that she did not
+prepare to resist the armed attack of the Government of Pretoria which
+could be easily foreseen by the intense organization they were evidently
+making to impose Boer supremacy in South Africa.
+
+In his very unjust appreciation of the policy of Great Britain in South
+Africa, Mr. Bourassa kept no account whatever of the very important
+fact that war was declared against England by the South African
+Republic. How could Great Britain have been guilty of a hideous crime in
+not bowing to the dictate of President Kruger and his Government, as the
+"Nationalist" leader said, is beyond comprehension.
+
+England was absolutely within her right in accepting the challenge of
+the Government of Pretoria, and fighting to maintain her flag and her
+Sovereignty in South Africa.
+
+Fortunately, the South African War, characterized by deeds of heroism on
+both sides, has had the most satisfactory conclusion. It is to be hoped
+that for many long years the future of that great country is settled
+with all the blessings that political liberty and free institutions will
+surely confer on that important part of the British Empire. The Boers
+themselves have fully recognized that their own national development
+cannot be better guaranteed and safeguarded than by the powerful
+Sovereignty pledged to their protection, on the only condition of their
+loyal allegiance to the flag waving on the fair land where they can
+multiply in peace, prosperity and happiness. The enthusiasm and the
+admirable courage with which they have rallied to the support of Great
+Britain and her Allies in the present war, is the best evidence how much
+they appreciate the advantages of their new conditions in the great
+South African Dominion destined to such a grand future.
+
+I most sincerely deplore the persistent efforts of the "Nationalist"
+leader to pervert more and more the mind of my French Canadian
+countrymen by his so very unfair appreciation of the nature of the South
+African conflict. It was with the hope of counteracting them that I
+introduced a special chapter in my French edition explaining, as fully
+as I could, though in a condensed form, the South African question.
+
+The assertion that the participation of Canada in the present European
+war was the sequence of the precedent of our intervention in the South
+African struggle, is also most injustifiable and untenable. Had Canada
+taken no part whatever in the South African War, it would not have made
+the least difference with regard to the decision of the Canadian people
+to support Great Britain and the Allies in their gigantic effort to put
+an end to Prussian terrorism. The assertion which I most emphatically
+contradict could have no other object but to prejudice the public mind
+against Canadian intervention in any of the wars of the Empire--_les
+guerres de l'empire_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+BRITISH AND GERMAN ASPIRATIONS COMPARED.
+
+
+In the attempt to justify his opposition to the Canadian armed support
+of the Allies' cause, Mr. Bourassa repeatedly asserted that Great
+Britain was as much as Germany aspiring to rule the whole world. He
+pretends that there is no difference between Anglo-Saxonism and
+Germanism.
+
+How unjust and dangerous is such a doctrine is evident to any fair
+minded man. It was no doubt calculated to prejudice the French Canadians
+against Great Britain, by telling them that the sacrifices they were
+called upon to make were imposed upon them only to favour the British
+determination to reach the goal of her ambition:--universal domination.
+
+I strongly repudiated such assertions and vindicated England's course
+and policy.
+
+To accuse Great Britain to aspire to universal domination is a most
+unwarranted charge, contradicted by the whole history of the last
+century during which she was the most determined supporter of peace.
+
+Though one of the great Powers of the world, England never undertook to
+organize a large standing army. How could she aspire to the world's
+domination without a complete military organization comprising many
+millions of men, is what I am unable to understand.
+
+Mr. Bourassa's argument to prove his assertion is based on the efforts
+of England to maintain and develop her naval forces so as to guarantee
+her supremacy on the high seas of the world. How he failed to realize
+that Great Britain, on account of her insular position, close to the
+European continent, is by nature itself bound, of sheer necessity, to
+protect herself by the strength of her military naval power, is beyond
+comprehension. Supremacy on the seas is for the Mother Country a mere
+question of national existence,--to be or not to be. But supremacy on
+the seas cannot, and will never, permit England to attain anything like
+universal domination. And why? For the obvious reason that Great Britain
+is not, and never can become, a continental Power, in the exact sense of
+the word.
+
+I explained, conclusively, I believe, that the case would be very
+different if Germany succeeded in her efforts to supplant England's
+supremacy on the seas. When the Berlin Government undertook to build a
+huge military fleet, Germany was the greatest continental military
+Power. What were her expectations when she adopted that threatening
+naval policy? The Berlin authorities were very confident that when they
+would decide to bring on the great war for which they had been
+strenuously preparing for half a century, they would in a few months
+have continental Europe at their feet and under their sway. Triumphant
+over Europe they would have at once dominated Asia and a great part of
+Africa. The next surest way for the German Empire to reach universal
+domination was to break England's power on the seas. What is impossible
+for England to accomplish, on account of her insular position, Germany,
+being a continental Empire, could achieve if she became mistress of the
+seas.
+
+The present war is the proof evident that the mighty power of England on
+the seas has been the salvation of her national existence and, almost
+equally, that of France and Italy. It kept the oceans open for the trade
+of all the Allied and neutral nations. He is willingly blind,
+intellectually, the man who does not see that deprived of the matchless
+protection of her naval forces, Great Britain could be starved and
+subdued in a few months by an enemy ruling the waves against her.
+
+Is it possible to suppose that any man aspiring to help moulding the
+public opinion of his countrymen, ignores that with the relatively small
+extent of the territory it can devote to agricultural production, Great
+Britain can never feed her actual population of over forty-five
+millions, most likely to reach sixty millions in the not very distant
+future. Consequently how unjust, how extravagant, is it to accuse
+England of any aspiration to dominate the world by means of the
+sacrifices she is absolutely bound to make for the only sake of her
+self-defence, her self-protection.
+
+If he does not know, I will no doubt cordially oblige the "Nationalist"
+leader by informing him that Great Britain, usually importing food
+products to the amount of seven to eight hundred millions of dollars,
+for many years past, required as much as a billion dollars worth of them
+in the war year of 1915. It is so easy to foresee that the continual
+increase of the population of the United Kingdom, by the new large
+developments which will surely follow the war in all industrial,
+commercial and financial pursuits, will cause a relative increase in the
+importations of food products likely to reach, and even exceed before
+long, an average total annual value of a billion and a quarter dollars.
+
+None of the European continental Powers has the same imperious reasons
+as England to take the proper means to guarantee her control of the
+seas. How is it then that Germany is the only Power to object to
+England's policy, if it is not for the ultimate object to attain
+universal domination by the overthrow of Great Britain's ascendency on
+the wide oceans, which would permit her to realize her long cherished
+aim by the combined powerful effort of her gigantic military forces both
+on land and sea.
+
+With regard to England's naval supremacy, the "Nationalist" leader is
+also committed to other opinions which I strongly contradicted. He
+entirely forgets that beyond the sea coast limits, well defined by
+International Law, no Sovereign rights can be claimed on the high seas.
+The navigation of the ocean is free to all nations by nature itself. Has
+any Government ever entertained the foolish idea that the broad Atlantic
+could, for instance, be divided into so many parts as the European,
+Asiatic, or American continents, over which several States could
+exercise Sovereign powers? No Chinese Wall can be built on the seas.
+
+My own view of the case, which I believe to be the correct one, is that
+England's naval supremacy means nothing more nor less than the police of
+the seas, and the protection of the flags of all the Nations navigating
+them, besides being, of course and necessarily, the guarantee of her
+National existence.
+
+Blind also, intellectually, is the British subject not sufficiently
+inspired by the true sense of the duties of Loyalty, who does not
+understand that once Great Britain's maritime power would be crushed and
+the United Kingdom either conquered or obliged to an humiliating peace
+which would ruin all her future prospects, the Colonial Empire would
+equally be at the mercy of the victorious enemy of the Mother Country.
+
+With the most earnest conviction, I have tried, to the best of my
+ability, to persuade my French-Canadian compatriots of the inevitable
+dangers ahead if the false views which were so persistingly impressed
+upon their minds were ever to prevail, and the aim they undoubtedly
+favour to be realized.
+
+Another argument widely used by our "Nationalist" School to influence
+the opinion of the French Canadians against Canada's participation in
+the war, was that Great Britain herself was not doing what she ought to
+win the victory. I have personally heard this false objection repeated
+by many--unconsciously of course--who were influenced in so saying by
+the "Nationalist" press.
+
+No more unfair charge could have been made against England. I could not
+help being indignant at reading it, knowing as I did, by daily acquired
+information what an immense effort the United Kingdom had been making,
+from the very beginning of the hostilities, to play its powerful part in
+the great war into which it had nobly decided to enter to avenge its
+honour, to defend the Empire and the whole world against German
+barbarous militarism.
+
+I have already commented on the immense service guaranteed to the Allied
+nations by the British fleet. To illustrate the wonderful and admirable
+military effort of Great Britain, I will quote some very important
+figures from the most interesting Report of the British War Cabinet, for
+the year 1917, presented to Parliament by Command of His Majesty.
+
+Under the title "_Construction and Supply_" the Report says:--
+
+ During the past year the Naval Service has undergone continual
+ expansion in order to enable it to meet every demand made upon
+ it, not only in the seas surrounding these islands, but in the
+ Mediterranean, the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, the Arctic Ocean,
+ the Pacific, and the Atlantic, where it has co-operated with the
+ Naval forces of the Allies. The displacement tonnage of the
+ Royal Navy in 1914 was 2,400,000 tons. To-day it has increased
+ by 75 per cent.--=(making a total of 4,200,000 tons--)=. The
+ ships and vessels of all kinds employed in the Naval Service in
+ September, 1914, after the whole of the mobilisation had been
+ completed, had a tonnage of just over 4 million; now the figure
+ is well over 6 million. Transports, fleet attendants and
+ overseas oilers and similar auxiliary vessels at the outbreak of
+ war numbered 23; the Admiralty to-day control nearly 700 such
+ craft. The strength of the personnel, which was 145,000, has
+ been increased to 420,000.
+
+ From these brief particulars regarding the ships and their
+ manning, an estimate can be formed of the expansions that have
+ been made in the auxiliary services, such as guns, torpedoes,
+ munitions, and stores of all kinds, anti-submarine apparatus,
+ mines, &c., and some idea is gained of the demands that have
+ been made upon the great army of workers on shore, the men in
+ the Royal dockyards and arsenals, in the shipyards, the engine
+ shops, and the factories, without whose help the Fleet could not
+ be maintained as a fighting force.
+
+ As regards warship and auxiliary ship construction, the output
+ during the last 12 months has been between three and four times
+ the average annual output for the few years preceding the war.
+
+ The Admiralty now control all the dry docks in the
+ country,...--250 merchant ships are being repaired each week,
+ either in dry dock or afloat.
+
+ Since the beginning of the war, 31,470 British war vessels have
+ been placed in dock or on the slips =(--as many as 225 being
+ repaired in one week--)=.... These figures do not include repair
+ work carried out to the vessels of our Allies....
+
+The Transport Service is of the highest importance in carrying on the
+war. What has been the achievement of England on that score? Under the
+title:--"_Transportation_" the War Cabinet Report proves its immensity
+as follows:--
+
+ The record of what has been done by the transport services for
+ the Armies of the Allies shows a stupendous amount of work
+ accomplished, which constitutes one of the brilliant
+ achievements of the war. There had been transported overseas up
+ till the end of August, 1917, the last date for which complete
+ statistics are available--some:--13 million human
+ beings--combatants, wounded, medical personnel, refugees,
+ prisoners, &c.; 2 million horses and mules; ½ million vehicles;
+ 25 million tons of explosive and supplies for the armies; ... 51
+ million tons of coal and oil fuel for the use of our Fleets, our
+ Armies, and to meet the needs of our Allies.
+
+ The operations of the seas are on such a large scale that it is
+ difficult to realize all that is involved in sea transportation;
+ for example, over 7,000 personnel are transported, and more than
+ 30,000 tons of stores and supplies have to be imported daily
+ into France for the maintenance of our own army. About 567
+ steamers, of approximately 1¾ million tons, are continually
+ employed in the service of carrying troops and stores to the
+ Armies in France and to the forces in various theatres of war in
+ the East.
+
+We all know that the Berlin Government expected that the submarine
+campaign would result in an early final victory for the Central Empires.
+Herr von Bethmann Hollweg, then the Imperial Chancellor, said:--"_The
+Blockade must succeed within a limited number of weeks, within which
+America cannot effectively participate in the operations_."
+
+How he was mistaken, and extravagant were his expectations, events have
+proved. This sentence is also proof evident that he realized how
+effective the United States effort would become, if the submarine
+campaign did not succeed within a few weeks.
+
+The iniquitous submarine campaign, re-opened early in the year 1917,
+"_added materially to the responsibilities of the Navy. To meet this new
+and serious menace drastic steps had to be taken to supplement those
+adopted in the previous December and January_."
+
+The Report adds:--
+
+ A large number of new destroyers have been built and at the same
+ time auxiliary patrol services have been expanded enormously so
+ as to deal with the nefarious submarine and minelaying methods
+ of the enemy. Before the outbreak of the war there were under 20
+ vessels employed as minesweepers and on auxiliary patrol duties.
+ To-day the number of craft used for these purposes at home and
+ abroad is about 3,400, and is constantly increasing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A new feature of the means adopted for the protection of trade
+ against submarines has been a return to the convoy system as
+ practised in bygone wars. It has been markedly effective in
+ reducing the losses. During the last few months over 90 per
+ cent. of all vessels sailing in all the Atlantic trades were
+ convoyed....
+
+ The Royal Naval Air Service at the outbreak of war possessed a
+ personnel of under 800; at the present moment the numbers
+ approach 46,000 and are continually increasing.... Mention must
+ also be made of the great value of the air services in combating
+ the submarine menace round our coasts.... Illustrating their
+ extent it may be stated that in one week the aircraft patrol
+ round the British coasts alone flies 30,000 miles.
+
+ The general result of the German attack, therefore, though
+ serious enough, is far from unprecedented. In the two years
+ after Trafalgar, when our command of the sea was unquestioned,
+ we still lost 1,045 merchant ships by capture, and in the whole
+ period from 1794 to 1875 we lost over 10,000 merchant ships.
+
+ Nor should we lose sight of the very heavy losses sustained by
+ the enemy in the present war. At the commencement of
+ hostilities, Germany had 915 merchant ships abroad, of which
+ only 158 got home safely; the remainder within a few days were
+ cleared from the oceans, either captured or driven to shelter in
+ neutral ports. In the aggregate the German Mercantile Marine
+ consisted of over 5 million tons of shipping; at the present
+ time nearly half of this has been sunk or captured by ourselves
+ or our Allies, while the bulk of the rest is lying useless in
+ harbour.
+
+Let me now refer to the military effort of Great Britain. Under the
+title:--"_Strength of the Army," &c._, the War Cabinet Report gives the
+following most inspiring figures.
+
+ The effort which the British nations have made under the one
+ item of "Provision of Men for the Armed Forces of the Crown"
+ amounts to not less than 7,500,000 men, and of these 60.4 per
+ cent. have been contributed by England, 8.3 per cent. by
+ Scotland, 3.7 per cent. by Wales, 2.3 per cent. by Ireland, 1.2
+ per cent. by the Dominions and the Colonies, while the
+ remainder, 13.3 per cent., composed of native fighting troops,
+ labour corps, carriers, &c., represent the splendid contribution
+ made by India and our various African and other Dependencies.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Royal Artillery.=--The personnel of the Royal Artillery
+ increased 17.6 per cent., between August, 1916, and August,
+ 1917.
+
+ In the first nine months of 1917 the supply of modern
+ anti-aircraft guns in the field increased 44 per cent., that of
+ field guns 17 per cent., of field-howitzers 26 per cent., of
+ heavy guns 40 per cent., of medium howitzers 104 per cent., of
+ heavy howitzers 16 per cent., and of heavy-guns on railway
+ mountings 100 per cent.; these last have an increased range of
+ about 35 per cent.... We have also supplied large numbers of
+ heavy guns and trench mortars to our Allies in different
+ theatres of war.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The Medical Service has continued to expand with the growth of
+ the Army and its strength is now largely in excess of our whole
+ original Expeditionary Force.... More than 17,000 women are
+ employed as nurses and over 28,000 others are engaged in
+ military hospitals on various forms of work.... Hospitals in the
+ United Kingdom now number more than 2,000.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The health of the troops in the United Kingdom is actually
+ better than the peace rate; the same is the case in France,
+ excluding admissions to hospital by reason of wounds.
+
+The above quoted figures prove that out of a total of 7,500,000 men for
+the Armed Forces of the British Crown, Great Britain--the United
+Kingdom--had contributed, at the end of last year, 5,625,000, out of
+which number the shore of England and Wales amounted to 4,800,000. The
+British Colonial Empire's contribution had been 1,875,000.
+
+At the date of the current year--August, 1918--I am writing, I can
+safely calculate that the number of men for the Armed Forces of the
+British Crown--using the words of the Official Report above quoted--has
+reached, at least, _the grand and magnificent total of 8,000,000_. The
+percentage of respective contributions of the United Kingdom and the
+Colonial Empire no doubt remaining the same, the relative number of each
+of them is,--for the United Kingdom 6,000,000; for the Colonies
+2,000,000.
+
+I consider the War Cabinet Report of 1917 so interesting, so
+encouraging, that my readers will, I am confident, kindly bear with me
+in a few more very important quotations, the full Report itself having
+had only a very limited circulation in Canada.
+
+
+TRANSPORT.
+
+In addition to the prodigious Naval effort of England, both military and
+mercantile, previously illustrated, Great Britain has most powerfully
+contributed to the fighting operations on land by an immense improvement
+in transportation facilities by railway construction in all British
+theatres of war.
+
+The Report says:--
+
+ In all these theatres railways have come to play a more and more
+ important part. In France a vast light railway system has been
+ created, involving the supply during the present year of
+ approximately 1,700 miles of track and the whole of the
+ equipment.... Exclusive of these light railway systems, the
+ total amount of permanent railway track supplied complete to all
+ theatres of war is about 3,600 miles. In Egypt the railway
+ crossing the desert from the Suez Canal has now reached and
+ passed Gaza. In Mesopotamia the rapid and successful movements
+ of our troops have only been made possible by the construction
+ of a whole series of lines since the beginning of 1917. The
+ development of road-building has been on a similar scale, and
+ the shipments of material, equipment and stores for these two
+ purposes during the last nine months have averaged 200,000 tons
+ a month. Much labour has also been spent in the organisation of
+ an Overland Line of Communication through France and Italy to
+ the Mediterranean in order to save shipping. This line was
+ opened for personnel traffic in June, 1917, and for goods
+ traffic early in August.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ In France the conveyance of supplies of all kinds to our armies
+ along the French rivers and canals is performed by a large fleet
+ of tugs, barges, and self-propelled barges. The fleet thus
+ employed in France consists of over 700 vessels, and the tonnage
+ carried by it averages over 50,000 tons per week.
+
+
+THE AIR SERVICE.
+
+In a recital indicating generally what steps have been taken in matters
+of administration and control, the Report says:--
+
+ From the point of view of defence, the new arm presented
+ problems pregnant with at least equal importance. The proud and
+ ancient inviolability of these islands was being challenged in a
+ new and startling fashion, and the seriousness of the problem
+ was added to by the fact that the geographical position of the
+ capital of the Empire rendered it particularly inviting to
+ attack from the air.
+
+Respecting the supply of Aircraft, the Report says that:--
+
+ In endeavoring to describe the measures taken to meet the
+ aircraft needs of the Navy and Army, the writer is at once
+ confronted by the fact that the information desired by the
+ country is precisely the information desired by the enemy. What
+ the country wants to know is what has been the expansion in our
+ Air Services; whether we have met and are meeting all the
+ demands of the Navy and of the Army, both for replacement of
+ obsolete machines by the most modern types, and for the increase
+ of our fighting strength in the air; what proportion of the
+ national resources in men, material and factories is being
+ devoted to aviation; what the expansion is likely to be in the
+ future. These are precisely the facts which we should like to
+ know with regard to the German air service, and for that reason
+ it would be inadmissible for us to supply Germany with
+ corresponding information about ourselves by publishing a
+ statement on the subject.
+
+ It can be said that the expansion of our Air Services is keeping
+ pace generally with the growing needs of the Navy and the Army.
+
+In Chapter VIII, under the heading:--"_The Ministry of Munitions in
+1917_," the following is read:--
+
+ The number of persons engaged in the production of munitions in
+ October, 1917, was 2,022,000 men and 704,000 women, as compared
+ with 1,921,000 men and 535,000 women in January. They have thus
+ been increased during the past six months at the rate of 11,000
+ men and 19,000 women per month. These numbers include those
+ employed in Government and in private establishments, in the
+ principal munition industries, chemical and explosive trades,
+ engineering and munition plants, furnaces and foundries, in
+ shipbuilding and in mining other than coal-mining. The total
+ represents approximately two-thirds of the total labour occupied
+ on Government work in industry.
+
+The preceding official statistics prove most conclusively that actually,
+and ever since the beginning of the third year of the war, more than
+_twelve millions_ of men and women--more than the fourth of the total
+population of the United Kingdom--have been either in the Armed Forces
+of the British Crown--Navy and Army--or in the shipbuilding yards, in
+munitions factories, in transportation on land and sea, in the Medical
+Service, in the Air Service, &c., employed for the success of the cause
+of the Allies.
+
+
+THE FINANCIAL EFFORT OF GREAT BRITAIN.
+
+The gigantic military effort of Great Britain, in all the branches of
+its wonderfully developed organization, as above illustrated, was only
+rendered possible by a corresponding financial contribution.
+
+During the financial year preceding the outbreak of the war, the total
+expenditure of the Government of Great Britain was $987,464,845. The
+hostilities have imposed upon the United Kingdom vast expenditures. "For
+that period"--again quoting the War Cabinet Report--"from the 1st April,
+1917, to the 1st December, 1917, the total Exchequer issues for
+expenditure (including Consolidated Fund Service and Supply Services)
+were £1,799,223,000,--($8,796,115,000) representing a daily average for
+that period of £7,344,000 ($36,720,000)."
+
+At this rate of expenditure, the total for the year equals at least
+$13,500,000,000. But the financial charges entailed by the war being
+constantly on the increase, they can be calculated at a daily average of
+no less than $40,000,000 until the close of the conflict.
+
+England has not only incurred very heavy financial obligations, met both
+by an enormously increased taxation and the issue of large National
+loans, to pay the cost of her own war expenditure, but she has also
+generously helped her friends whose financial resources were not so
+abundant as her own. To the 1st December, 1917, she had made advances to
+the Allies amounting to no less than $5,930,000,000. In addition to this
+large amount, the advances she had made to the Dominions for the same
+period summed up $875,000,000.
+
+
+ACHIEVEMENTS OF DOMINION, COLONIAL AND INDIAN TROOPS.
+
+Under the above title, the War Cabinet Report concludes a general review
+of the past year's effort by paying high tribute to the value of the
+services rendered by the whole British Colonial Empire, in the following
+elogious terms:--
+
+ In the above sketch of military operations during the past year,
+ it has not been possible to distinguish between the particular
+ services rendered by the various nations and nationalities of
+ the Empire. But it must not be forgotten that during the war the
+ forces of the Crown have become welded into a true Imperial
+ army, representative of every part of the world-wide British
+ Commonwealth, and a brief note may be included as to the special
+ services of the various overseas forces.
+
+ The share of the Australian, New Zealand, Canadian, South
+ African and Newfoundland contingents in the successes of the
+ 1917 campaign are well known. The capture of Vimy Ridge in
+ April, the prolonged and bitter fighting around Lens during the
+ whole summer and autumn, and the capture of Passchendaele were
+ carried out by the Canadian Corps, which has thus proved itself
+ as excellent in offensive as its splendid defence of Ypres in
+ 1915 had shown it to be in defensive fighting. The New Zealand
+ and Australian contingents have corresponding achievements to
+ their credit in their share of the battle of Messines and in the
+ long sustained and bitterly contested fights in the Ypres
+ salient from July to November. The South African brigade
+ sustained the brilliant reputation which it won last year at
+ Delville Wood by the devoted services it rendered on the
+ battlefields of Arras and Ypres. Finally, the Newfoundland
+ Regiment took a glorious and costly part in the same two
+ battles. The troops of all the Dominions have shown themselves
+ throughout the campaign of 1917 to have maintained the historic
+ standards of the British Army and have been worthy rivals of the
+ United Kingdom troops in every military effort and achievement.
+
+ This testimony to the services rendered by the Dominions would
+ not be complete without some reference to the part played by
+ South Africa in German East Africa, where her troops have borne,
+ under the brilliant leadership of General Van Deventer, a
+ conspicuous share in a peculiarly arduous campaign.
+
+ The smaller Colonies and Protectorates have naturally been
+ unable to play so great and conspicuous a part in the World War,
+ but in their own spheres they have contributed their full share
+ to the military effort of the Empire. Labour and fighting troops
+ were freely drawn upon for the Mesopotamian and East African
+ theatres. West Africa, British East Africa, Uganda, Nyasaland
+ and Rhodesia have all sent contingents to fight in German East
+ Africa. 16,000 men from the West Indies have been sent across
+ the Atlantic; and labour corps from the Eastern Colonies have
+ been sent to the Mesopotamian and East African fronts, and,
+ despite unfavourable conditions, to the Western theatre. A large
+ number of individuals from overseas possessions, such as the
+ Malay States and Hong Kong, have also joined the Imperial
+ forces.
+
+ Finally, India's contribution, both in man-power, material and
+ money, has steadily increased throughout the year. India has
+ taken a very important share in the victorious campaign in
+ Mesopotamia. The great majority of the troops in this theatre of
+ war are Indian. They have fully sustained the high reputation of
+ the Indian Army for gallantry and endurance. India has been
+ responsible for much of the supply, medical and transportation
+ system by water and on land. Indian forces have also rendered
+ conspicuous service in France, Egypt and East Africa. The
+ question of the supply of officers, especially medical officers,
+ has been solved; commissions have been granted to Indians, and a
+ voluntary Indian Defence Force is now being organised and
+ trained. Special mention should be made of the loyal and
+ effective assistance of the Indian ruling princes and chiefs,
+ from the smallest to the greatest.
+
+The Indian Government has moreover generously contributed $500,000,000
+towards the cost of the war.
+
+The foregoing quotations of official figures, of facts undeniable, of
+achievements really most extraordinary, constitute the unanswerable
+refutation, complete and crushing, of the Nationalist charge that
+England, while not doing her own duty with regard to the war, was using
+undue influence to coerce the British Colonies to participate in the
+conflict far beyond the fair proportionate effort to be expected on
+their part; that an illegitimate pressure of Great Britain's Government
+on her Colonies was being practised, as insidiously alleged, to promote
+her Imperialist ambition of the World's ascendency.
+
+Unfortunately, those false and most unjust notions had taken deeper root
+in many minds, even in some who should have been much above such an
+unfair misconception, than was at first supposed. Hence the importance
+of setting the matter right, and the necessity of proving that England's
+war achievements, in every branch of the Military Service, were far
+exceeding what had, at first, been expected of her, and was ever
+considered possible. British pluck and manliness were equal to the
+direst emergency that ever called them forth. Patriotism, courage,
+determination, perseverance, rising superior to any increased
+difficulties, have truly worked miracles of manly efforts and
+self-sacrifices inspired by the noble cause which brought Great Britain
+in the World's struggle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE VERITABLE AIMS OF THE ALLIES.
+
+
+After doing their utmost to persuade the French Canadians that the
+Allies, more especially England and Russia, were equally responsible for
+the war, together with Germany and Austria, our "Nationalist" leaders
+moreover asserted that they were hostile to a just and lasting peace on
+account of their unfair claims. In support of their pretension, they
+repeatedly affirmed that the Allies were pledged to the complete
+destruction of the German Empire. No more unfounded charge could be made
+against the Nations suddenly challenged to a gigantic struggle for life
+or death.
+
+It was very important to protect my French Canadian countrymen against
+views which, if not proved to be absolutely wrong, were calculated to
+bias their mind against the Allies. With this patriotic object strongly
+impressed upon my mind, I fully explained what were the veritable aims
+of Great Britain, France, Russia and Italy, in fighting their deadly
+enemy. When I issued my French book, the United States had not then
+entered the contest. Their declaration of war against Germany, in the
+spring of 1917, after the outrage of the sinking of the Lusitania, and
+the numerous criminal provocations of the submarine campaign, clearly
+emphasized, once more, what the Allies had been strenuously struggling
+for from the outbreak of the hostilities. They had taken up the gauntlet
+savagely thrown to them, declaring to the world that they would battle
+to the last to put an end to German militarism, always threatening
+general peace, to protect the small nations, notably Belgium and Servia,
+against the onslaught of mighty and tyrannical conquerors, to save
+Humanity, Civilization and Freedom from the crushing ascendency of
+autocratic rule. The great American Republic rallied with them to the
+defence of this most sacred cause. Need I refer to the numerous and
+eloquent messages of President Wilson, to the writings of the American
+press, and to the declarations of all the leading public men of the
+United States, in both Houses of Congress, or before public meetings, in
+support of the contention which was proved beyond controversy for all
+fair minded men.
+
+Mr. Bourassa, whether from sheer misconception, or blindly carried away
+by incomprehensible German sympathies, having their root in his
+prejudiced hostility to England, could see no difference between a war
+policy aiming at putting an end to Prussian militarism, and one having
+for its object the dismemberment of the German Empire. Nor could he
+conceive that fighting for human liberty was a nobler purpose than
+struggling for autocratic tyranny. Though ever posing as the champion
+of the small nationalities, he would not utter a word of sympathy for
+martyred Belgium, barbarously conquered Servia, oppressed Poland, since
+the beginning of the war.
+
+The great conflict once begun under so terrific conditions, every one
+somewhat posted with the immense resources of the belligerents, their
+respective warlike spirit and enduring qualities, could easily foresee
+that, unfortunately, it was most likely to last for several years, the
+contending parties being so far apart in their respective aspirations.
+Elated beyond all reason by her triumph over France, in 1870, which had
+for its first very important result the final creation of the German
+Empire, proclaimed to the world from Versailles,--the bleeding heart of
+her vanquished foe,--the new great Power, dominating Central Europe,
+lost no time in setting all its energies to the task of perfecting the
+most gigantic military organization ever seen. To all clear sighted men,
+Germany could not be supposed to accept the heavy sacrifices required
+for such an end with the sole purpose of maintaining peace. Further
+conquests were evidently her inspiring aim.
+
+Who can forget how Humanity was staggered by the rapidity of the
+onslaught of the Teutonic hordes let loose against nations whose
+greatest wish was to keep the peace of the world? In a sudden rush, the
+waves of the torrent overran Belgium and Northern France dashing direct
+towards Paris.
+
+The wonderful plan of campaign, so scientifically conceived and matured,
+could then be understood as it was boldly and powerfully developed. The
+Berlin military staff, knowing that France was not sufficiently prepared
+for the struggle, that England, if forced to intervene in honour bound,
+by the criminal violation of Belgium's neutrality, would require a
+couple of years to organize an army of millions of men, decided to
+strike the first blow with such an overpowering strength as to conquer
+Belgium in a victorious run and crush France out of the fight. A couple
+of months were to be sufficient to that most coveted end. Meantime
+Austria was to face and resist the Russian attack, to allow Germany the
+necessary time to settle victoriously the western part of the campaign,
+so cleverly planned and successfully carried out, before transferring
+her glorious legions to the Eastern theatre of the war. Russia was not
+supposed to be able to properly organize her armies in less than many
+months, when it could no longer expect to triumph over the enthusiastic
+Huns.
+
+In the depressing darkness of those anxious days, the great Marne
+victory came like the brilliant sun piercing the heavy clouds, pledging
+final success as the reward of the persevering courage and heroism to be
+long displayed to deserve it. Germany's first dream of conquering
+universal domination by military operations even overshadowing those of
+the illustrious Napoleonic Era, and of Cæsar's marvellously laid deep
+foundations of Roman grandeur, was shattered to pieces.
+
+Before the Teutonic armies could be reorganized for another great
+offensive, England's forces and those of her Colonies would be in a
+position to enter the struggle; France's resources would be brought to
+bear with all their strength; Italy would break away from the Central
+Empires and heartily join the Allies.
+
+Then the conflict turned to that weary trench fighting which to the
+sadness of its trials added new evidence of the inevitable lengthening
+of the war. No wonder that the longing for peace was intensified under
+the pressure of conditions becoming more and more trying. Without doubt
+all true friends of human prosperity and happiness, in their limited
+possible worldly measure, were fervently praying to God in favour of the
+restoration of harmony between the warring Nations. But they saw with
+undeniable clearness that there were two essential--sine qua
+non--conditions to the peace of the future. To be of any value it must
+be _Just_ and _Durable_. If it could become permanent, much more the
+better.
+
+Unfortunately, outside the legions of the true friends of an honourable
+peace, there were found, in the Allied countries, faint hearted men
+getting tired of the worries and sacrifices consequent upon the
+prolonged struggle. The moment they began to show their hands, was the
+signal for the ultra Revolutionists of Russia, finally organized into
+the disastrous bolshevikism, for the paid traitors of France, for the
+disloyal elements of the British Empire, to rally around them to set in
+motion, with accrued force, a current of opinion clamouring for peace
+almost at any price. To quiet this unpatriotic longing of the
+disheartened, the political leaders of the Allies publicly explained
+their war aims, positively affirming that their objective was that _Just
+and Durable_ peace to which alone they could and would agree.
+
+Canada had also her _pacifist_ element. So far as the French Canadians
+were concerned, it was, though small in numbers, almost entirely
+recruited in the ranks of the supporters of "_Nationalism_." I feel I
+must explain that our "_Nationalism_," as it has been repeatedly
+propounded, does not in the least represent the sound views of the very
+large majority of my French Canadian countrymen.
+
+As was to be expected, Mr. Bourassa was again the outspoken organ of our
+French Canadian _pacifists_. He laid great stress on what he gave out as
+a fact: that if peace negotiations were not at once entered upon and
+brought to a successful conclusion, it was on account of the Allies'
+unreasonable claims, pointing especially to England's determination not
+to surrender her supremacy on the high seas, to develop more and more
+what he termed her _imperialism_ for the purpose of dominating the world
+_economically_.
+
+In my French work, I strongly took issue with the views of our
+_pacifists_ as expressed by their leader and their press. Addressing my
+French Canadian countrymen on the bounden duties of all loyal British
+subjects, it was my ardent purpose to tell them the plain truth.
+Writing, as I did, in 1916, I was then, as I had been from the very
+beginning, firmly convinced that the conflict would be of long duration,
+that it was very wrong--even criminal if disloyally inspired--for any
+one to delude them by vain hopes, or deceive them by false charges.
+
+Having some knowledge of military strategy and tactics, I saw with the
+clear light of noon day that, despite the gigantic efforts put forth by
+the Allies, and the admirable heroism of their armies--our Canadian
+force brilliantly playing its part--final victory would be attained only
+by indomitable perseverance, both of the millions of fighting men and of
+the whole Allied nations backing them to the last with their moral and
+material support. That profound conviction of mine I was very anxious to
+strongly impress on the minds of my French-Canadian readers, imploring
+them not to be carried away by the "Nationalist" erroneous pretentions
+that peace could easily be obtained, if the Allies would only agree to
+negotiate. I told them plainly, what was absolutely true, that the war
+aims of Germany were so well known and inadmissible that there was not
+the least shadow of hope that peace negotiations could lead to a
+reasonable understanding realizing the two imperious conditions of
+_Justice and Durability_ in a settlement to which all the Allies were
+in honour pledged. I explained to them that it was no use whatever to be
+deluded by expectations, however tempting they might appear, because
+under the then conditions of the military situation--time and events
+have since brought no favourable change but quite the reverse--there was
+not the slightest chance of an opening for a successful consideration of
+the questions to be debated and settled before the complete cessation of
+the conflict. There was only one conclusion to be drawn from the
+circumstances of the case, and, however sad to acknowledge, it was that
+the fight must be carried on to a final victorious issue, any weakening
+of determination and purpose being sure to bring about humiliating
+defeat.
+
+
+THE ONLY POSSIBLE PEACE CONDITIONS.
+
+Whenever representatives of the belligerents shall meet to negotiate for
+peace, there will of course be many questions of first class importance
+to consider and discuss. But the one which must overshadow any other and
+of necessity carry the day, is that peace must be restored under
+conditions that will, if not forever, at least for many long years,
+protect Humanity and Civilization against a recurrence of such a
+calamity as ambitious and cruel Germany has criminally imposed upon the
+world. I urged my French Canadian readers to consider seriously how
+peace due to a compromise, accepted out of sheer discouragement, would
+soon develop into a still more trying ordeal than the one Canada had
+willingly and deliberately undertaken to fight out with the Allies. I
+forcibly explained to them that if the present war did not result in an
+international agreement to put an end to the extravagant and ruinous
+militarism which, under Prussian terrorism, was proving to be the curse
+of almost the whole universe, all the sacrifices of so many millions of
+lives, heroically given, of untold sufferings, of so much treasures,
+would have been made in vain if Germany was allowed to continue a
+permanent menace to general tranquillity.
+
+It was a wonder to me that any one could fail to understand that an
+armed peace would be only a truce during which militarism would be
+spreading with increased vigour and strength. It was evident--and still
+daily becoming more and more so--that Germany would only consent to it
+with the determination to renew, on a still much larger scale, her
+military organization with the purpose of a more gigantic effort at
+universal domination.
+
+Then was it not plain that labouring under the inevitable necessity of
+such an international situation, the Allied nations,--the British Empire
+as much as France, the United States and Italy--would by force be
+obliged to make the sacrifices required to maintain their military
+systems in such a state of efficiency as to be always ready to face
+their ambitious foe with good prospects of success. Such being the
+undeniable case, I affirmed--I am sure with the best of reasons--that
+Great Britain could not return to her ante-war policy of the enlistment
+of only a small standing territorial army, trusting as formerly to her
+Naval strength for her defence and the safe maintenance of her prestige
+and power. Like all the continental nations, England would have to incur
+the very heavy cost of keeping millions of men always fully armed.
+
+I firmly told my French Canadian countrymen that it was no use deluding
+themselves with the "Nationalist" notion that peace being restored under
+the above mentioned circumstances, the British Colonies would not be
+called upon to share, with England, the burdens of the extensive
+military preparations necessitated for their own safety as well as for
+that of Great Britain and the whole Empire. The very reasons which had
+prompted Canada and all her sister Dominions to intervene in the present
+war, would surely induce them to cooperate with the Mother Country to
+maintain a highly and costly state of military preparedness in order to
+be ever ready for any critical emergency.
+
+Could it be believed that after the sad experience of the actual
+conflict, the Allied nations--Great Britain perhaps more than any
+other--would blindly once again run the risk of being caught napping and
+deceived by an unscrupulous and hypocritical enemy, unsufficiently
+prepared to at once rise in their might to fight for their very
+national existence and the safety of Mankind against tyrannical
+absolutism. If such abominable pages of History as those that for the
+last four years are written with the blood of millions of heroes
+defending Human Freedom were, by fear of new sacrifices, allowed to be
+repeated, shame would be on the supposed civilized world having fallen
+so low as to bow to the dictates of barbarism. Let all truly hearted men
+hope and pray that no such dark days shall again be the fearful lot of
+Humanity. Let them all resolve that if the world can at last emerge free
+from the present hurricane, they will not permit, out of weakness and
+despondency, the sweeping waves of teutonism to submerge Civilization
+and destroy the monuments of the work of centuries of the Christian Art.
+
+After showing the dark side of the picture, and what would be the
+fearful consequences of a German victory, or of an armed peace pending
+the renewal, with still much increased vigour and resources, of the
+conflict only suspended, I explained to my French Canadian readers the
+great advantages to be derived by all, Germany included, from the
+restoration of peace carrying with it the untold benefits to be derived
+from the cessation of extravagant military organization, yearly
+destroying the capital created by hard work and the saving of the
+millions of the working populations. If an international agreement could
+be arrived at by which militarism would be reduced to the requirements
+of the maintenance of interior order and the safeguarding of
+conventional peace amongst the Powers, then many long years of material
+prosperity, in all its diversity of beneficial development, would surely
+follow. Canada, like the other British Colonies, would not have to incur
+any very large expenditure for military purposes, devoting all her
+energies to the intelligent building of the grand future which her
+immense territorial resources would certainly make, not only possible,
+but sure.
+
+How much could material development be conducive to intellectual, moral
+and religious progress, if the Nations of the Earth would only sincerely
+and permanently abide by the Divine teachings of Christianity.
+
+Considering all the conditions of the military situation, at the end of
+the summer of 1916, I clearly perceived the imperious necessity of the
+Allies--Canada as well as all her associates--to fight to a finish. That
+duty I did my best to impress on the minds of the French Canadians.
+Events have since developed in many ways, but they all tend to
+strengthen the conviction that ultimate victory will only be the price
+of unshaken perseverance, of undaunted courage, of more patriotic
+sacrifices.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+JUST AND UNJUST WARS.
+
+
+In one of his pamphlets Mr. Bourassa favoured his readers with his views
+on the justice and injustice of war. He affirmed that a Government could
+rightly declare war only for the three following objects:--
+
+ 1.--For the defence of their own country.
+ 2.--To fulfill the obligations to which they are
+ in honour bound towards other nations.
+ 3.--To defend a weak nation unjustly attacked.
+
+I have no hesitation to acknowledge the soundness of those principles,
+as theoretically laid down. I took the "Nationalist" leader at his own
+word, wondering more than ever how he could refuse to admit the justice
+of the cause of the Allies.
+
+Looking at the case from the British standpoint, was it not clear as the
+brightest shining of the sun that England had gone to war against
+Germany for the three reasons assigned by Mr. Bourassa as those which
+alone can justify a Government entering a military struggle.
+
+Great Britain was by solemn treaties in honour bound to the defence of
+Belgium whose territory had been violated by Germany, the other party
+to those treaties which she threw to the winds contemptuously calling
+them "_scraps of paper_."
+
+Even outside of all treaty obligations, it was England's duty, according
+to the third principle enunciated by Mr. Bourassa as authorizing a just
+declaration of war, to rush to the defense of Belgium, a _"weak nation"
+most dastardly attacked by the then strongest military Power on earth_.
+
+The British Government, being responsible for the safety of the British
+Empire, would have been recreant to their most sacred duty, had they
+failed to see that if the German armies were freely allowed to overrun
+Belgium, to crush France and vanquish Russia, Great Britain and her
+Colonies, unprepared for any effective resistance as they would have
+been, had they remained the passive onlookers of the teutonic conquest
+of continental Europe, would have been the easy prey of the barbarous
+conquerors. Consequently, in accepting the bold challenge of the Berlin
+Government, that of England also did their duty for the defence of Great
+Britain and the British Empire.
+
+But the whole British Empire being at war with Germany for the three
+above enumerated causes combined, were the free autonomous Colonies of
+England not also in duty bound to help her in vindicating her honour and
+theirs, and to do their utmost to support the Mother Country in her
+efforts to oblige the Berlin Authorities to respect their treaty
+obligations! Were they not also in duty bound to participate with
+England in the defence of invaded weak, but heroic, Belgium! Were they
+not in duty bound to at once organize for their own defence, sending
+their heroic sons to fight their enemy on the soil of France, instead of
+waiting the direct attack upon their own territories!
+
+The British Parliament dealing exclusively with the Foreign Affairs of
+the Empire, the international treaties which they ratify are binding on
+the whole Empire. If such a treaty is violated by the other party or
+parties who signed it, violently obliging England to stand by her
+obligations, are not the Colonies also bound to uphold the Mother land
+in the vindication of her treaty rights?!
+
+Looking at the same question, in the full light of the sound principles
+of the justice of any war, from the German standpoint, what are the only
+true conclusions to be drawn? To satisfy Austria's unjust demands and
+maintain peace, Servia had, in 1914, at the urgent request of England,
+France and Russia, gone as far as any independent nation could go
+without dishonour. Not only backed, but no doubt inspired, by the Berlin
+Government, Austria would not consent to reduce by an iota her unfair
+pretentions against Servia.
+
+It was plainly a case of a great Power unjustly threatening a weak
+nation. Consequently, according to the "Nationalist" leader's
+principle, Russia was right and doing her duty in intervening to
+protect the menaced weak State. Instead of hypocritically resenting
+Russia's intervention in favour of Servia, it was equally Germany's duty
+to join with her to save this weak nation from Austrian unjust
+challenge. Had it done so, Austria would certainly have refrained from
+exacting from Servia concessions to which she could not agree without
+sacrificing her independent Sovereignty. The Vienna Authorities backing
+down from their unjust stand, there would have been no war. And Germany,
+together with Russia, would have deserved the gratitude of the world for
+their timely intervention, prompted by a clear sense of their duty and a
+sound conception of their international right.
+
+It is well known how the very opposite took place. Russia, to be ready
+for the emergency of the declaration of war by Austria against Servia,
+ordered the mobilization of that part of her army bordering on the
+Austrian frontier, answering to the Berlin request for explanations that
+she had no inimical intention whatever against the German Empire, that
+her only object was to protect weak Servia against Austria's most unjust
+attack. The Kaiser's government replied by requesting Russia to cancel
+her order for the mobilization of part of her army. And in the very
+thick of this diplomatic exchange of despatches, whilst England and
+France were sparing no effort, by day and night, to maintain peace and
+protect Mankind from the threatening calamity, Germany suddenly threw
+the gauntlet and declared war against Russia.
+
+Foreseeing clearly that France was consequently in honour bound to
+support Russia, in accordance with her international obligations towards
+that great Eastern Power--in strict conformity with the second principle
+enunciated by Mr. Bourassa and previously quoted--, Germany took the
+initiative of a second unjust declaration of war, and this one against
+France.
+
+The military operations against France being very difficult, and
+certainly to be very costly in a fearful loss of man-power, before the
+strongly fortified French frontier could be successfully overrun,
+Germany, after a most shameful attempt to bribe England into neutrality,
+decided to take the easy route and ordered her army to invade Belgium's
+neutral territory, in violation of her solemn treaty obligations. That
+treacherous act filled the cup of teutonic infamy, and brought Great
+Britain, and the whole British Empire, into the conflict.
+
+So Germany was guilty of the most outrageous violation of the three
+sound principles laid down by the "Nationalist" leader qualifying a just
+war against an iniquitous one, whilst England and France won the
+admiration of the world by their noble determination to stand by them at
+all cost.
+
+Still Mr. Bourassa, by an incomprehensible perversion of mind in judging
+the application of his own loudly proclaimed principles, has not to
+this day uttered one word openly condemning Germany's war policy and
+eulogizing that of England and France. On the contrary, he has tried to
+persuade his readers that both groups of belligerents were equally
+responsible for the war, more especially giving vent to his, at the
+least, very strange hostility to England and scarcely dissimulating his
+teutonic evident sympathies. He never positively expressed his
+disapproval of Austria's unjust attack against Servia, but condemned
+Russia for her intervention to protect that weak country, concluding
+that the Petrograd Government was the real guilty party which had thrown
+the world into the vortex of the most deadly conflict of all times.
+
+One of the most damaging and unfair arguments of Mr. Bourassa was that
+in intervening in the struggle, England was not actuated by a real
+sentiment of justice, honour and duty, but was merely using France as a
+shield for her own selfish protection. And when he deliberately
+expressed such astounding views, he knew, or ought to have known, that
+by her so commendable decision to avenge outraged weak Belgium, Great
+Britain had at once, by her command of the seas, guaranteed France
+against the superior strength of the German fleet, kept widely opened
+the great commercial avenues of oceanic trade, the closing of which by
+the combined sea power of the Central Empires, would have infallibly
+caused the crushing defeat of France by cutting off all the supplies
+she absolutely required to meet the terrible onslaught of her cruel
+enemy. He knew, or ought to have known, that the navigation of the seas
+being closed to her rivals by Germany, Russia would have been very
+easily put out of the fight, her only available ocean ports,
+Vladivostock and Arkhangel, through which supplies of many kinds,
+especially munitions, could reach her eastern coast, at once becoming of
+no service to her.
+
+He knew, or ought to have known, that if Great Britain had remained
+neutral, Japan, Italy, Portugal, would not have declared war against
+either Germany or Austria.
+
+As such consequences of British neutrality were as sure as the daily
+rising of the sun, was I not right when I drew the conclusion that if a
+shield there was, it was rather that of Great Britain covering France,
+all her allies and even the neutral nations, with the protection of her
+mighty sea power. With such a conviction, the soundness of which I felt
+sure, I told my French Canadian countrymen that, for one, I would, to my
+last day, be heartily grateful to England to have saved France from the
+crushing defeat which once more would have been her lot, had she been
+left alone to fight the Central Empires. Heroic, without doubt France
+would have been. But with deficient supplies, with much curtailed
+resources, with no helpful friends, heroism alone, however admirable and
+prolonged, was sure to be of no avail against an unmatched materially
+organized power, used to its most efficiency by the severest military
+discipline, by national fanaticism worked to fury, and by soldierly
+enthusiasm carried to wildness.
+
+In a single handed struggle with Germany, in 1914, France would have
+been in a far worse position than in 1870. The extraordinary development
+of the new German Empire--the outcome of the great war so disastrous to
+France--in population, in commerce, in manufacturing industry, in
+financial resources, in military organization, made her fighting power
+still more disproportionate. To her wonderful territorial army, she
+added her recently built military fleet, then much superior, in the
+number of vessels carrying thousands and thousands of skilled seamen, to
+the French one. Moreover Austria, with another fifty millions of people,
+Bulgaria and Turkey, with more than thirty millions, were backing
+Germany, whilst, in 1870, France had only Prussia to contend with.
+
+All those facts staring him like any one else, how could Mr. Bourassa
+reasonably charge Great Britain with using France merely as a tool for
+her own safety. Under the circumstances of the case, such a preposterous
+assertion is beyond human comprehension. I, for one, cannot understand
+how he failed to see that, had England been actuated by the selfish and
+unworthy motives to which he ascribes her intervention in the war, she
+could have then, and at least for several years, wrought from Germany
+almost all the concessions she would have wished for. Could it not, by
+an alliance with the Central Empires, have attained the goal of that
+dominating ambition which the "Nationalist" leader asserts to be her
+most cherished aim.
+
+But such a dishonourable policy England would not consider for a single
+moment. She indignantly refused Germany's outrageous proposals, stood by
+her treaty obligations, and resolutely threw all the immense resources
+of her power in the conflict which, at the very beginning, developed
+into a struggle for life and death between human freedom and absolutist
+tyranny.
+
+I am sure, and I do not hesitate to vouch for them, all the truly loyal
+French-Canadians--they are almost unanimously so--are like myself
+profoundly grateful to Great Britain for her noble decision to rush to
+the defense of Belgium and France in their hour of need. Comparing what
+took place with what might have been, moved by all the ties of affection
+that will ever bind them to the great and illustrious nation from which
+they sprung, they fully appreciate the inestimable value of the support
+given by their second mother-country to that of their national origin.
+They ardently pray that both of them will emerge victorious from the
+great conflict to remain, for the good of Mankind, indissolubly united
+in peace as they are in war.
+
+
+A "NATIONALIST" ILLOGICAL CHARGE AGAINST ENGLAND.
+
+Our Nationalists, after charging England with using France merely as a
+shield against Germany, have been illogical to the point of reproaching
+her for not having intervened in favour of her close neighbour, in 1870.
+It is most likely that, had she done so, they would have pretended that
+she would have been actuated by the same selfish sentiment that prompted
+her, for the only sake of her own protection, to enter into the present
+conflict.
+
+How is it that Mr. Bourassa, so fond of charging England with ambitious
+views of constant self-agrandizement, of worldly domination, can
+suddenly turn about and accuse her of having shamefully sacrificed
+France, in 1870, to the overpowering German blow?
+
+The circumstances of the two cases--1870 and 1914--were very different.
+The conflict of 1870 had, apparently at least, a dynastic cause. The
+House of Hohenzollern had been intriguing to have a Prussian prince of
+her own elevated to the Spanish Throne. The Imperial Government of
+Napoleon III strongly objected to such a policy. The diplomatic
+correspondence which ensued did not settle the difficulty. France
+declared war against Prussia. Many years later it was discovered that by
+a falsified diplomatic despatch, Bismark had succeeded in his satanic
+design to bring the government of Napoleon III to attack Prussia, thus
+shamefully throwing upon France the responsibility of the war.
+
+In 1870, England was at peace with all the European Powers, as she had
+ever been since 1815, with the only exception of the Crimean War. During
+the diplomatic correspondence that led to the hostilities, what reason
+would have justified England to break her neutrality? What would the
+present critics of her course have said if she had sided with Prussia?
+Would they have pretended that she would have used Prussia as a shield
+against France?
+
+I personally remember very well the tragic events of the terrible year,
+1870. The crushing military power of Prussia as proved by the triumphant
+march of her victorious armies, was a revelation for all, for France
+still more than for others. True Prussia had beaten Austria in the short
+campaign ended at Sadowa. The Prussia France was then fighting was not
+the giant Empire against which she is battling with such heroism for the
+last four years. France was at the time the leading continental Power.
+The general opinion was, when war was suddenly declared, that France
+would easily triumph over her enemy.
+
+It must not be forgotten that, in 1870, England was even less ready than
+in 1914 to engage in a continental conflict. Her standing army was not
+large, and then partly garrisoned in the colonies. Some of her best
+regiments were stationed in Canada. She could have been a really
+important ally of France only as a strong support of another continental
+power joining with her against Prussia, for instance Russia or Austria,
+or both of them.
+
+If England had been able to send 500,000 men in a few days to the very
+heart of France, incessantly followed by another half million, it is
+almost certain that the Prussian army would not have entered Paris. But
+England had not that million of trained men. It would have taken at
+least a year to organize such a large army.
+
+I will speak my mind openly. After Sedan, any attempt at saving France
+by force would have been vain and useless. Even Russia and Austria were
+unprepared for such a task. Their intervention, coming too late, would
+most likely have given Prussia a chance to win a much greater victory.
+France out of the struggle, Prussia would then have had the opportunity
+to achieve, as early as 1870, what she has ever since prepared for, and
+tried to accomplish by the war she has brought on in 1914.
+
+What then becomes of the "Nationalist" pretention that Great Britain has
+ever been aiming at dominating the world, when it is so easy to
+understand that without a very large territorial army, which she
+persistingly refused to organize, she was unable to take an important
+part in any continental war. The days were passed, after the
+extraordinary development of Prussian militarism, when she could
+brilliantly hold her own on the continent with a small standing army
+backed by generous subsidies to the European powers. The present war is
+surely proof evident of it, since England, instead of the two hundred
+thousand men she was expected to send over to France, as her man-power
+contribution, has had to raise a total army, with all the auxiliary
+services, of 6,000,000 officers and men, exclusive of the 2,000,000
+contributed by the whole British Colonial Empire.
+
+The Nationalists accusing England to have abandoned France to her sad
+fate, in 1870, was only another instance of their campaign to arouse the
+feelings of the French Canadians against Great Britain.
+
+
+OTHER "NATIONALIST" ERRONEOUS ASSERTIONS.
+
+Mr. Bourassa has had his own peculiar way of explaining the real
+determining cause of the war. Some men are--by nature it is to be
+supposed--always disposed to judge great historical events from
+considerations inspired by the lowest sentiments of the human heart. In
+the "Nationalist" leader's view, the great war was brought about by the
+treacherous alliance of British and German capitalists speculating
+together, in actual partnership or otherwise, in the production of war
+material: cannons, rifles, munitions, war shipbuilding, &c.
+
+In my humble opinion, such views are lowering to a very vulgar and
+lamentably repulsive cause--if it could be true--events of immense
+significance, the result, on the one side, of criminal aspirations
+which, however guilty they may be, have not yet been degraded to the
+profound depth of abjection they suppose; on the other, by the most
+noble sentiments which can inspire nations to make the greatest
+sacrifices to avenge outraged Justice and Right.
+
+Autocratic German ambition, such as it has proved to be, is bad enough.
+Still the cause of the war, such as asserted by Mr. Bourassa, would have
+been far worse. National aspirations, however wrongly diverted from
+their legitimate conception, will never be as contemptible as the nasty
+greed of individual speculators treacherously sucking the very life
+blood of their countrymen for the sake of squeezing millions of dollars
+at the cost of their country's honour and future.
+
+Unfortunately, illegitimate "profiteering" has taken place in the course
+of every war. Of course it must be severely condemned and firmly
+prevented, to the utmost, by governmental authority strongly supported
+by public opinion which must, however, be cautious not to be unduly
+influenced and carried away by the wild charges of some who denounce
+others with so much apparent indignation for the only reason that they
+themselves are not succeeding as they would like to do in their
+speculative attempts.
+
+Illegitimate "profiteering" is one of the deplorable effects of a war;
+it is never its real cause.
+
+What are the true causes, humanly speaking, of the cataclysm so
+violently shaking the world? They were of two kinds. The first was the
+disordered ambition of a nation having reached, by prodigious efforts,
+such a power that she fatally determined to dominate everywhere,
+militarily and politically. To this first cause was added that of
+secular race rivalry.
+
+The two causes of the first kind--which can properly be called
+_offensive_, were followed by the noble one of the resistance to
+oppression, of the defence of the honour of threatened nations, of the
+energetic determination to avenge violated international treaties, and
+to save the civilized world from a new barbarous invasion.
+
+If the Allies had humbly bowed to the odious German claims, there would
+have been no war.
+
+Consequently, the two evident causes of the war are, on the one hand,
+German ambition to universal domination; on the other, the absolute
+necessity on the part of the Allies to prevent by all possible means the
+success of such a tyrannical enterprise.
+
+However much guilty they have been in bringing on the most terrible war
+of all times, it is still injurious for the Berlin Government to suppose
+that in assuming this weighty responsibility, they were playing the part
+of an unconscious instrument of the most diabolical thirst of money
+making by shameless "profiteers."
+
+But such a charge is absolutely inexplicable when one accuses France,
+England and Belgium to be, in their admirable and heroic campaign for
+the world's deliverance and freedom, the pliant tools of contemptible
+speculators in the production of war materials.
+
+Governments and nations are, as a rule, far from having dropped to such
+a low state of incurable corruption. For many of them, there yet exists
+bright summits, shining with the clear light of Justice, Right and
+Honour, which in those times of sufferings and burning tears, are the
+pledge of better days and the promise of the world's resurrection.
+
+
+INCREDIBLE "NATIONALIST" NOTIONS.
+
+Can it be possibly believed that the "Nationalist" leader has asserted
+that when the British capitalists and bankers invested the savings
+entrusted to their safe keeping, they were principally actuated by the
+desire to create in Canada a financial influence which would, in due
+course, assist with force in dragging the Dominion to participate in the
+Imperial wars against her better judgment? Yet, so he has positively
+written and developed the wild argument.
+
+Any man, with the slightest business experience, knows that, in all
+cases, would-be borrowers go where money is to be lent. I have not yet
+learned that one of them ever went to the North Pole in search of
+millions for railway building and all kinds of industrial and commercial
+enterprises. Daring explorers who ventured thither, facing so many
+risks, were stimulated by a laudable thirst of fame and the desire of
+scientific progress. They did not imagine, for a moment, that they were
+likely to discover, in these far away regions, great financial markets
+amply provided with millions of accumulated capital waiting for safe and
+profitable investments.
+
+Canada, a young country, as large as all Europe in territorial extent,
+with wonderful undeveloped resources of the agricultural soil, of the
+mines, of immense forests, of mighty rivers, of large and breezy lakes,
+could not progress without labour and capital. The large natural
+increase of the population, supplemented by immigration, was sure to
+supply the labour. Capital, to the amount of hundreds of millions, could
+not be provided by the only savings of our people. Immigration of
+capital was even more pressingly required than that of men. The
+Governments of Canada, federal and provincial, city corporations,
+railway companies, industrial concerns, wanting money, all went where it
+could be found. It happened that London, the capital of the British
+Empire, was by far the largest financial market of the world. No wonder
+then that instead of going to Lapland, Canadian borrowers crowded in
+London, where they met with those of nearly all the nations of the
+world, gathering in the same city for the same purpose.
+
+Two incontrovertible economical truisms are, without the shadow of a
+doubt, the following:--
+
+1. That a would-be borrower wishes to get the money he wants in the
+easiest way at the lowest interest charge;
+
+2. That a wise lender wishes to secure for his money the safest
+investment carrying the highest possible rate of interest; the rate of
+interest being however subordinated, in his mind, to the safety of the
+investment.
+
+Such were the sound economical considerations which settled for the
+Canadian borrowers of all sorts, and the British investors, the
+conditions of all the loans made on Canadian account.
+
+Any one merely hinting to the British saving public that the money
+invested in Canada was sent over to our shores for the object of
+creating a financial influence which would force the Dominion into
+costly wars, could not have adopted a more unwise course to destroy the
+best chances of the success of a loan. Canadian credit was of first
+class order, because the British investors knew our grand possibilities;
+because they were aware that Canada had always been a safe debtor,
+honouring with clock regularity her interest charges and the payment of
+maturing loans; because also, and in a very large measure, they realized
+that we were not in the same position of so many nations of the Old
+World, exposed to frequent warring necessities likely to exhaust our
+means and to jeopardize our bright prospects.
+
+Confidence being the sound basis of good credit, we got all the money we
+wanted for all the purposes of our national economical development, the
+true interest of Canada and of Great Britain being equally well served
+by the financial intercourse between the wealthy mother-country and her
+progressive colony.
+
+
+CANADIAN FINANCIAL OPERATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Our "Nationalists," so eager to discourage Canadian effort in the war,
+and, with this object, always prone to magnify German warlike
+achievements and the difficulties confronting the Allies, were rather
+nervous at the increasing prospects of the United States joining the
+_Entente_ Nations. Their leader seized every opportunity to argue that
+they would be mistaken in doing so. During the weary months when the
+President of the neighbouring Republic was prudently feeling his way
+before taking the bold stand which he has ever since so brilliantly and
+bravely upheld, the "Nationalists", through successive ups and downs in
+their expectations, could scarcely help hiding their desire that the
+United States would not intervene in the struggle. Those of us who had
+not been moved by the horrors of the Belgian invasion, by the murder of
+so many innocent victims of teutonic savageness, by the brutal killing
+of Edith Cavell, by the Armenian massacres, by the wanton destruction
+of admirable works of Art, could not be expected to thrill at the
+barbarous sinking of the Lusitania, sending to the bottom of the ocean
+hundreds of American citizens of the neutral American Northern Republic.
+They were anxious that the Washington Government should condone the
+outrageous offence and all the subsequent ones perpetrated by the German
+submarines against our neighbours. How much they were dismayed at the
+sudden close of Mr. Wilson's apparent hesitation, and at the proud
+declaration of war from Washington to Berlin. Though rejoicing at it,
+they did not consider that the Russian bolsheviki's collapse could
+compensate for the additional military and financial resources the
+Allies were sure to derive from the United States participation in the
+war.
+
+Canada having to borrow many millions to sustain her warlike effort, and
+the British money market being closed to further outside investments,
+had two sources left for her successful financial operations: her own
+market and that of the United States. The Washington Authorities had
+generously decided to help financially the European Allies in pressing
+need of money. The Ottawa Government, before making a grand appeal to
+the Canadian public, applied to Washington for a loan. Mr. Wilson's
+cabinet, however much they would have liked to meet the wishes of the
+Canadian Government, had to answer that, having such a large war
+expenditure to incur, and such big sums to collect to assist their less
+wealthy European associates in the struggle, they could not see their
+way to grant Canada's demand.
+
+Acknowledging the value of the reasons given for not complying with
+their request, the Canadian Ministers then applied to Washington for the
+permission to negotiate a loan in the open American market. This was
+readily granted.
+
+It was, of course, well understood that going in the open market,
+Canada, to secure the required sum of money, would have to pay the then
+current rate of interest increasing, as usual, in proportion to the
+increased pressure of the demand of funds.
+
+It is utterly incredible--but still it is true--that Mr. Bourassa did
+denounce in his newspaper _Le Devoir_, the Ottawa Cabinet's action in
+borrowing money from the American saving public. In severe terms he
+blamed the Washington Authorities for not having lent millions to Canada
+at the low rate of interest they had agreed to accept from France and
+Italy. He asserted that this refusal on their part was a testimony of
+ill-will against the Dominion. And in the most violent terms he charged
+all those who favoured Canadian borrowings in the American market with
+being traitors selling their country to the United States.
+
+It is hard to say whether the charge is not more ridiculous than
+contemptible. It is the repetition, in an aggravated form of absurdity,
+of the argument accusing the British investing capitalists to have had
+for their only object in lending us their money to help coercing Canada
+into the Imperial wars.
+
+Was Mr. Bourassa ignorant of the fact that the building of the
+magnificent railway system of the United States, that their great
+industrial development, were due to the billions of British capital
+which for the last eighty years have flowed, in rolling waves, towards
+the shores of the Republic, invading, in the most peaceful and friendly
+way, her large territory, and drawing from its immense resources the
+greatest immeasurable accumulation of wealth ever created by the labour
+of man? I am not aware that any American writer ever ran the risk of
+being crushed by ridicule in accusing all the United States borrowers in
+the English market, governmental and others, of the hideous crime of
+selling their country to Great Britain. It would have been sheer madness
+to say so in the broad light of the marvellous economical progress of
+our neighbours. They knew very well that the billions of dollars
+invested by the British saving public for the development of their
+territorial riches, were producing returns much larger than the rate of
+interest paid to their British creditors.
+
+No one in the United States ever apprehended, for a single moment, that
+because the Republic had borrowed enormous sums from Great Britain, she
+was likely to lose her State independence through the financial
+influence of the holders of her securities of all sorts.
+
+Such "Nationalist" notions, as above exposed and contradicted, can only
+create very wrong and deplorable conclusions in the public mind, were
+they allowed to follow their course without challenge and without the
+refutation proving their complete absurdity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+"NATIONALIST" VIEWS CONDENSED.
+
+
+After refuting at length the "Nationalist" theories, I thought proper to
+condense them in a concrete proposition, and challenge their
+propagandist to call a public meeting in any city, town, or locality, in
+the Dominion,--Montreal for instance--and to find a dozen of citizens of
+standing in the community, to consent to move and second a
+"_Resolution_" embodying their doctrines.
+
+This condensed proposition, I translate as follows:--
+
+"Whereas England has unjustly declared war against Germany;
+
+"Whereas Great Britain has done nothing to maintain the peace of the
+world;
+
+"Considering that His Majesty King George V. _had not the right to
+declare the state of war for Canada without the assent of the Canadian
+Cabinet_;
+
+"Considering that Canada, as an autonomous colony, _is a Sovereign
+State_;
+
+"Considering that British Sovereignty over Canada _is only a fiction_;
+
+"Considering that Canada, interfering in the present war, _should have
+done so as a Nation_;
+
+"Whereas Canada should only have fought on her own account, like
+_Belgium, Servia, Italy or Bulgaria_.
+
+"Whereas _the maintenance of a compact British Empire is the most
+permanent provocation against the peace of the world_;
+
+"Considering that the supremacy of England on the seas is unjust;
+
+"Considering that Great Britain's aspiration, for a long time past, has
+been universal domination by means of her military naval power;
+
+"Whereas England is unfair against France in using her as a shield
+against German invasion;
+
+"Considering that England is exercising by all possible means a strong
+pressure upon the Colonies for her only benefit;
+
+"Considering _that all the social leaders have united to demoralize the
+conscience of the people, to poison their mind, to set their vigilance
+at sleep, and to represent to them as a national duty what would
+formerly have been considered as a betrayal of national interests_;
+
+"Considering _that England is trying to crush Germany, being afraid of
+her colonial expansion and her maritime and commercial competition_;
+
+"Whereas our compatriots of the British races have many faults; _that
+they are ignorant, assuming, arrogant, overbearing and rotten with
+mercantilism_;
+
+"Considering that they have acquired _many of the worst vices of the
+Yankees_;
+
+"Considering that Canada should never participate, outside of her own
+territory, in the wars of the British Empire;
+
+"Considering that the Canadian Cabinet and Parliament are criminally
+guilty of having ordered the organization of a Canadian army to go and
+fight against Germany on the French territory, and in authorizing the
+payment of the cost of this military expedition;
+
+"Be it "Resolved", that this meeting energetically protest against the
+declaration of war against Germany by His Majesty King George V,
+_without the assent of the Canadian Cabinet_, to defend Belgium's
+territory invaded by Germany violating solemn treaties;
+
+"That this meeting is of opinion that, for the purpose of favouring the
+restoration of peace as soon as possible, England should notify all the
+Powers that she abdicates for ever her supremacy on the seas, which
+supremacy Germany could hereafter safely exercise;
+
+"That this meeting being absolutely convinced that _the maintenance of a
+compact British Empire is the most permanent provocation against the
+peace of the world_, is strongly of opinion that Great Britain should,
+in order to quiet the fears of the Nations friendly to peace and opposed
+to militarism, like pacifist Germany, dissolve her Empire, at once
+acknowledging the immediate independence of India and of all her
+autonomous Colonies;
+
+"That this meeting's formal opinion is that the Canadian Parliament's
+imperious duty is to order without delay the dissolution of the British
+bond of connection, _which would be a public benefit_, and to proclaim
+the immediate independence of Canada;
+
+"That a copy of the present "Resolution" be addressed to His Excellency
+the Governor General, to the Members of the Federal Cabinet, to the
+Senators and to the Members of the House of Commons."
+
+The italics in the above draft "Resolution" and "Preamble" are quoted
+from Mr. Bourassa's writings.
+
+The "Preamble" and "Resolution" emphasize, in their true and complete
+meaning, the "Nationalist" doctrines perseveringly propounded for years
+past to poison French Canadian mentally. That such teachings can only
+produce disloyal feelings, stir up national prejudices and hatred of the
+Mother Country, and be most detrimental to the best interests of the
+Province of Quebec, of the Dominion of Canada, and of the British Empire
+as a whole, every one must admit with sadness.
+
+My challenge, which is still maintained, has not been taken up yet. All
+may rest assured that it will never be. The most ardent "Nationalist"
+knows that no responsible citizens would move the adoption of such
+views.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+LOYAL PRINCIPLES PROPOUNDED.
+
+
+To the foregoing "Nationalist" proposition, I opposed one condensing, in
+a concrete form, the views and principles of the truly loyal Canadian
+citizens. I also translate it as follows:--
+
+"Whereas, since 1870, the German Empire had been a permanent menace
+against the peace of the world by her threatening military policy;
+
+"Whereas England, throughout the same period, and more especially during
+the twenty years previous to 1914, had done her utmost efforts to
+maintain peace;
+
+"Considering that Great Britain had, in many ways, solicited Germany to
+agree to the limitation of armaments, especially of the building of war
+vessels;
+
+"Considering that she had persisted in her attempts with the German
+Government to save the nations from the ruinous system of excessive
+armaments, in spite of the latter's refusal to accede to her demands;
+
+"Considering that though in honor bound, like England, by three solemn
+treaties, to respect Belgium's neutrality, the German Government have,
+in August 1914, ordered their army to violate Belgian territory in
+order to more easily invade France to which they had declared war;
+
+"Whereas Great Britain, in honour bound, could not permit the crushing
+of Belgium by the German Empire;
+
+"Considering, moreover, that Germany, after mutilating and destroying
+Belgium, by the deprivation of her independence, after triumphing over
+France which she would have once again dismembered, would have
+undertaken to beat England to deprive her of sea supremacy, in order to
+obtain, by this last conquest, her domination over Europe and almost all
+the world;
+
+"Considering that the defeat of England might very likely have resulted
+in the cession of Canada to Germany;
+
+"Considering that the world at large is greatly interested in the
+maintenance of England and France as first class Powers on account of
+their services in favour of Human Civilization and Liberty;
+
+"Considering that the German armies have accompanied their military
+operations with untold barbarous acts, by the murder of priests, of
+peaceful citizens, of wounded soldiers, of religious women, of mothers,
+of previously criminally outraged young girls, of old men, of young
+children, with the destruction by fire and otherwise of Cathedrals,
+Churches,--monuments of the Christian Art,--of libraries--sanctuaries of
+Science--of historical monuments, the legitimate glory and pride of
+Human Genius;
+
+"Whereas the German Government is guilty of the murder of thousands of
+persons, men, women and children, by the sinking of merchant
+vessels--the Lusitania, for instance--by its submarine ships, without
+giving the notices required by International Law;
+
+"Whereas from the very beginning of the war, the Allied Nations,
+England, France and Russia, have jointly agreed, in honour bound, to
+require, as the essential peace condition, the cessation by all the
+belligerent Powers of the crushing and ruinous militarism prevailing
+before the opening of the hostilities, by the fault of Germany's
+obstination to constantly strengthen her military organization both on
+land and sea;
+
+"Considering that England and her Allies are struggling for the most
+venerable and sacred cause:--_outraged Justice_--; that, being a
+British Colony, _Canada is justly engaged in the present cruel and
+deplorable conflict, for the defence of the Right and the true Liberty
+of Nations; that our Canadian soldiers are valiantly fighting with those
+of England, France and Belgium for the great cause of sovereign
+importance--the protection of the world threatened by Germanism_;
+
+"Considering that England, to which the political life of Canada is
+bound, and France, to which the French Canadians owe their national
+existence, _have to fight for sacred interests in a war of endurance_
+requiring the incessant renewal of all the energies of the most ardent
+patriotism, the victims of which falling on the field of honour have
+the merit of giving their lives _for Justice_";
+
+"Considering that, though wishing the restoration of peace as soon as
+possible, and earnestly praying Divine Providence to favour the world
+with the blessings of peace, more and more urgently needed after this
+assault of abominable barbarism against Christian Civilization lasting
+for the last four years, the Allies are absolutely unable to terminate
+the war by giving their consent to conditions which would not protect
+Humanity against the direst consequences of the militarism fastened by
+the German Empire on the Nations so anxious to bring it to an end;
+
+"Be it "Resolved":--
+
+"That this meeting approves of the free and patriotic decision of the
+Federal Parliament to have Canada to participate in the so very Just War
+which England, France, Belgium, the United States and Italy are fighting
+against the German and Austrian Empires, allied in an effort to dominate
+the world;
+
+"That this meeting's strong opinion is that, on account of the terrible
+crisis menacing the British Empire and Civilization, it was the bounden
+duty of Canada to intervene in the war for the safety of the Mother
+Country and her own, for the salvation of Liberty and _of the sacred
+cause of outraged Justice_;
+
+"That this meeting desires to express her admiration and profound
+gratitude for the braves who enlist in the grand army which the
+Canadian Parliament has ordered to be organized for the defence of the
+cause of the Allies, which is also that of the civilized world;
+
+"That this meeting also concur in the opinion that Canada is in duty
+bound to continue to participate in the present war until the final
+victory of the Allies, which will guarantee to the world a lasting peace
+and put an end to German militarism which has been the direct cause of
+so much dire misfortunes for Humanity."
+
+The italics of the above draft "Resolution" are quoted from the writings
+and speeches of leaders of French Canadian Roman Catholics.
+
+There was no need of calling meetings to adopt the preceding
+"Resolution" with its well defined preamble. It had been approved, in
+all its bearings, at the outset of the hostilities by the unanimous
+decision of the Canadian Parliament, by the almost unanimous consent of
+public opinion, by the religious, social, commercial, industrial and
+financial leaders of the country. It had been so approved by the four
+hundred thousand brave Canadians who rallied to the Colours; by the
+subscribers, by thousands, to the national war loans.
+
+Since writing the above draft "Resolution", its full substance has been
+almost unanimously approved by the Canadian people in general elections,
+the two contending political parties entirely agreeing so far as the
+Justice of the cause of the Allies was concerned, differing only as to
+the best means for Canada to adopt to achieve final victory.
+
+Without entering into any considerations respecting the divergence of
+the views of the leaders of political thought, in the still recent
+electoral campaign,--from which it is more advisable for me to abstain
+in the interest of the cause I am defending--I may be allowed to remark
+that only a small remnant of the "Nationalist" element dared to reaffirm
+his hostility to Canada's intervention in the conflict and to avow his
+opinion _that the country had done enough_.
+
+What did those irreconcilable "Nationalists"--so few in numbers as the
+event ultimately proved--mean by their assertion that _Canada had done
+enough for the war_? According to its literal wording, it must have
+signified that no more sacrifices should have been incurred for the
+triumph of the Allied cause. If it was so, the conclusion to be drawn
+from such sayings was that, to put an end to any further Canadian
+contributions, orders should be given to bring back the Canadian Army
+from Europe, and to send home all the forces still on Canadian soil. It
+is plain that even if the new Canadian Parliament had decided not to
+increase our contribution of man-power, in order to maintain the
+efficiency of the Canadian divisions at the front, large sacrifices
+would have had to be made to keep on the theatre of war the forces which
+were still in the field.
+
+To refuse to participate in the war would have been deserting the flag
+at the hour of danger, and a total misconception of our plain duty.
+
+Giving up the fight, once engaged in the struggle, before triumphant
+victory, or irremediable defeat, in the very thick of the battle so
+heroically carried on by the Allies, would have been sheer
+cowardice--bolchevikism of the worst kind.
+
+Whether they meant it or not, those few "Nationalists" dared not openly
+propose the recall of our troops. The solitary "Nationalist" candidate
+who had the nerve to face the electorate was defeated by a very large
+majority.
+
+No better proof of the weakness of the hold of the doctrines of
+"Nationalism," on sound public opinion, is required than the decision of
+its most outspoken advocate and leader, Mr. Bourassa, to refrain from
+being a candidate in any constituency, and to advise all his supposed
+friends to do likewise. No one was deceived, with regard to this
+decision, by the reasons, or rather excuses, given to explain it.
+
+Evidently, if the "Nationalist" group and their leader had been
+confident of the support of the large number of electors whose opinion
+they pretended to represent, they would certainly not have lost the
+chance to show their strength, and the opportunity to elect many
+candidates of their persuasion to enter Parliament free from any party
+allegiance but that of their own element. But any one somewhat posted
+with the currents of public opinion in the Province of Quebec, knew very
+well that if pure "Nationalist" candidates had been nominated in all
+the constituencies of the Province, running between the regular party
+nominees,--ministerial and opposition--the average number of ballots
+cast for them would scarcely have reached ten per cent. of the French
+Canadian votes, less than two per cent. of the whole Canadian
+electorate.
+
+It was moreover highly probable that, had they tried the game, they
+would not have even succeeded, in two-thirds of the constituencies, in
+inducing citizens of sufficient standing to accept their nomination and
+their political program. Once engaged in such a hopeless electoral
+contest, they would have had either to humbly retire from the field, or
+to await the doomed day by nominating men of no weight whatever. Both
+alternatives would have led them to an equally disastrous defeat.
+
+
+UNJUST "NATIONALIST" GRIEVANCES AGAINST ENGLAND.
+
+At the end of the very first page of Mr. Bourassa's pamphlet,
+entitled:--_What do we owe England_?--in French:--Que devons-nous à
+l'Angleterre?,--The following lines are found:--(_Translation._)
+
+ British Imperialism, in its concrete and practical form, can be
+ defined in ten words: =the active participation by the Colonies
+ in the wars of England=. It is almost precisely the definition I
+ gave of it as early as the days of the African war. It is exact.
+ Considered from a larger point of view, from its profound causes
+ and far reaching consequences, British Imperialism calls for a
+ more ample definition. Its object is to have Great Britain
+ dominate the world by means of the organization and
+ concentration of all the Military Forces of the Empire--both Sea
+ and Land Forces--; it means the gradual annihilation, or at
+ least the enslaving of all the divers nationalities constituting
+ the British Empire, in order to bring about the World's
+ supremacy of the Anglo-Saxon race, of her thoughts, of her
+ language, of her political conceptions, of her commerce and her
+ wealth. Its object is to crush all competitions, all internal
+ and external oppositions. It is the German Ideal; it is the
+ Roman Ideal. It is the Imperialism of all countries, at all
+ times, enlarged to the limits of the monstrous pretensions of
+ Pan-Anglo-Saxonism.
+
+All the propositions of the above quotation do not bear, for one single
+instant, the light of historical research, of reason, even of common
+sense.
+
+I challenge Mr. Bourassa, and any one else, to read the speeches and the
+writings of all those who have studied the great question of the future
+of the British Empire, and to detect therein one single word to justify
+the assertion _that the organization and concentration of all the
+Military Forces of the Empire have for their object to help England to
+dominate the world_.
+
+I have already abundantly proved that England never aspired to dominate
+the world. I answered Mr. Bourassa's unfounded propositions as
+follows:--
+
+1--I will surely be allowed to say that for nearly the last fifty years,
+I have done my best efforts to keep myself well informed with the
+opinions expressed by the most authorized political men of the Mother
+Country--of all parties--by the most renowned publicists, by the most
+distinguished writers of the great English press. I have yet to read one
+sentence leading me to suppose that the mind of any one of them was
+haunted by the foolish hope of Great Britain's domination of the world.
+Many of them have spoken and written to persuade their countrymen of the
+growing urgency to consider the most effective measures to be adopted to
+defend the Empire, in view of the efforts of other nations--notably
+Germany--to strengthen their military organizations. No one advised them
+to incur the most heavy sacrifices _in order to dominate the world_.
+They had too much political sense to believe that such a ridiculous
+scheme could ever be carried out.
+
+2--What the "Nationalist" leader calls British Imperialism never had for
+its objective _the gradual suppression, or at least the enslaving of the
+divers nationalities constituting the British Empire_.
+
+Such an assertion is nothing less than a stroke of the imagination which
+recent history utterly refutes, proving, as it does, the very reverse,
+as follows:--
+
+A--The creation, by Imperial Charters, of the great autonomous federal
+Canadian, Australian, South African Dominions.
+
+B--The federal system adopted for the Dominion of Canada purposely for
+the protection of the French Canadians whose special interests are
+entrusted to the Legislature of the Province of Quebec.
+
+C--The South African Union Charter is the guarantee of the Boers'
+control of the future of that vast stretch of country, by means of the
+two fundamental principles of the British constitutional
+system:--government by the majority combined with ministerial
+responsibility.
+
+No Empire in the world grants as large a measure of freedom as the
+British Empire does, to the various national groups living under the
+protection of her flag.
+
+3--British Imperialism, contrary to Mr. Bourassa's assertion, was never
+deluded by the wild dream _of a world wide supremacy of the Anglo-Saxon
+race, of her thoughts, of her language, of her political conceptions, of
+her commerce and her wealth_.
+
+Surely, I have yet to learn that Great Britain has dreamt, and is
+dreaming, to impose _by Force_ her "mentality," her language, her
+political institutions to China, to Japan, to Russia, to France, to all
+the South American Republics, to Italy, to Spain, to Germany, to
+Austria-Hungary, to Turkey, &c., which, considered as a whole,
+represent, any one must admit, a pretty large part of the universe.
+
+4--Mr. Bourassa's assertion that England aspires to dominate the world,
+_economically_, _commercially_, is most positively contradicted by the
+history of the last eighty years. Who does not know--and I cannot for a
+moment suppose that Mr. Bourassa ignores it--that, nearly a century
+ago, Great Britain, finally rallied in favour of a Free Trade Policy,
+has opened her market free to the products of all the nations of the
+world. Is that not a rather strange way of aspiring to an economical
+domination! And whilst all the countries of the earth, the British
+colonies as well as foreign nations, can freely sell their goods in the
+British market, they protect their own markets by high customs
+duties--in some cases almost prohibitive--against British goods.
+
+National commercial statistics are opened to the "Nationalist" leader's
+perusal as to any one else. If he had referred to them, he would have
+learned that the Foreign Trade of Great Britain, in 1913, the year
+preceding the outbreak of the war, amounted to $7,017,775,335; exports
+were valued at $3,174,101,630; imports totalized $3,843,673,695,
+exceeding the exports by the large amount of $669,572,065.
+
+By looking at the figures, Mr. Bourassa would only have had to call upon
+his common sense to draw the conclusion that England was certainly not
+moving along an easy road to the commercial domination of the world by
+maintaining a policy resulting in an import trade larger, by an annual
+average of nearly twenty per cent., than her exportations.
+
+Before the war, Germany, by rapid strides, had succeeded in attaining
+the second rank amongst the great trading nations, coming next after
+Great Britain. In the same year--1913--her Foreign Trade totalized
+$5,351,500,000, divided as follows:--Imports $2,801,675,000; exports
+$2,549,825,000.
+
+The really wonderful industrial and commercial expansion of Germany,
+during the last forty years previous to the war, offered another
+opportunity to Mr. Bourassa to show his spite against Great Britain. He
+would have been sorry not to make the best of it. Calling into play his
+fertile imagination, he unhesitatingly charged England with deep rooted
+jealousy of Germany's trade success and the guilty intent to crush it
+out of existence.
+
+To this absurd assertion--not using the word offensively, being always
+determined to be courteous in any discussion I engage--I answered by
+quoting the figures of the reciprocal relative external British and
+German trade. In 1913, Great Britain sold to Germany goods to the amount
+of $203,385,150, and bought German products for a total value of
+$402,055,285. Great Britain's exports to Germany were then only about
+fifty per cent of her imports from the same market. It is indeed
+difficult to detect in such trade relations between two nations any sign
+of the intent, on the part of the country buying from the other double
+the value of her sales to her, to dominate her people commercially.
+
+Any one knowing all the circumstances and the causes that imposed upon
+Great Britain the duty of taking part in the European struggle, cannot
+help being shocked at Mr. Bourassa's accusation _that England has
+incidentally been brought into the conflict only through the frantic
+desire of her business men to use it to crush the commercial competition
+of Germany_. No serious men could have entertained such strange notions.
+And the "Nationalist" leader certainly charged the political leaders and
+the business community of England with sheer madness.
+
+With all right minded men, the world over, I have long ago reached the
+sound conclusion that universal economical domination is only a
+chimerical idea absolutely outside of all possible realization. England
+does not indulge in any such extravagant dream, being too well aware how
+vain it would be.
+
+May I ask my readers--and Mr. Bourassa has been one of them,--to join
+with me in a short general review of the economical progress of the
+world, in its broadest lines, rising, for this purpose, as should be
+done in all cases, superior to all national and local prejudices. A
+grand natural scenery is always better appreciated from the mountain
+top. Equally so, questions of universal import must be considered from
+the heights of the noblest principles inspiring the Christian desire to
+promote the general good of Mankind. Considered from this elevated
+standpoint, very short-sighted indeed is the man who fails to see THAT
+THE ECONOMICAL PROGRESS OF THE WORLD, AGRICULTURALLY, INDUSTRIALLY,
+COMMERCIALLY, IS BOUND UP WITH INTELLIGENT, ENERGETIC AND PERSEVERING
+LABOUR; THAT IT IS THE OUTCOME OF THE IMPROVEMENTS OF ALL THE MEANS OF
+PRODUCTION, TO THE CONSTANT INCREASED PERFECTION OF THE AGRICULTURAL AND
+INDUSTRIAL ARTS, TO THE ENLARGEMENT OF THE RESOURCES OF CAPITAL,
+ACCUMULATED BY JUDICIOUS SAVINGS. It is bound with the improvement of
+means of transportation by land and sea; with the much enlarged
+facilities of the exchange of all kinds of products; with the superior
+management,--the result of a much wider experience--of all the
+institutions distributing credit; with the energetic development of all
+the resources which generous Providence has profusely provided the
+earth for the good of Humanity. It is more than useless to expect
+economical progress from disastrous armed conflicts which, in the course
+of a few years, nay, only a few months, destroy the accumulated wealth
+of many years of incessant labour.
+
+War is productive of untold material losses. As a general rule, it
+cannot make the nations of the world richer. Many successive generations
+have for a long time to bear the crushing burden which they inherit from
+guilty ambitious Rulers as the only result of their thirst of vain
+glory. Materially, a nation may profit by an unjust war, resulting in
+the defeat of a weaker rival, but the riches thus acquired by the one,
+either by territorial acquisitions, or by the payment to her of war
+contributions and indemnities, or both, from the other, are merely
+transferred from the vanquished to the victor. The great society of
+nations, instead of gaining anything by it, is only losing, as a whole,
+the total amount of the financial cost of the military operations, of
+the squandering of hard earned savings, of diminished labour and
+production, of the waste of productive capital, of the loss of so many
+long days which could have been so much better employed. But most
+deplorable is the loss entailed by the warring nations, and the universe
+at large, by the sacrifice of the younger generations, of early youth
+and of strongly developed manhood, for the success of tyrannical and
+criminal purposes.
+
+There can be but one justification--and it is a noble, a glorious
+one--of the sacrifice of so many valuable lives and so much material
+wealth: the sacredness, the sanctity of the cause for which a nation, or
+a group of peoples, take up arms against an enemy, or enemies, only
+intent on crushing weaker rival, or rivals, by all the illegitimate
+means at his, or their command, for self-aggrandizement, for unjust
+domination. Such is the present war: sacred and just on the Allied side;
+abominable, brutal, barbarous on the German side, enhanced in its guilt
+by the ferocious Turks and the shameful submission of the enslaved
+Austrians to the overpowering will of their teutonic masters. It will
+not have cost too much if it has the result of freeing Mankind from the
+horrors of German militarism, assuring to the world a long reign of
+justice and moral grandeur.
+
+England can rightly claim a very large part of the merit accruing to all
+those who have contributed to the immense material progress of the world
+during the last century. She has actively and most intelligently worked
+for it by her vigorous industrial and commercial development, by the
+very numerous billions of dollars she has contributed, all over the
+world, to railway building and oceanic navigation. She has contributed
+to it by her extraordinary amount of savings which allowed her to supply
+the capital required for so many varied enterprises over all the
+continents. She has played the very important part of universal banker,
+distributing her immense treasures to foster production of all kinds
+everywhere. She has most largely contributed to the economic phenomenon
+of the gradual diminution of the universal rate of interest.
+
+If, according to Mr. Bourassa's strange notion, all this is to be
+considered as equivalent to economical domination, the more the whole
+world will enjoy it the better, more prosperous it will be, and future
+generations will have so much more cause for rejoicing at its increased
+development, and to be grateful to England for it.
+
+The witnesses who, for the last sixty years, have lived with their eyes
+opened, preferring the full shining light of the bright days of
+universal economical development to the darkness obscuring fanatical
+minds only intent on stirring up local, sectional and national
+prejudices, and miserable petty ambitions, have rejoiced at the greatly
+varied advantages Humanity has derived from the gifts of Providence
+favouring her with the great scientific discoveries which have worked,
+are still, and will for all times, work wonders for her material
+prosperity. The regular tendency of those natural forces recently
+applied to production is an increased movement towards the unification
+of the industrial, commercial and financial interests of the world. The
+vital energies of all peoples have more or less been stimulated by the
+same causes, operating everywhere, reaching until lately unknown and
+undeveloped regions. Engineering genius, broadened by the new scientific
+resources at its command, has triumphed over all difficulties. The
+gigantic locomotive, drawing palatial passenger coaches, and sometimes
+as much as a hundred heavily loaded freight cars, run by thousands and
+thousands daily through luxurious prairies. They cross giant rivers,
+ascend with alertness the highest mountains, or rush through tunnels
+which the skill and hard work of man has pierced through them, backed by
+the financial power of millions of money. Automobilism covers the whole
+universe, multiplying intercourse and human relations, and making
+possible, in a few days of marvellous organization, a glorious military
+victory like that almost miraculously carried at the Marne.
+
+Giant steamers, of fifty to sixty thousand tons--of a hundred thousand
+in the near future--ply, day and night, over the high seas. In
+mid-ocean they scatter human thoughts through the air to very distant
+points. They carry within their large skulls immense quantities of the
+most varied products.
+
+Means of transportation have become so numerous, so improved, so rapid,
+that the surplus agricultural production of the most fertile regions do
+reach, in a few short days, the countries which, on account of their
+numerous industrial and commercial population, have to import a large
+quantity of food products. The equilibrium between production and
+consumption becomes yearly more easily obtainable. Famine by the
+inequality of agricultural production is very much less to be
+apprehended. Millions of human beings are no longer, as hitherto,
+threatened to die by starvation at the same time that more favoured
+regions had a surplus of food products which they could not use, sell,
+or export.
+
+Without a most powerful capitalization of savings--totaling, in some
+cases, billions of dollars--without the marvellous development of the
+great transportation industry by land and sea, could the Canadian and
+American western grain crops be delivered, within a few days' time, with
+an astonishing rapidity and at very small cost, on all the markets where
+they are absolutely required for daily consumption.
+
+Every country on earth is multiplying her efforts to develop her
+manufacturing interests by an active and intelligent use of the raw
+materials with which her territory has been favoured by Nature.
+
+To this intense economical development of the world, all the peoples are
+contributing their shares in various proportions, of course:--In Europe,
+Great Britain, France, Germany, Russia, Austria, Italy, Belgium, &c.; in
+the two Americas, the United States, Canada--Canada with the sure
+prospects of such a grand future--the Argentine Republic, Brazil, &c.;
+in Asia, Japan, China, and the so very large Asiatic regions of Russia;
+in Africa, the British colonies, Egypt, Algeria, &c.; and Australia, so
+recently opened to the glories of Christian Civilization, blooming in
+the Pacific ocean washing her shores, fertilizing her lands nearer to
+its refreshing breeze.
+
+Who does not see that all this development tends naturally to the
+economical unity of the world. If Humanity is ever effectively delivered
+from the dangers of wars like the one actually desolating her so
+cruelly, she will have to be grateful for this great boon to the
+unification, on a larger scale, of the general interests of all the
+nations requiring permanent peace for their regular and harmonious
+growth.
+
+To the wonderful material prosperity achieved as above explained,
+England has contributed her legitimate share, without trying to dominate
+economically the universe which derived all the great advantages which
+her business genius has so largely developed.
+
+It must not be supposed that I lose sight of the inconveniences which
+material prosperity may entail. One of them is the tendency to bend the
+national aspirations to materialism. This can be counteracted by the
+national will to apply material development to the more important
+intellectual, moral and religious progress of the people at large.
+
+Any nation aspiring to dominate the world by brute force or by the power
+of wealth, would be guilty of attempting an achievement just as vain as
+it would be criminal in its conception.
+
+Any nation is within her undoubted right and duty in aspiring to the
+legitimate influence of her material progress, of her intellectual
+culture, of her moral development, of her religious increased
+perfection. Happy indeed would be the future of Humanity if all the
+Nations and their Rulers understood well, and did their best efforts to
+practice Christian precepts in the true spirit of their Divine
+teaching.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+IMPERIALISM.
+
+
+Mr. Bourassa is apparently so frightened by what he calls _Imperialism_
+that the horrible phantom being always present to his imagination, he
+shudders at it in day time, and wildly dreams of it at night. Judging by
+what he has said and written, he seems to have worried a great deal, for
+many years past, about the dire misfortunes which, he believed, were
+more and more threatening the future of the world by the strong movement
+of imperialist views he detected everywhere. It is the great hobby which
+saddens his life, the terrible bugbear with which he is ever trying to
+arouse the feelings of his French Canadian countrymen against England.
+
+The deceased British statesman, called Joseph Chamberlain, by his
+efforts to promote the unity of the Empire, inspired Mr. Bourassa with a
+profound fear which he wanted his compatriots to share by all the means
+at his command:--public speeches, newspaper editorials, pamphlets. He
+charged him with the responsibility of the _infamous crime_ he brought
+England to commit in accepting the challenge of President Kruger and the
+then South African Republic, and fighting for the defence of her
+Sovereign rights in South Africa. According to the Nationalist leader, a
+vigorous impulse was given by the South African war to the political
+evolution which he termed _British Imperialism_. Nothing was further
+from the true meaning of this important event.
+
+In refuting Mr. Bourassa's assertion, I showed that the South African
+war was not the outgrowth of Imperialist ideas, and that it has in no
+way resulted in a dangerous advance of the kind of Imperialism which so
+much frightens him and all those who experience his baneful influence.
+
+As I have previously proved, the South African campaign was imposed upon
+England by the then aspiration of a section only of Boer opinion, led by
+the unscrupulous and haughty President Kruger, imprudently relying on
+the support of the German Kaiser who had hastened to congratulate him
+for his success in the Jameson Raid. It resulted not in favor of
+Imperialism of the type so violently denounced by Mr. Bourassa, but in a
+most beneficent expansion of Political Freedom by the granting of the
+free British institutions to the new great South African overseas
+Dominion. It is only the other day that ex-Premier Asquith, on the
+occasion of a great public function, has declared that Premier Botha,
+the former most prominent Boer General, was now one of the strongest
+pillars of the British Empire.
+
+It being so important to set the opinion of the French Canadians right
+respecting that question of Imperialism, so much discussed of late, and
+by many with so little political sense and historical knowledge, I would
+not rest satisfied with a refutation of the special Bourassist
+appreciation of the causes and results of the South African conflict. I
+summarized, in a condensed review, the divers phases of the political
+movement which can properly be called _Imperialism_, tracing its origin
+as far back as the organization of the first great political Powers
+known to History: the Persian, the Egyptian, the Greek Empires, &c. More
+than ever before, Imperialism was triumphant during the long Roman
+domination of almost all the then known world. Every student of History
+is impressed by the grandeur of the part played by the Roman Empire in
+the world's drama. Constantine struck the first blow at Roman
+Imperialism--unwillingly we can rest assured--in laying the foundations
+of Constantinople, and dividing the Roman Empire into the Western and
+Eastern Empires. At last, after repeated invasions, the Northern
+barbarians succeeded in smashing the Roman Colossus.
+
+After many long years during which European political society passed
+through the incessant turmoil of rival ambitions, Charlemagne sets up
+anew the Western Empire, being coronated Emperor in Rome. Ever since,
+amidst multiplied ups and downs, Imperialism has swayed to and fro by
+the successive edification and overthrow of the Holy Roman Empire, the
+short lived Napoleonic European domination, the recently organized
+North German Empire.
+
+So far as Imperialism is concerned, all those great historical facts
+considered, how best can it be defined? Is it not evident that from the
+very birth of political societies for the government of Mankind, a
+double current of political thoughts and aspirations has been
+concurrently at work, with alternate successes and retrocessions: one
+tending towards large political organizations, uniting a variety of
+ethnical groups; the other operating the reverse way to bring about
+their dissolution in favour of multiplied small sovereignties. Each of
+the two opposing political systems has had its ebb and flow tides; the
+waves of the one, in their flowing days, washing the shores of the other
+until they had to recede before the pressure caused by the exhaustion of
+their own strength and the increased resistance of internal opposition.
+
+Viewed from this elevated standpoint, Imperialism is not new under the
+sun. It is as ancient as the world itself. Mr. Bourassa has been
+uselessly spending his energy in breaking his head against a movement
+which is in the very nature of things, developing the same way under the
+same favourable conditions and circumstances.
+
+Are the days we live so fraught with the dangers of Imperialism as to
+justify the fears of the alarmist? The answer would be in the
+affirmative, the question being considered from the point of view of
+Germany's autocratic Imperialism, if the free nations of the world had
+not joined in a holy union to put an end to its extravagant and
+tyrannical ambition. But how is it that Mr. Bourassa, the heaven-born
+anti-imperialist, so frightened at the supposed progress of British
+Imperialism, is so lenient towards Teutonic Imperialism? How is it that
+from the very first days of the gigantic struggle calling for the most
+heroic efforts of the human race to emerge safe and free from the
+furious waves powerfully set in motion by the most daring absolutism
+that ever existed, he has not thought proper to chastise as it deserved
+the worst kind of Imperialism that he could, or any one else, imagine?
+
+Taking for granted that the present economical conditions of the
+universe, likely to intensify, are working for great political
+organisations, from the causes previously explained, any intelligent
+observer could not fail to see that for the last century four great
+imperialist evolutions have been concurrently--or rather
+simultaneously--developing themselves; they were the British, the
+Teutonic, the Russian, the Republican in the United States. Let no one
+be astonished at seeing the two words _Imperialism_ and _Republicanism_
+coupled together. In their true sense, they are easily conciliated.
+
+The Roman Republic, by the grandeur of its part, was Imperialist as much
+as the Empire to which she gave birth. Cæsar, without the imperial crown
+was Emperor as much as August. He was more so by his genius, and by the
+eminent position he had acquired by one of the most brilliant careers in
+History.
+
+Bonaparte, General and First Consul, in the closing days of the first
+French Republic, was Emperor as much as he became on the day of his
+Coronation, at Paris, by the Sovereign Pontiff.
+
+Imperialism being a great historical fact through all the ages, and most
+certainly destined to further developments, is it to be judged
+favourably or alarmingly?
+
+No doubt the problem is of the greatest possible political importance.
+The question can, I consider, be at the outset simplified as
+follows:--Would the prosperity, the freedom, the happiness of the world
+be better served by great political Powers, or by the multiplication of
+small sovereignties? It is just as well, and even better, to admit at
+once that a unique, a dogmatic, answer cannot be given to that question.
+Independent nations, sovereign societies, are not created at will by
+men, merely according to their fancy, to their variable and very often
+undefined wishes. History teaches that they are the outgrowth of various
+circumstances, of many divergent causes,--the most important, the one
+inscrutable, being always the action of Divine Providence directing the
+destinies of peoples as well as those of every human being. Different
+causes produce, of course, different results. Large and small political
+communities can surely be productive of much good for their
+populations. Much depends upon the intelligence, the wisdom, the
+devotion, the patriotism of the rulers and the governed. They can also
+do much harm. Unfortunately, the readers of past events have too much
+reason to deplore that both large and small political organizations have
+been equally guilty of maladministration, of ambitious cupidity of their
+neighbours' possessions, of unjust wars. As an uncontrovertible example,
+can I not point to the present German Empire, whose origin dates back to
+the days of the very small Prussia of two centuries ago, fighting her
+way up to her actual greatness by successive, unfair, and often criminal
+aggressions.
+
+After reading much of the history of past ages, I have not been able to
+come to the conclusion--and the more I read, the less inclined I am to
+do so--that the days when England, France, Central Europe, Italy, &c.,
+were subdivided into numerous small political organizations, almost
+always warring, were preferable to ours, even darkened and saddened as
+they are by the present trials and sufferings.
+
+If, on the other hand, the causes which at all times have tended to the
+creation of large political sovereignties are gradually acquiring an
+increased momentum of strength and activity, from the changed conditions
+brought about by the great scientific discoveries so wonderfully
+developing the commercial relations of the nations, is it not more
+advisable to study the true nature of the evolution and the good it can
+produce, rather than to shiver at the supposed prospects of an
+Imperialist cataclysm so certainly to be averted if public opinion is
+sound and Rulers wise. Crying on the shores of the St. Lawrence, against
+the advance of the rolling waves, would not prevent the tide from
+running up. The mad man who would try it, and persist in remaining on
+the spot, displaying his indignant and extravagant protest, would surely
+be submerged and drowned.
+
+Political developments, like many others, obey natural laws which no
+true statesman can ignore nor overlook. Because the limits of a
+political organization are extended, does it necessarily follow that
+only deplorable consequences can be expected from their enlargement?
+Surely not. One might as well pretend that unity, cohesion, strength,
+grandeur, are only productive of baneful results. Is it not a certainty
+that they can be equally beneficial or harmful, according to the
+intellectual and moral qualities of those who are called upon to apply
+them to the best interests of those they govern.
+
+German Imperialism, for instance, was not _per se_ a public misfortune.
+It became such because instead of using its instrumentality for the
+general good of the world as well as that of Germany, it was applied to
+a barbarous and criminal purpose to satisfy unjust and senseless
+aspirations.
+
+In the same years, all the resources of British Imperialism,--so
+abhorrent to Mr. Bourassa and his Nationalist adepts who view with such
+meekness the Teutonic type--have been brought into play for the freedom
+of the world and the protection of the small nationalities--notably
+Belgium.
+
+Bulgaria was a small State. Was it on this account less ambitious and
+troublesome for its neighbours? Any one conversant with the recent
+Balkan history knows that Bulgaria has from the start aspired to
+dominate the Balkan States. When the Berlin Government struck the hour
+which was to throw not only Europe, but three-fourths of the universe
+into the worst horrors of war, has Bulgaria rallied to the defence of
+her weak neighbour, Servia? Has she proved any sympathy for
+treacherously crushed Belgium?
+
+I emphatically declare that I would oppose Imperialism with all my
+might, if I thought that it is by nature a necessary producer of
+absolutism, of autocratic tyranny. But, the British precedent considered
+through all its beneficial developments, I must recognize that true
+Imperialism is not incompatible with the just and wise exercise of
+political liberty, with respectful protection of the rights and
+conditions of the divers national elements under its ægis.
+
+I pray to remain to my last day a faithful friend of the political
+liberties of the people. Knowing, as I do, how hard it is to apply them
+to the government of nations--great or small--I am not bewildered by
+vain illusions. But I cannot conceive--and never will--that the justice
+of the real principles of Political Liberty is to be denied on account
+of the difficulties of their satisfactory working, certainly obtainable
+when applied in conformity with the dictates of moral laws owing all
+their power to their Divine origin.
+
+The best political institutions which can work out such great advantages
+for the populations enjoying them, are too often diverted from their
+beneficient course by the vicious passions of those who are charged
+with, and responsible for, their administration. It would be most
+illogical to draw the inference that good institutions become bad by
+their guilty management.
+
+Free and autocratic governments are essentially different in their
+natural structure. Though liable to mismanagement by unscrupulous
+politicians, free institutions can, under ordinary favourable
+conditions, be trusted to be productive of much good for the peoples
+living under their protection. Autocracy--the whole human history proves
+it--by nature engenders absolutism. Crowned or revolutionary despots as
+a rule are not imbued with the patriotism nor purified by the virtues
+required for the good government of a country. Kaiserism, Terrorism and
+Bolshevikism are equally despicable and unfit to contribute to the sound
+progress which liberty, practiced by sensible and wise men, can develop.
+
+Reverting to the Nationalist bugbear, which does not in the least move
+me to despair of Canada's future, I consider that Imperialism, sensibly
+appreciated, is of two kinds: Autocratic Imperialism; Democratic
+Imperialism:--Absolutism is the foundation stone of the former;
+Political Liberty that of the latter. I am energetically opposed to the
+first. I sincerely believe that the second can do a great deal for the
+prosperity of the countries where it has regularly and justifiably been
+developed according to the natural laws of its growth.
+
+Autocratic Imperialism, in contemporaneous history, is almost
+exclusively typified by its Teutonic production. A general review of the
+world shows that for the last century, and more, with one sad exception,
+all the nations have been moving along the path leading to a greater
+freedom of their institutions. Even Japan and China have joined in the
+race. Russia had deliberately done so. Much was expected from her first
+efforts, and much would certainly have been reaped in due course had not
+the calamitous war still raging at first opened an opportunity for the
+reactionary Russian element, strongly influenced by German intrigues,
+spies and money, to check, through the Petrograd Court, the forward
+movement of Russian political liberty, and to impede, for Germany's
+sake, the success of the Russian military operations. Under those
+circumstances--as was also to be expected--the advancing wave of the
+aspirations of the great Russian people for more political freedom, was
+bound either to recede before the autocratic outburst, or to rush
+impetuously against the wall Germany was to her best helping to raise
+against it. The latter prevision happened, history once more repeating
+itself.
+
+Even barbarous Turkey, in recent years, had been somewhat shaken by a
+sudden desire to remove some of her secular shackles. The young Turks
+movement might have had some desirable results had the Ottoman Empire,
+as every national and political considerations should have induced her
+to do, sided with France and England.
+
+Germany is actually the only country in the world where Autocratic
+Imperialism has been flourishing during the last century. We all know
+the extent and the grievousness of the calamity it has wrought on the
+universe.
+
+During the same last century, Democratic Imperialism--using the term in
+its broadest and most reasonable meaning--has had two distinct
+beneficial developments:--the Monarchical Democratic Imperialism, and
+the Republican Democratic Imperialism.
+
+The Monarchical Democratic or free Imperialism--it is scarcely necessary
+for me to say--is that of Great Britain.
+
+The Republican Democratic or free Imperialism is that of the United
+States of America, of the Argentine Republic, of Brazil.
+
+Happily the two great and glorious countries which are favoured with the
+advantages of the Democratic type of Imperialism are united in a grand
+and noble effort to destroy the German Autocratic Imperialism in
+chastisement of its criminal aspirations to universal domination.
+
+The two types of Democratic or free Imperialism--the Monarchical and the
+Republican--can be better illustrated by a comparative short historical
+study of their development in Great Britain and her colonies, and in the
+United States. I summarize it as follows, beginning by the last
+mentioned, as it requires a shorter exposition.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+AMERICAN IMPERIALISM.
+
+
+The still recent and wonderful growth of the two American continents, in
+population and wealth, is almost an incredible marvel. It is none the
+least politically.
+
+The two Americas, by the extent of their areas, the vastness of their
+productive lands, the length and largeness of their mighty Rivers, the
+broadness of their Lakes, the grandeur of their scenery, seem to be most
+adapted to great developments of many kinds. It is difficult to think of
+small conceptions originating in the New World, which the genius of
+Columbus discovered and the combined genius of all the great races of
+the Old are united in developing.
+
+Let me first put the question:--when the leading European nations
+undertook to colonize the new Continents, were they not, consciously or
+not, throwing the Imperialist seed in a fertile land where it was sure
+to take root and blossom? Spain, France, and, last, England were
+certainly not obeying the dictates of our "Nationalist school" when they
+brought under their Sovereign authority such vast stretches of American
+territory.
+
+That Christian Civilization was to be extended to the new great
+Hemisphere, goes without saying. That the riches, then unknown, of the
+New World, were to be extracted from the land so full of them, was one
+of the duties of the discoverers, all will admit. The European
+Governments in extending their Sovereignties to America unfortunately
+adopted the mistaken Colonial Policy then still too much prevalent.
+Their error was to stick to the wrong conception that a colony was
+important only in the measure that it could be favourable to the
+interests of the Metropolis. History proves that this colonial system is
+bound to lead to unfair treatment of the colonies. Absolutism, then
+dominant in Europe, could not be expected to show any tender leniency
+towards the Colonials who were above all to work for the wealth and
+glory of the Metropolis. Spain proved to be the worst promoter of that
+Regime. Her failure has been most complete. She has had to withdraw her
+flag from the very large part of America over which it might have been
+kept waving, if sounder and more just political notions had prevailed in
+the narrowed minds of her Rulers.
+
+England, treading along the wrong path of Colonial oppression, but in a
+much less proportion, had to face a like result in the revolt of her
+American Colonies. Fortunately for her, for America and the world at
+large, the event widely opened her eyes. In acknowledging the
+independence of the young Republic of the United States, she was
+destined to be proud of her offspring in witnessing the astonishing
+development of the child to whom she had given birth. Could she have
+then foreseen that the day would come when at the hour of her dire
+trial, the daughter who threw off her motherly authority, too
+stringently exercised, would rush to her support for the defence of the
+very principles of Political Liberty for which she, the child, had
+fought for her independence, how soon would England have forgotten the
+sufferings of the parting and blessed Providence for them!
+
+The American Revolution, successfully carried out, was the occasion for
+England to revolutionize her Colonial Policy. She was the first
+nation--and I am sorry to say she has remained alone--to understand with
+great clearness that the old Colonial Regime, fraught with such
+disastrous consequences, must be done away with and replaced by the new
+one which called the colonies to the enjoyment, to the largest possible
+extent, of the free institutions of the Mother Land.
+
+Like every new born child, whose laborious birth was critical, the
+American Republic experienced great difficulties the very moment she
+commenced to breathe freely. So true it is always that national
+development, like personal success, cannot be achieved without struggle.
+
+The United States offer the example of the best development of the
+Imperialist evolution in the world. It dates as far back as the
+proclamation of the Independence of the Republic. When she was admitted
+into the international society of Sovereign States, she had at first to
+settle her political organization. The framing of a constitutional
+charter proved to be a very arduous task, at times almost desperate.
+
+Three sets of divergent opinions were fighting at close range during the
+protracted and solemn deliberations which at last reached a happy
+conclusion. Thirteen American British Colonies had coalesced to wring
+their Independence from England. The goal once attained, a first group
+of opinion was favoured by the supporters of the dissolution of the
+temporary union organized to secure the Independence of the whole, but
+to revert, they said, if successful, to their previous separate status.
+Had this view prevailed, at the very start North America would have been
+cumbered with thirteen Sovereign States. Many were alarmed at the
+creation of so many small Republics. More reasonable persons suggested
+to organize three or four of them, instead of thirteen, meeting as much
+as possible the wants natural to geographical conditions. It was no
+doubt an improvement on the first mentioned scheme. It met with the
+hearty support of devoted adepts.
+
+It is much to be hoped that they will forever receive from the
+successive generations of their countrymen the reward of the gratitude
+they deserve, the true statesmen who, at this important juncture,
+stepped on the scene and bravely took their stand in favour of the
+maintenance of the Union which had conquered Independence, and of the
+establishment of only one great Republic. The celebrated Hamilton was
+their trusted leader. They knew they were undertaking an herculean task.
+At that time, the population of the thirteen original States, scarcely
+four millions in number, was scattered over a vast territory, and
+located, for the most part, on the lands near the Atlantic coasts, two
+thousand miles in length, from North to South. Transportation was in a
+very primitive stage. Many years had yet to run before the whistle of
+the locomotive, powerful and struggling, would be echoed by the solitude
+of immense forests. No one foresaw that, in less than a century, the
+overflowing tide of European immigration would roll its waves so
+powerfully as to cross the whole continent and the Rocky Mountains to
+reach the coast of the Pacific Ocean.
+
+With such conditions, so unfavourable to the aspirations of only one new
+Independent State, moulding together political groups so far apart,
+interests apparently so hostile, the local point of view, local
+prejudices, were sure to dominate. They inspired the strong current of
+opinion in favour of the dissolution of the temporary Union, and the
+organization of every one of the old provinces into a separate Sovereign
+State.
+
+How, under such circumstances, the friends of a unique National American
+Union succeeded in the marvellous achievement of carrying their point by
+a prodigy of persuasive demonstration, will forever be a wonder for the
+student of the Republic's history. Few in numbers when they boldly
+threw their challenge, they encountered the shock of local fanaticism
+heightened by their offensive. Everything seemed to predict their utter
+failure. If ever Founders of States have proved the heroism of their
+convictions, the American Federalists have most gloriously done so.
+Undoubtedly, the force of the argument was with them. But what can
+logic, reason, good sense, too often do against inveterate prejudices?
+Were they, in this particular instance, destined to be powerless?
+
+The Federalists--such is their historical name--were not to be
+disheartened by the formidable obstacles thrown in their way. An
+_Imperialist_ inspiration was certainly the basic foundation of their
+demonstration finally triumphant. They told their countrymen that if
+they were to erect thirteen small Republics upon the burning ruins of
+the first Union to which they owed their Independence, they would
+prepare a very sad future for their children and children's children.
+European immigration was setting in, slowly but surely. They predicted
+that the World, this time, would witness, not a barbarous invasion like
+that which overthrew the Roman Empire, but one which the Old World would
+overflow to the New Continents. This surplus European population would
+bring over to America Christian Civilization, the training of hard work,
+large hopes, courage, experience in many ways, persevering energy,
+which would transform the boundless regions which could become their
+national heritage--until then the domain of the wandering Indian--into
+one of the greatest and wealthiest countries on earth. Would they commit
+the irreparable error to destroy the certainty of such a magnificent
+National Destiny, by creating thirteen separate governments, with the
+sure result of renewing in America, by such race groupings, the
+atrocious military conflicts which, for centuries, have flooded the
+European soil with human blood.
+
+Hamilton and some of his most distinguished friends published that work,
+entitled: "_The Federalist_", which will ever live as one of the
+broadest and most elevated productions of Political Intelligence. To
+all, and especially to the "Nationalist" theorists, I strongly recommend
+the reading of that book, a monument of the genius of great statesmen.
+
+In short, after a lengthy discussion characterized by their brilliant
+eloquence and their argumentative strength, the supporters of the
+Federal Union of the thirteen States, under one Sovereignty, carried the
+day. They had well deserved their glorious triumph. The Republic of the
+United States of North America was founded under the ægis of the free
+constitutional Charter which has done so much for her prosperity and her
+grandeur.
+
+Such was the initial move of the evolution of American Imperialism.
+Those amongst us who desire to learn more about its developments have
+only to look over the boundary line. The thirteen original States,
+federally united, have increased to number forty-four, with three more
+territories gradually developing into Statehood.
+
+The actual population of the Republic is already much over a _hundred
+million_, living in unrivalled prosperity and contentment on a
+territorial area of more than _three millions and a half square miles_,
+larger than all the European Continent. The sun of the present century
+will set upon a people of more than 250,000,000, with a splendid
+situation in a world to the destinies of which they will contribute in
+many admirable ways, if they are only true to the Christian principles
+which alone can assure Civilization and Progress.
+
+If the term _Imperialism_ truly means what the word
+implies,--_Sovereignty being exercised over a large population and a
+vast territory_, this political evolution, so decried by some, has most
+undoubtedly achieved a great success amongst our neighbours to the
+South.
+
+In all sincerity, may I not ask every unprejudiced mind:--has not the
+whole World every reason to be much elated at witnessing the beneficent
+results of the triumph of the American Federalists? Evidently, it has
+been _Imperial_ in its nature, in its proportions. It is so in its
+promises for the future greatness of the Republic. It has maintained,
+with only one exception, peace and harmony during nearly a century and a
+half, between the descendants of the European nationalities who have
+trusted their future welfare to the Sovereignty of the United States.
+Instead of wasting their energies in endless conflicts, such as numerous
+small States would have infallibly occasioned, thanks to the unity of
+the Sovereign Power binding into an admirable whole territories larger
+than Europe, they have learned to consider themselves as citizens of the
+same free country, as the free subjects of the same governmental
+authority. The temporary rupture of the Union, caused by the war of
+Secession, was but a vain reactionary action against the powerful
+current driving the Republic towards her grand future.
+
+It is most unlikely--I can say _impossible_ without the slightest
+hesitation--that the United States, after taking such a grand and
+glorious part in the present war, will abandon the broad and felicitous
+policy by which they have grown to be one of the greatest independent
+nations of the world, to drop so low as to adopt the blinding notions of
+a narrow, sectional, prejudiced and fanatical "Nationalism", such as the
+type which would ruin the future of our own Dominion, if ever it was
+allowed to prevail. They know too well, by the happiest experience, that
+the only true "_Nationalism_" is that which by the united effort of the
+intelligence, the culture, the strength, the patriotism of citizens of
+divers races has wrought for them their present admirable national
+status so full of the brightest promises. When peace shall have been
+restored, the great and mighty American Republic will be one of the
+leading Powers on earth, owing her unrivalled prosperity in a very large
+measure to her appreciation of the wonderful results obtainable by the
+union of all her subjects, of whatever racial origins, working with the
+same heart and devotion for the grandeur of their common country.
+
+I am not unduly enthusiastic, I am only speaking the plain truth, when I
+affirm that the Republican Imperialism of the United States has been
+most beneficent, having guaranteed to Mankind the inestimable boon of
+laying deep and strong in a virgin soil, providentially gifted with the
+most varied, the most abundant, the richest resources, the destinies of
+a great Sovereign Nation comprising numerous ethnical groups. This
+liberal, progressive, peaceful, harmonious Imperialism, it is a duty to
+approve wishing it to achieve new triumphs for the general good of
+Humanity.
+
+Republican Imperialism is also making its way--contaminating it, our
+"Nationalists" would say--in Southern America. This large and splendid
+half of the New World has been for too many years the theatre of civil
+troubles which appeared endless. A great change for the better has taken
+place since the beginning of the concentration movement which has united
+almost the entire Southern American Continent into eight Sovereign
+States, two of which with really Imperial proportions.
+
+The Brazilian Republic has a territorial area of 3,218,991 square miles,
+with a population of more than 24,000,000 increasing at the average rate
+of six or seven hundred thousand a year. With the great natural
+resources at her command, she will certainly develop into one great
+Power. The day is not so far distant when it will have a population
+exceeding _fifty millions_ living in comfort on a soil of luxurious
+wealth.
+
+The Argentine Republic has a territory of 1,153,119 square miles in
+extent. Her population is over 8,000,000, having doubled during the last
+twenty years. At this rate of a yearly increase of five per cent., it is
+easily foreseen what large total it will reach in a few years. It is
+wealthy, doing the best with her splendid resources, already
+contributing extensively to feed the population of Europe.
+
+The other Southern American Republics--the Bolivian, the Chilean, the
+Colombian, the Peruvian, the Venezuelan--have all territorial areas
+double in extent of those of the Great Powers of Western and Central
+Europe.
+
+In Southern America, like everywhere else, the rising tide is not
+running in favour of a multiplicity of small Sovereignties, always in a
+warring frame of mind. Since her political reorganization, South
+America, as a whole, has enjoyed the advantages of peace and of a large
+material progress.
+
+In reality the same political phenomenon is to be found in the five
+continents forming the whole earthly globe. Let the "Nationalists" call
+it _Imperialism_ if they like, I cannot help concluding that it is the
+outgrowth of natural causes operating in the sense of larger political
+units, giving to the Nations getting so constituted, prestige, power,
+grandeur, favouring public order and, in many instances, the development
+of free institutions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+BRITISH IMPERIALISM.
+
+
+Let me now consider the wonderful development of what I have called
+Monarchical Democratic or free Imperialism. It has so far been
+exclusively of British growth. It is the typical form of Imperialism
+which has been honoured with the most violent, the most unjust,
+denunciations of our "Nationalists".
+
+How did it deserve such an hysterical reprobation? Such is the question
+to which I shall now endeavour to give a decisive negative answer.
+
+I have previously once said that British Imperialism, like American
+Imperialism, has Political Liberty as its foundation stone. I think this
+can easily be proven.
+
+Any close observer of political events, will agree with me, I am
+confident, that Imperialism is also "OFFENSIVE" and "DEFENSIVE" in its
+expansion. The meaning of these two terms is clear.
+
+For the last fifty years, "OFFENSIVE" IMPERIALISM has been the GERMAN
+DESPOTIC IMPERIALISM. The present war--its criminal work--is the
+convincing evidence in support of the charge.
+
+I have, I believe, proved to the satisfaction of every fair minded man,
+that during the same last fifty years England's constant efforts have
+been to maintain peace. Consequently, I am authorized to draw the
+conclusion that British Imperialism was not intended to be, and has not
+been "OFFENSIVE".
+
+The Imperialist effort OFFENSIVELY, AGGRESSIVELY and VIOLENTLY tending
+to the continuous and unmeasured expansion of a Sovereign Power, with
+the objective of universal domination by all possible means, however
+unjust, immoral and savage they may be, is a most guilty effort
+deserving the severest condemnation. Such is the German autocratic
+Imperialism.
+
+On the contrary, the DEFENSIVE Imperialist effort, having for its only
+object the protection of an Empire, the maintenance of her standing in
+the society of nations, and of peace so essential to the general
+prosperity of the world, is meritorious, beneficient and laudable. Such
+has been the British Monarchical democratic Imperialism.
+
+It is from this elevated standpoint that I will consider the
+negotiations which, for the last few years, have taken place between the
+Metropolis and her autonomous Colonies, respecting Imperial defence.
+While admitting the right of all the free citizens of Canada to
+appreciate them, and entertaining a real respect for the sincerity of
+opinions which I cannot conscientiously share, I cannot help considering
+that many amongst us have fallen into a serious error in judging the
+nature of these negotiations.
+
+Is it truly, as has been asserted, in obedience to a powerful wave of
+"OFFENSIVE IMPERIALISM" that Great Britain has of late convened
+representatives of her free Colonies to meet, in London, to confer about
+the best means to adopt for the general security of the whole British
+Empire?
+
+Is it, as also asserted, with the unworthy design to entrap the Colonies
+that their self-appointed delegates have been called in secret conclaves
+where the political leaders of England would, by unfair and foul means,
+prevail upon them to agree to unjust sacrifices on the part of the
+peoples they represented?
+
+I am absolutely unable to share such erroneous views. I must admit with
+all candor that I have not yet been brought to the conclusion that
+British Statesmen are all contaminated with "Machiavellism". A free
+country like the United Kingdom is not a land where such deplorable
+principles are likely to blossom.
+
+What are then the extraordinary events which have recently taken place
+to justify the assertion of the "Nationalist" leader that, in the course
+of the last few years, a complete REVOLUTION has been wrought in the
+relations of the autonomous Colonies with their Metropolis? Of such a
+Revolution, cunningly promoted to bring the colonies against their will
+to participate in the Imperial wars--_les guerres de l'empire_--I do not
+perceive the smallest shadow of traces.
+
+As everybody else, living with their eyes not closed to the light of
+day, I clearly saw, principally during the last twenty years, that
+important developments were taking place under the sun; that European
+equilibrium upon the maintenance of which universal peace so much
+depended, was rapidly breaking asunder; that the German Empire was more
+and more unmasking her guilty ambition to dominate an enslaved universe;
+that, to reach that goal, she was organizing an army formidable by its
+millions of warriors, their superior training, their ironed discipline
+and their unrivalled armament. I knew that the sadly famous Kaiser
+Wilhelm II. was determined, at all cost, to increase the power of his
+Empire by the addition of a military fleet in such proportions as to be
+able, in a successful naval battle, to conquer the supremacy of the
+seas.
+
+Under such circumstances, was it to be supposed that the Statesmen
+responsible for the government of Great Britain would be so careless and
+so blind as not to see the dark spots crowding on the horizon!
+
+The problem of Imperial defence was then once more raised, not by a mere
+caprice of vain glory on the part of England, but by the inevitable
+outcome of the initiative of would-be opponents, if not actually
+declared enemies. The overseas colonies being more and more likely to be
+attacked, in a general conflict, was it surprising that the British
+Government was induced to confer with them for their common defence
+under the new conditions which were surely not of their own
+metropolitan or colonial creation.
+
+All the representatives of Great Britain, of Canada, Australia, South
+Africa, New Zealand, at the London conferences, took part in those
+solemn deliberations with the full sense of their responsibility. None
+of them was so mistaken as to consider the question, of paramount
+importance, of the DEFENSIVE organization of the Empire, as futile,
+merely to be used by the astuteness of some and the guilty complicity of
+others, joining together to sacrifice the future of their common
+country. The odious imputation, the shameless charge, were equally
+unjust and calumnious for the British ministers and the colonial public
+men who, in their turn, went to London to deliberate on subjects so
+vitally interesting all the component parts of the Empire.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE SITUATIONS OF 1865 AND 1900-14 COMPARED.
+
+
+Our "Nationalist" opponents of all colonial participation in the
+Imperial wars, affirm that Canada should have abided with the convention
+of 1865. Are they not aware that, since that year, a great deal of water
+has run along the rivers; that the world, although perhaps not wiser,
+has at least grown half a century older; that so many ancient conditions
+have radically changed; that nations, like individuals, to be
+progressive, cannot go on marking time on the same small hardened spot?
+
+Any man sincerely desirous to form for himself an enlightened opinion on
+the question of Imperial defence, must first admit that two national and
+general situations, totally different, create widely different duties.
+
+Let us compare for a moment, 1865 and 1900-14--_yesterday and
+to-day_--as the "Nationalist" leader says.
+
+Fifty years ago, the German Empire was non-existent. Nothing pointed to
+the early birth of this terrible child destined to grow so rapidly to
+such colossal proportions.
+
+The French Empire was the leading continental Power; Great Britain, then
+as now, the leading naval Power, both military and mercantile.
+
+Those two nations, without a formal alliance, had been united ever since
+the days when Lord Palmerston favoured the advent of Napoleon III.
+
+The Union of England and France was doing much to maintain the peace of
+the world.
+
+The United States were just emerging from the trials of their great
+Civil War. They had to solve the very difficult problem of their
+national reconstruction. Their population did not exceed thirty-five
+millions.
+
+How different was the situation of 1900-14!
+
+The German Empire had become formidable with her population of
+68,000,000, her soldiers numbering more than 7,000,000, with 1,000,000
+of men permanently under arms, ever ready for an offensive campaign,
+with her fleet much enlarged yearly at the cost of enormous financial
+sacrifices; allied to Austria-Hungary, with her population of
+50,000,000, to Italy, with her 36,000,000--then being one of the Triple
+Alliance--supported by Turkey and Bulgaria,--in all a combined strength
+of 150,000,000 bodies and souls; with the Germans exalted to the utmost
+by persistent appeals to their feelings and to their ambitious dreams.
+
+The American Republic grown to the rank of a first class Power, with a
+population of 100,000,000 and a magnificent military fleet.
+
+Was it even sensible to pretend that such altered worldly conditions did
+not make the revision of the understanding arrived at in 1865 an
+imperious necessity.
+
+They are living in an imaginary world those of us who assert that Canada
+could remain a British Colony under a permanent agreement--never to be
+amended--by which the Mother Country would be bound to defend her, at
+all costs and all hazards, whenever and by whomsoever attacked, Canada
+in the meantime refusing, whatever the perils of England might be, to
+spend a dollar and to send one man for her defence. There could be but
+one issue to the consideration of such propositions: the dissolution of
+the British Empire. I regret to say that Mr. Bourassa has audaciously
+declared that such has been the objective of his oppositionist campaign
+to the Canadian participation in Imperial wars.
+
+If Canada, through its constitutional organ, the Ottawa Parliament, had
+signified to England, in 1914, that she would not take the least part in
+the war imposed upon her by Germany, nor do anything to help her Allies,
+France and Belgium, could she, without blushing with shame, have claimed
+the protection of the British flag, if her territory had been attacked.
+
+Would not England have been fully justified in taking the initiative to
+break the bond which could henceforth but be disastrous to her, our
+shameless attitude towards her, at the hour of her peril, being most
+favourable to her mortal enemy.
+
+Have I not every sound reason to conclude that Canadian participation in
+the present war was in no way whatever the outcome of an Imperialist
+attempt to drag her, against her will, in the conflict into which she so
+nobly hastened to enter with the determination to fight to the last, and
+to deserve her fair share of the glory which will be but one of the
+rewards that will accrue to all those who will have united together to
+save Liberty and Civilization from the German barbarous onslaught.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+BRITISH IMPERIALISM NATURALLY PACIFIST.
+
+
+According to its "Nationalist" opponents, British Imperialism has always
+been of a conquering nature, like that of the Roman type and those of
+ancient history.
+
+This opinion is formally contradicted by a long succession of undeniable
+historical facts. Undoubtedly the splendid structure of the British
+Empire was not erected without armed support. The creation, without an
+army organization, of a Sovereign State comprising a fourth of the
+Globe, which component parts, themselves of colossal proportions,
+situated in all the continents, separated by the immensity of the seas,
+would have been more than marvellous.
+
+I will not pretend that always and everywhere the expansion of British
+Sovereignty has taken place according to the dictates of strict justice.
+Still I do not hesitate to say that, on the whole, it has developed
+under conditions which were never the outcome of a mere conquering
+ambition.
+
+With much reason, English citizens are proud of the fact that their
+Empire is the result of a NATURAL GROWTH. When the call to arms had to
+be made, it was oftener for DEFENSIVE WARS.
+
+The British Empire, outside the United Kingdom, comprise, for the most
+important part, Canada, Australia, the South African Dominion, and
+India. It is easy to explain, in a few lines, under what general
+circumstances those immense regions were brought under the British flag.
+I shall, of course, begin this short historical review by the
+acquisition of Canada by England.
+
+The great event of the discovery of the New World, at the end of the
+fifteenth century, tempted the western European nations to acquire vast
+colonies in the new continent. Spain, France, Portugal, Holland, were
+the first in the field. If the craving for large colonies in the new
+Hemisphere was of Imperialist inspiration, England does not appear to
+have been one of the first Powers infested with the disease so dreaded
+by our "Nationalists". She was rather late to catch it. Hollanders
+settled in New York before the British.
+
+As all ought to know, Spain took hold of the whole of Southern America.
+France displayed her flag on the larger part of Northern America,
+commanding the St. Lawrence and Mississippi Rivers, and the Great Lakes.
+Those immense regions, extending from the cold north to flowery
+Louisiana, were called NEW FRANCE. Later on, that part of North America
+bordering on the Atlantic, from Maine to Virginia, became British, and
+was subdivided into thirteen provinces, or separate colonies. For such a
+dominating Imperialist, as some pretend she has ever been, it must be
+admitted that England was rather in a modest frame of mind with regard
+to her colonial enterprises. The British Government itself was slow in
+moving towards the Imperialist goal which was stirring up Spain and
+France to a much greater activity. The first British emigrants were
+Puritans looking for that religious liberty, under a new shining sun,
+which was denied to them by their native land in those days when
+fanaticism was unfortunately too much triumphant in many countries.
+
+As it was inevitable, the European Colonies in America, all satellites
+of their metropolis, fell victims to the political rivalries of the
+nations who settled them. Not satisfied with fighting in Europe, those
+Powers also decided to gratify the New World with a specimen of what
+they could do on the battlefields. The Seven Years War did not originate
+in America, as it was the outcome of secular European international
+difficulties.
+
+If the European nations, in taking possession of America, were making a
+conquest, it was that of the white race over the yellow one of the New
+World. Spain and France, in raising their flags over four-fifths of the
+American continent, were surely strengthening Imperialism. Will our
+"Nationalists" accuse them of having unduly saved the New World from the
+secular Indian barbarism?
+
+More especially, Spanish Imperialism in America was most despotic. By a
+very false political conception, Spain undertook a great settlement work
+in America with the sole object of bleeding her colonies to her only
+profit. It failed disastrously as it deserved to. It is because she
+persevered in her fatal error that, in 1898, she was forced out of Cuba.
+The last stone of her immense colonial edifice was cast away.
+
+England shared Spain's error, but much less heavily. Like Spain, she
+reaped what she had sowed. The thirteen British American colonies
+revolted and conquered their Independence. Alone French Canada remained
+loyal to England.
+
+If the French Canadians had sided with the British Colonies to the South
+in the contest for their Independence, the Canada of those days would
+certainly have been included in the American Republic when England was
+forced, by the fate of war, to acknowledge the new Sovereign nation. Her
+offspring then violently broke away from the parental home, but has
+recently hastened to her defence, at the hour of danger, only
+remembering the first happy years of her childhood.
+
+Following the loyal advice of their spiritual leaders, and of their most
+trusted civil chieftains, the French Canadians remained true to England,
+refusing to desert her, thus maintaining her Sovereign rights over the
+Northern half of the Continent destined, a century later, to develop
+into the present Dominion, enjoying the free institutions of the Mother
+Country.
+
+As previously stated, the American Revolution brought for ever to an end
+British absolutism in the new continent. Henceforth, liberty and
+autonomy were to be the two foundation stones of a new colonial Policy
+which, far from disrupting the Empire as the autocratic one had done,
+was to cement its union so strongly as to make possible the gigantic
+military effort she has displayed for more than the last four years.
+
+The Treaty of Paris brought the Seven Years War to a close. Once more
+the peace of the world was temporarily restored. By the Treaty of Paris,
+Canada was ceded to England, our "Nationalists" say. If so, how can they
+pretend that the extension of British Sovereignty over the regions which
+have become the great autonomous Dominion of Canada was an undue
+manifestation of British conquering Imperialism?
+
+An intelligent and impartial student of the early settlements of the two
+continents of America can only draw the conclusion that the New World
+has not been the theatre of the operations of British Imperialism. Its
+first real attempt was tried--with much laudable success--in 1867, by
+the federal union of the Canadian provinces, decreed by the Sovereign
+legislative power of the Parliament of Great Britain, at our own request
+and in accordance with our own freely expressed wishes.
+
+Australia is the second autonomous colony of England in extent and
+importance. It comprises nearly all the territory of the Oceanic
+continent, so called from the geographical position, in the Pacific
+Ocean, of the Islands forming it. New Zealand is the second group of
+these Islands. It is another autonomous British colony, called, since
+1907 "THE DOMINION OF NEW ZEALAND".
+
+Those two Dominions have a combined territorial area of more than
+3,000,000 square miles--almost as large as the whole of Europe--with a
+population of six millions rapidly increasing. Their two largest cities,
+Sydney and Melbourne, each having a population of 700,000, are great
+commercial centres.
+
+If British Imperialism has had anything to do with the bringing of
+Australia and New Zealand under British Sovereignty, it must be admitted
+by all fair minded men that it has worked its way in the most pacific
+manner. Deservedly renowned British explorers--Cook, Vancouver, and
+others--discovered and took possession of the Oceanic continent in the
+name of their Sovereign. Welcomed by the aboriginal tribes, they raised
+the British flag over the fair land of such a promising future in the
+latter end of the eighteenth century--Cook in 1770. It has ever since
+been graciously waving, by the sweet breeze of the Pacific, over one of
+the happiest peoples on earth, enjoying the blessings of interior peace
+and all the advantages of the political liberties conferred upon these
+great colonies, more than half a century ago. As a matter of fact,
+England has organized her Australasian possessions into free autonomous
+colonies at the very dawn of their political life, dating from the
+middle of the last century, when they began that splendid progressive
+advance developing more and more every year.
+
+Is it not evident, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that the settlement of
+the Australasian colonies by England, so satisfactory and so promising,
+has not been brought about by the illegitimate ambition of an unmeasured
+Sovereign aggrandizement by a guilty sort of Imperialism.
+
+The establishment of British Sovereignty in the Indian country, immense
+in extent, wealth and population, is one of the greatest events of the
+historical development of the British Empire.
+
+I shall not say that all that took place in the government of India
+deserves a blind approval. That British authority was much too long left
+in the control of a company was a misfortune. Under such a regime abuses
+were sure to develop and increase. They did and were energetically
+denounced--more especially on that day when Sheridan rose to such an
+eloquence, in the House of Lords, that a motion of adjournment had to be
+carried, to allow the peers to recover the free control of their minds
+before rendering judgment in the case brought before their tribunal,
+impeaching Warren Hastings.
+
+The rule of the Indian Company was abolished, in 1858, by _The
+Government of India Act_.
+
+In 1876, the illustrious Disraëli--Lord Beaconsfield--took the
+statesmanlike decision of adding a new prestige to the British Crown and
+to the Sovereign wearing it. He had Parliament to adopt the _Royal
+Titles Act_, by which Her Majesty Queen Victoria was proclaimed EMPRESS
+OF INDIA.
+
+Such, in due course, and without any trouble, was accomplished that
+great political evolution which substituted, for populations numbering
+more than three hundred millions of human beings, an Imperial system in
+place of the deplorable government by a company. For the last sixty
+years, the new regime has given peace, order and prosperity to India.
+
+A French publicist wrote as follows:--
+
+ After troubles of nine centuries duration, India has recovered
+ peace under the tutelage of England, the best colonizer of the
+ peoples of Europe. England has rendered an evident service to
+ India. She has freed her from the intestine wars tearing her
+ since her historical origin; she has given her a police and an
+ administrative system.
+
+Nations, like individuals, are not perfect. To judge equitably,
+impartially, the government by a Metropolis of the regions under her
+Sovereignty, one must not only be scandalized at her failings, but must
+take the broader view of her whole history in appreciating its final
+good and commendable results. So judging the government of India by
+England, every impartial mind must conclude that, on the whole--and more
+especially for the last sixty years--it has been beneficient. It
+promises to be still more so, as a consequence of the admirable share
+India is taking in the present war.
+
+Egypt and the Soudan have a territorial area of 1,335,000 square miles,
+with a population of 15,000,000. I pride to be one of those who
+congratulate Great Britain to have freed the ancient and glorious
+Egyptian country from Turkish tyranny. A proclamation, dated the 18th
+of December, 1914, has finally placed Egypt under England's protectorate
+with the agreement of France.
+
+In the chapters respecting the Soudanese and South African wars, I have
+shown how satisfactory has been the rule of Great Britain in those
+African countries.
+
+It being ever true that the earth was Providentially created for men to
+live in the legitimate enjoyment of the blessings of peace multiplied by
+the fruits of their labours, the Egyptians and the Soudaneses have every
+reason to congratulate themselves for their liberation from the Turkish
+barbarous yoke, and for the protection they receive from one of the most
+civilizing nations.
+
+I sincerely believe that this short review of the respective situation
+of five of the principal component parts of the British Empire, is
+sufficient to form the honest conviction that if England has practised
+Imperialism, she has done so for the real benefit of the peoples living
+under the ægis of her Sovereignty, the most favourable to colonial
+political liberty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+BRITISH IMPERIALISM AND POLITICAL LIBERTY.
+
+
+British history, for the last century and more, proves that Imperialism
+is not naturally incompatible with Political Liberty, nor with the
+respect due the national aspirations of divers ethnical groups. The
+unity and the consolidation of the Empire made their greatest strides
+since the close of the war which resulted in the independence of the
+neighbouring Republic. As previously explained, they were the outcome of
+the very wise and statesmanlike change of colonial policy then adopted
+by England. The days were to come when they would be put to the severest
+test and would prove more than equal to its greatest strain. Those are
+the days which the British Empire is living through, with brilliancy and
+heroism, amidst the dazzling lightning and the roaring thunder of an
+unprecedented military conflict, with every prospect of surviving its
+sufferings and sacrifices with a still stronger political structure.
+
+The same evolution by which Great Britain was to reach the summit of
+Political Liberty by the final triumph of the new constitutional
+principle of ministerial responsibility, was spreading to her far
+overseas Colonies. Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa,
+Newfoundland were successively granted constitutional charters based on
+the same principles as those of the institutions of the United Kingdom.
+
+As I have already said, Imperialism becomes dangerous and deserves the
+severest condemnation, only where and when it is the instrument of
+autocratic absolutism. It causes me no alarm whatever when it is
+developed under free institutions, guaranteed and protected by
+ministerial responsibility.
+
+Whatever said to the contrary, by prejudiced and designing writers,
+imbued with the extravagant notions of a narrow and fanatical
+"Nationalism", Canada, the most important of the autonomous Colonies of
+the British Empire, is freer than ever. Like all the other nations, she
+suffers from disastrous events shaking the whole worldly edifice, but
+she is none the less the absolute mistress of the initiative of whatever
+efforts she considers her duty to make under those trying circumstances.
+England has imposed nothing upon Canada, has asked nothing from Canada,
+since the beginning of the war. She has, of course, accepted, with much
+pleasure and gratitude, the help we have freely offered and given her.
+Let our "Nationalists", in their inspired unfairness, say, if they like,
+that Canada, like all the Allies defensively fighting, was forced in the
+conflict by the imperious necessity of the situation created by those
+who expected to reach the goal of their ambition. But they have no
+right to charge Great Britain to have coerced the Dominion, against her
+will, to join in the struggle which the British Government had done
+their utmost to prevent.
+
+If it was not giving to this work too wide a range, I would like to
+undertake an historical sketch of all the good the British
+constitutional system has produced in the United Kingdom and in the
+Colonies. I shall quote only a few of the most important examples.
+
+In my opinion, the one development in England's history, since the close
+of the eighteenth century, most interesting to the French Canadians, is
+certainly that which resulted in the emancipation of the Roman Catholics
+of the United Kingdom.
+
+To persuade my French Canadian countrymen of the good to be wrought by
+the patriotic use of the British institutions, I explained to them that
+at the beginning of the last century, the Roman Catholics of the United
+Kingdom enjoyed no political rights. They were neither electors, nor
+eligible to the House of Commons. They asked that justice be done to
+them. True statesmen, high and fair minded, admitted the justice of
+their claims and supported them. The ensuing political contest lasted
+more than twenty years.
+
+To obtain the proposed change in the long standing laws of the realm
+from an exclusively Protestant electorate, was indeed a great task to
+accomplish. The public men supporting the Roman Catholics' claims were
+courageous and eloquent. They carried the day. Have not the true friends
+of political freedom every reason to congratulate themselves that a
+great measure of justice granting political rights to Roman Catholics
+was voted by an Electorate and a Parliament exclusively Protestant.
+
+King George IV, through fear that his Royal prerogative might be
+impaired by the change, was hostile to it. He was persuaded to agree to
+the measure by Sir Robert Peel, the life long opponent of Roman Catholic
+emancipation. Whatever were the religious convictions and feelings of
+Sir Robert Peel, he was a statesman of a high class. As all the leading
+public men of England, he had a broad conception of the duties of the
+chief adviser of the Crown, and of the true spirit of the British
+constitution. The voice of the nation having spoken in no uncertain
+sounds, the national will must be followed. He plainly said so to His
+Majesty who yielded. Then, in a most admirable speech, he--Sir Robert
+Peel--moved himself the passing of the bill granting justice to the
+Roman Catholics, carried it through the two Houses of Parliament and had
+it sanctioned by the King.
+
+A great act of national justice always receives its due reward. The
+Roman Catholics have been faithful and loyal subjects. George IV and his
+successors have lived to see many evident proofs of their loyal
+devotion, more especially since the opening of the present war.
+
+The final success of the free discussion of the question of granting to
+the Roman Catholics of the United Kingdom all the rights enjoyed by the
+British subjects of all the other religious denominations, carried in
+spite of difficulties not easily overcome, is certainly one of the
+greatest and most honorable triumphs that Political Liberty has ever
+obtained. I was often deeply moved at reading the historic account of
+that most interesting debate in Parliament, on the public platform and
+in the press. More and more, the conviction was firmly impressed on my
+mind and soul that a great people accomplishing a grand act of justice
+gives a most salutary example to posterity deserving the admiration and
+gratitude of all generations to come.
+
+I was only appreciating with justice and fairness the part played by
+England in Canada, in telling my French Canadian countrymen that they
+enjoyed the political rights of British subjects many years before the
+same privileges and justice was granted to the Roman Catholics of the
+United Kingdom. That much in answer to the charge of our fanatical
+extremists that England and her Government always wanted to oppress the
+French Canadians on account of their religious faith.
+
+Without going back to the eventful days of _Magna Charta_ and of the
+_Bill of Rights_, both embodying the fundamental constitutional
+principles which were finally bound to overcome the last pretentions of
+absolutism of yore, I considered a short review, in broad lines, of the
+work performed by the British Electorate and the Imperial Parliament,
+during the last century, would help in destroying in the minds of my
+French readers the prejudices forced upon them by "Nationalist" writers.
+That great work is principally illustrated by eight important measures
+of general interest.
+
+I have just mentioned that most honourable one emancipating the Roman
+Catholics of Great Britain.
+
+Shortly after, it was followed by that abolishing the Corn Laws after a
+protracted and very interesting discussion. That important measure was
+also carried on the proposition of the same Sir Robert Peel, for a long
+time its determined opponent. The manufacturing population, increasing
+so rapidly, would soon have been starved by the continuously augmenting
+cost of bread. Sir Robert Peel foresaw the fearful consequences sure to
+ensue, if no relief was granted to millions threatened with hunger. He
+was, as I have already said, too much of a statesman to hesitate in
+doing his duty. He gave up his own opinion and advised his Sovereign to
+do away with the Corn Laws, the repeal of which he had Parliament to
+vote.
+
+With the advent of Queen Victoria, ministerial responsibility for all
+the acts of the Sovereign became definitely the fundamental principle of
+the British constitution.
+
+Complete ministerial responsibility, once fully recognized in Great
+Britain, was without delay granted to all the British colonies having
+representative institutions.
+
+The abolition of slavery all over the British Empire is, every one must
+admit, a political development of first magnitude, one doing the
+greatest possible honour to the great nation having first taken the
+glorious initiative of granting to the black race the justice ordered by
+Christianity. It is undoubtedly a very valuable reform to the credit of
+England.
+
+The Imperial Parliament realized that the constitutional regime of the
+United Kingdom could not bear all the fruits to be expected from it with
+an electorate restricted to privileged classes. To support such a
+splendid edifice, admirable in structure and strength, a larger basic
+foundation, more solid, laid deep in the national soil, was required.
+After a long political struggle, freedom was once more triumphant in the
+Motherland. The first great Reform Bill of 1832 was the starting point
+of successive legislative enactments, enlarging the franchise, calling
+to the exercise of political rights various classes of the people,
+bringing up the British electorate to the glorious standard of being one
+of the freest, the most enlightened, and most independent in the world.
+The crowning measure of this extensive political reform has been the
+Bill of 1917 providing for the addition of some 8,000,000 voters to the
+roll, including about 6,000,000 women.
+
+The rotten boroughs of old were abolished and replaced by a much better
+redistribution of electoral divisions.
+
+Dating from 1867, great autonomous federal colonies, with full Sovereign
+rights in the administration of all their interior affairs, have been
+created by Imperial charters. The Canadian, Australian, South African,
+and New Zealand Dominions, of a total territorial area exceeding
+7,000,000 square miles, with a total population of over 25,000,000,
+nearly 20,000,000 of which belong to the white race, have commenced
+their new political career with all the confidence and the hopes
+inspired by their free institutions.
+
+Finally, the Imperial Parliament passed a law granting Home Rule to
+Ireland. Unfortunately, the war, so disastrous in many ways, prevented
+the immediate carrying out of the will of Parliament, certainly
+representative of that of the nation. But this vexed question must at
+last be settled once for all. It is to be hoped that the day is not far
+distant when it will be removed from the political arena by a solution
+satisfactory to Ireland, to England and to the whole Empire.
+
+Besides all those very important measures of political reform, the
+British Parliament has passed many laws of urgent social improvement.
+
+The crowning act of the Imperial Parliament has been its determined
+attitude for the maintenance of peace through a long series of years.
+
+If all the above enumeration of measures of widespread influence for the
+general good is to be called Imperialism, I say without hesitation that
+it is an Imperialism worth favouring. The world will never have too much
+of it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+IMPERIAL FEDERATION AND "BOURASSISM".
+
+
+The leader of our "Nationalists," always frightened, apparently at
+least, with the supposed dangers of further Imperialist encroachments
+detrimental to the best interests of the British autonomous Colonies,
+seems alarmed at the prospects to follow the close of the hostilities.
+Consequently, it has been a part of his campaign to bring the French
+Canadians to share his fears for their future.
+
+Not in the least worried by such apprehensions, it was also my duty to
+try and persuade my French Canadian compatriots not to be unduly
+disturbed by the sayings of a publicist magnifying the errors of his
+excited imagination.
+
+That there will be after-the-war problems to consider, is most likely.
+What will they be? It is very difficult to foresee just now with
+sufficient definiteness. So much will depend upon the general conditions
+of the restoration of peace. However, broad lines have, for the last
+four years, been outlined with fair clearness permitting a general view
+of what is likely to happen.
+
+Let us for a moment examine the traces of the initial phases of the
+constitutional developments likely to be the outcome of the joint
+effort of the whole Empire to win the war.
+
+The second chapter of the Report of the War Cabinet for the year
+1917--already quoted somewhat extensively--deals with the new aspect of
+Imperial Affairs more especially the consequence of the war. The opening
+paragraph partly reads as follows:--
+
+ The outstanding event of the year in the sphere of Imperial
+ Affairs has been the inauguration of the Imperial War Cabinet.
+ This has been the direct outcome of the manner in which all
+ parts of the Empire had thrown themselves into the war during
+ the preceding years. Impalpable as was the bond which bound this
+ great group of peoples together, there was never any doubt about
+ their loyalty to the Commonwealth to which they belonged and to
+ the cause to which it was committed by the declaration of war.
+ Without counting the cost to themselves, they offered their men
+ and their treasure in defence of freedom and public right. From
+ the largest and most prosperous Dominion to the smallest island
+ the individual and national effort has been one of continuous
+ and unreserved generosity.
+
+After mentioning that during 1917 "great progress has been made in the
+organisation both of the man-power and other resources of the Empire for
+the prosecution of the war," and that "the British Army is now a truly
+Imperial Army, containing units from almost every part of the Empire,"
+the Report says:--
+
+ The real development, however, of 1917 has been in the political
+ sphere, and it has been the result of the intense activity of
+ all parts of the Empire in prosecuting the war since August,
+ 1914.
+
+ It had been felt for some time that, in view of the
+ ever-increasing part played by the Dominions in the war, it was
+ necessary that their Governments should not only be informed as
+ fully as was possible of the situation, but that, as far as was
+ practicable, they should participate, on a basis of complete
+ equality, in the deliberations which determined the main
+ outlines of Imperial policy.
+
+Accordingly, a Special War Conference was convened to meet in London,
+where for practical convenience it was divided into two parts: one,
+"known as the Imperial War Cabinet, which consisted of the Oversea
+Representatives and the members of the British War Cabinet sitting
+together as an Imperial War Cabinet for deliberation about the conduct
+of the war and for the discussion of the larger issues of Imperial
+policy connected with the war." The other "was the Imperial War
+Conference, presided over by the Secretary of State for the Colonies,
+which consisted of the Oversea Representatives and a number of other
+ministers, which discussed non-war problems connected with the war but
+of lesser importance."
+
+On the 17th May, 1917, the British Prime Minister, giving "to the House
+of Commons a short appreciation of the work of the Imperial War
+Cabinet," said in part:--
+
+ I ought to add that the institution in its present form is
+ extremely elastic. It grew, not by design, but out of the
+ necessities of the war. The essence of it is that the
+ responsible heads of the Governments of the Empire, with those
+ Ministers who are specially entrusted with the conduct of
+ Imperial Policy should meet together at regular intervals to
+ confer about foreign policy and matters connected therewith, and
+ come to decisions in regard to them which, subject to the
+ control of their own Parliaments, they will then generally
+ execute. By this means they will be able to obtain full
+ information about all aspects of Imperial affairs, and to
+ determine by consultation together the policy of the Empire in
+ its most vital aspects, without infringing in any degree the
+ autonomy which its parts at present enjoy. To what
+ constitutional developments this may lead we did not attempt to
+ settle. The whole question of perfecting the mechanism of
+ "continuous consultation" about Imperial and foreign affairs
+ between the "autonomous nations of an Imperial Commonwealth"
+ will be reserved for the consideration of that special
+ Conference which will be summoned as soon as possible after the
+ war to readjust the constitutional relations of the Empire. We
+ felt, however, that the experiment of consulting an Imperial
+ Cabinet in which India was represented had been so fruitful in
+ better understanding and in unity of purpose and action that it
+ ought to be perpetuated, and we believe that this proposal will
+ commend itself to the judgment of all the nations of the Empire.
+
+The preceding are words of political wisdom, worthy of the best form of
+British statesmanship. Were they the dawn of a new era, dissipating the
+clouds accumulated by the trials of a long period of military conflict,
+and showing in a future, more or less distant, the rising constitutional
+fabric of a still greater Imperial Commonwealth, not so much in size,
+than in unity, in freedom and strength? Time will tell. But can we not
+at once note with confidence that the fundamental principle upheld by
+all the leading British public men is that, whatever constitutional
+developments may be in store for us all, they will not be allowed to
+infringe "in any degree the autonomy" presently enjoyed by the Oversea
+Dominions.
+
+The Imperial War Conference held in London, last year, passed the
+following very important "Resolution" dealing with the future
+constitutional organisation of the Empire:--
+
+ "The Imperial War Conference are of opinion that the
+ readjustment of the constitutional relations of the component
+ parts of the Empire is too important and intricate a subject to
+ be dealt with during the war, and that it should form the
+ subject of a special Imperial Conference to be summoned as soon
+ as possible after the cessation of hostilities.
+
+ "They deem it their duty; however, to place on record their view
+ that any such readjustment, while thoroughly preserving all
+ existing powers of self-government and complete control of
+ domestic affairs, should be based on a full recognition of the
+ Dominions as autonomous nations of an Imperial Commonwealth, and
+ of India as an important portion of the same, should recognise
+ the right of the Dominions and India to an adequate voice in
+ foreign policy and in foreign relations, and should provide
+ effective arrangements for continuous consultation in all
+ important matters of common Imperial concern and for such
+ necessary concerted action, founded on consultation, as the
+ several Governments may determine."
+
+We can await without the slightest alarm the holding of the proposed
+"_special Imperial Conference to be summoned as soon as possible after
+the cessation of the hostilities_." The fundamental principles upon
+which "_the readjustment_," if any one is made, "_of the constitutional
+relations of the component parts of the Empire_" are to rest, are well
+defined in the above "Resolution":--_through preservation of "all
+existing powers of self-government and complete control of domestic
+affairs_;--_full recognition of the Dominions as autonomous nations of
+an Imperial Commonwealth, and of India as an important portion of the
+same_";--the admission of "_the right of the Dominions and India to an
+adequate voice in foreign policy and in foreign relations_."
+
+Upon that large and strong basis, I, for one, am ready to wait with
+patience and confidence the result of the deliberations of the future
+special Imperial Conference. With regard to the proposed Conference, I
+cannot see any reason for anyone to indulge in the "Nationalist"
+hysterical fears of an oppressive Imperialism devouring, as the old
+mythological god--Saturn--his own children.
+
+As I have said, the work of the special Imperial Conference will be
+rendered more or less easy by the conditions of the future peace. I
+pray, with all the fervour of my soul, that the war shall not end by a
+hasty compromise--as wished for by our blind, if not really disloyal,
+pacifists--by which the world would be doomed to another disaster far
+worse than the one it is straining every nerve to overcome, and that
+after years of the most costly warlike preparations. Such a peace would
+be the saddest possible conclusion of the present conflict, and much
+worse than the sacrifices yet to be borne by the prosecution of the war
+to a finish. We must all implore Providence to save Humanity from such a
+cataclysm.
+
+A special Imperial Conference meeting under such disheartening
+circumstances would indeed have a most difficult task to accomplish. It
+was evidently an act of wisdom on the part of the Imperial War
+Conference of last year to express the opinion that the special Imperial
+Conference should be summoned only after the cessation of hostilities.
+
+When peace shall have been restored with the only conditions which can
+be satisfactory to the Allies and to the world at large, a special
+Imperial Conference will be in order, having for its object to consider
+the readjustment of the constitutional relations of the component parts
+of the Empire, in conformity with the requirements of the new situation
+which will have grown out of the necessities of the war. However
+important the task, the tranquility of the world being, let us hope,
+assured for many long years, there will be no reason for the Conference
+to proceed hastily to any insufficiently matured conclusion. The
+representative public men who will meet in London from all over the
+Empire will not forget, we may rest confident, that the safest way to a
+good working readjustment will be, as it has always been in the past,
+that which will follow the straight line of natural growth. Dry cut
+resolutions, imprudently adopted, and pressed upon unwilling populations
+would have ninety-nine chances out of a hundred to be more injurious
+than profitable.
+
+Every sensible man must acknowledge that the war has in an extraordinary
+manner hastened the rapidity of the advance towards the turning point in
+the Constitutional organization of the British Empire. The day is near
+at hand when the problem will have to be faced with courage and
+broadness of mind. Very blind indeed, and far behind the times, is he
+who does not realize that TO BE, or NOT TO BE, for the Empire, is
+confined to two clear words: CONSOLIDATION or DISSOLUTION. The tide has
+either to ebb or flow, the wave to advance or recede. The edifice must
+be strengthened or left to decay. Like any living being, a political
+society, be it great or small, after its birth, more or less laborious,
+grows to a prosperous and healthy old age, or crumbles down prematurely.
+Very much depends, for either course, on the wisdom or extravagance of
+the way of passing through life. Unmeasured ambitions, wild
+expectations, are too often, alike for the individual and the nation,
+the surest road to a lamentable ruin. Wisdom, the outcome of sound moral
+principles, and wide experience, is, on the other hand, the safest
+guarantee of longevity, of bright old days full of contentment, honour,
+prestige and true grandeur.
+
+Grave will be the responsibility of those who will meet in solemn
+conclave to lay down the foundations of the future British Imperial
+Commonwealth. No less serious will be the responsibility of the
+populations, scattered over the five continents, who will be called upon
+to pronounce, freely and finally, upon the propositions which will be
+submitted to their approval or disavowal. Consequently undue haste would
+be more than ill-advised.
+
+For instance, the paramount question to be considered by the new
+Imperial Conference will most likely be that of the future military
+organization of the Empire. Is it not evident that this problem will be
+much more easily settled if the Allied nations succeed in carrying the
+point they have the most at heart:--The reduction of permanent
+armaments as the safest protection against any new outburst of savage
+militarism flooding the earth of God with human blood. If this _sine qua
+non_ condition is the top article of the future peace treaty, the great
+Powers having agreed, in honour bound, to maintain the world's
+tranquillity and order, will all be afforded the blessings of a long
+rest from the ruinous military expenditures too long imposed upon them
+by the mad run of Germany to conquer universal domination. The British
+Empire, as a whole, will, as much as any other nation, enjoy the full
+benefits of such a favourable situation. She will, like her Allies,
+return to the pursuits of peace, with millions of veteran soldiers who,
+for the next ten years at least, would, in large numbers, certainly join
+the Colours once more, if need be, to defend their country in a new just
+war. Then, under such circumstances, why should the peoples of the whole
+Empire be immediately called upon to incur more expenses for military
+purposes than absolutely necessary for the maintenance of interior
+order, and to meet any sudden and unforeseen emergency.
+
+The liquidation of the obligations necessarily accumulated during the
+war will be the first duty of all the Allied nations. The task will no
+doubt be very large, most onerous. Still I trust that it will not be
+beyond their resources of natural wealth, of capital and labour, of
+courageous savings.
+
+As the "Resolution" adopted by the Imperial War Conference says, "the
+readjustment of the constitutional relations of the component parts of
+the Empire is too important and intricate a subject to be dealt with
+during the war." When taken up after the war--even if just _as soon as
+possible_--it will be none the less IMPORTANT AND INTRICATE. Such a
+subject should not be dealt with without matured consideration and given
+a hasty solution. If the peace treaty satisfactorily settles the world's
+situation for a long future of general tranquillity which will certainly
+bless all the nations with many years of unprecedented prosperity,
+plenty of time will be afforded to deliberate wisely upon the paramount
+question of the building of a "new and greater Imperial Commonwealth."
+Our frenzied "Nationalists" can quiet their nerves. The imperialist wild
+bear will not be growling at the door. Because we are all likely to be
+called upon to consider how best to promote the unity and the future
+prosperity of the Empire, we will have no reason to fear that we shall
+be, from one day to the other, forcibly thrown into perilous adventures
+by the Machiavellic machinations of out and out Imperialist enthusiasts.
+
+I have already said that it is becoming more and more evident that TO
+BE, or NOT TO BE, the British Empire must either CONSOLIDATE or
+DISSOLVE. I must not be understood to mean that with the restoration of
+peace under the happy conditions all the Allies are fighting for, the
+Empire, as she will emerge from the tornado, could not, as a whole,
+resume, for more or less time, her prosperous existence of _ante_-war
+days. What will be best to do, it is too early to foresee. Then it is
+better to wait for the issue of the war, trusting that all the truly
+loyal British subjects will then join together to pronounce upon
+whatever questions of imperial concern will claim their urgent
+consideration.
+
+But there is a certainty that can be at once positively affirmed. All
+the peoples living and developing under the ægis of the British flag are
+determined that the British Empire is to be. Whenever a special Imperial
+Conference sits in London, all the representatives of the many component
+parts of the British Commonwealth will meet in the great Capital surely
+to deliberate over the most practical means TO CONSOLIDATE THE EMPIRE.
+We may all depend that no one will propose to destroy it.
+
+How best to consolidate the Empire, such will be the important question.
+To be sure, the future special Conference will not likely be wanting in
+propositions from many outside would-be constitutional framers. Schemes
+may be numerous, some worth considering, others useless if not
+mischievous. No reason to feel uneasy and to worry about them. We can
+confidently hope that British statesmanship will be equal to the new
+task it will be called upon to perform. Our Canadian public men will
+have much to gain by closer intercourse with their Imperial colleagues,
+and by judging great questions from a higher standpoint.
+
+Let there be no mistake about it: the true secret of the most effective
+consolidation of the Empire was discovered by the British statesmen the
+day when they realized that henceforth free institutions and the largest
+possible measure of colonial autonomy were the only sure means to
+solidify the structure of the British Commonwealth. Such is the opinion
+of the Imperial War Conference outlining in their previously quoted
+"Resolution" what must be the fundamental basis of any future
+"READJUSTMENT OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL RELATIONS OF THE COMPONENT PARTS OF
+THE EMPIRE."
+
+
+CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT OF INDIA.
+
+As a preliminary to the prospective readjustment of the political status
+of the Empire, it is worth noting the advance of India towards political
+autonomy. It was made manifest by the significant step of inviting India
+to the deliberations of the Imperial War Cabinet, and by the
+"Resolution" adopted by the Imperial War Conference that India must be
+fully represented at all future Imperial Conferences.
+
+Respecting India, the Report of the War Cabinet, for the year 1917,
+says:--
+
+ It was clear, however, that this recognition of the new status
+ of India in the Empire would necessarily be followed by
+ substantial progress towards internal self-government.
+ Accordingly, on August 20th, the following important declaration
+ of His Majesty's Government on this subject was made in the
+ House of Commons by the Secretary of State for India:--
+
+ "The policy of His Majesty's Government, with which the
+ Government of India are in complete accord, is that of the
+ increasing association of Indians in every branch of the
+ administration and the gradual development of self-governing
+ institutions with a view to the progressive realization of
+ responsible government in India as an integral part of the
+ British Empire. They have decided that substantial steps in this
+ direction should be taken as soon as possible, and that it is of
+ the highest importance, as a preliminary to considering what
+ these steps should be, that there should be a free and informal
+ exchange of opinion between those in authority at home and in
+ India. His Majesty's Government have accordingly decided, with
+ His Majesty's approval, that I should accept the Viceroy's
+ invitation to proceed to India to discuss these matters with the
+ Viceroy and the Government of India, to consider with the
+ Viceroy the views of local Governments, and to receive with him
+ the suggestions of representative bodies and others. I would add
+ that progress in this policy can only be achieved by successive
+ stages. The British Government and the Government of India on
+ whom the responsibility lies for the welfare and advancement of
+ the Indian peoples, must be the judges of the time and measure
+ of each advance, and they must be guided by the co-operation
+ received from those upon whom new opportunities of service will
+ thus be conferred and by the extent to which it is found that
+ confidence can be reposed in their sense of responsibility.
+ Ample opportunity will be afforded for public discussion of the
+ proposals, which will be submitted in due course to Parliament."
+
+ In accordance with this declaration, the Secretary of State left
+ for India in October, and has since been in consultation with
+ the Government of India and deputations representative of all
+ interests and parties in India in regard to the advances which
+ should be made in Indian constitutional development in the
+ immediate future. No reports as to the results of these
+ discussions had been made public by the end of the year.
+
+ Another important decision relating to India was that whereby
+ the Government abandoned the rule which confines the granting of
+ commissions in the Indian army to officers of British
+ extraction. A number of Indian officers, who have served with
+ distinction in the war, have already received commissions.
+
+Who, only twenty years ago, would have believed that the day was so near
+at hand when this Asiatic vast and populous country, called India, would
+be most earnestly considering, through numerous representatives, in
+consultation with the British Government, the proper steps to be taken
+"FOR THE GRADUAL DEVELOPMENT OF SELF-GOVERNING INSTITUTIONS WITH A VIEW
+TO THE PROGRESSIVE REALIZATION OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT IN INDIA AS AN
+INTEGRAL PART OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE." In every way, it is a most
+extraordinary political evolution. If it reaches the admirable
+conclusion aimed at--for which success every true friend of Political
+Liberty will fervently pray--it will have realized one of the greatest
+constitutional achievements of modern times.
+
+Behold just now how safely and wisely this Indian evolution is
+proceeding under the experienced direction of British statesmanship. It
+is "TO BE ACHIEVED BY SUCCESSIVE STAGES", declares the Secretary of
+State for India, speaking in the name of the whole British responsible
+Cabinet. Such have been accomplished all the constitutional developments
+which have wrought so much perfection for British free institutions.
+
+True progress, in every form, is never revolutionary. And why? For the
+very reason that instead of fighting for destruction by brute force, it
+aims at perfecting by regular advances in the right direction, by
+successive improvements which experience justifies, which reason,
+intelligence and wisdom approve, which political sense recommends, which
+sound moral principles authorize and sanction.
+
+A country favoured with the free British constitutional regime is not
+the land where bolshevikism of any grade or stamp, can flourish and bear
+fruits of desolation and shame.
+
+The wonderful Indian country, for so many centuries tortured by
+intestine troubles, at last rescued by England from that barbarous
+situation, given a reorganized administration able to maintain interior
+peace, favoured by British business experience and capital with material
+progress in many ways, specially in transportation facilities, may soon
+see--let us hope--the dawn of the glorious days of a large measure of
+political freedom and responsible government.
+
+Far away indeed from the perilous Imperialism abhorred by our much
+depressed "Nationalists" is India safely moving.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+THE FUTURE CONSTITUTIONAL RELATIONS OF THE EMPIRE.
+
+
+Though very difficult to say what they will be, I thought proper, for
+the better information of my French Canadian readers, to consider some
+of the suggestions which of late years have been repeatedly made.
+
+Mr. Bourassa, in his recent pamphlets, reviewing the situation from his
+wrong and prejudiced standpoint, has decidedly come out in favour of
+Canadian Independence. The least that can be said is that the time was
+very badly chosen to raise the question. To select the moment when the
+Motherland was engaged in a fight for life or death, to propose to run
+away from the assailed home where we had lived many happy years, was
+certainly not an inspiration of loyal devotion and gratitude. I am glad
+to say that the wild proposition met with no countenance on the part of
+our French Canadian compatriots.
+
+To the point raised in England, some years ago, that it was not to be
+supposed that the British Empire was destined to exist forever, one of
+the leading British statesmen of the day, then a member of the Cabinet,
+answered that, though it was likely to be true that the British
+Commonwealth would not be eternal, like many other great political
+societies of times gone by, it was surely not the particular duty of a
+British minister to do his best to hasten the day of the final downfall
+of the country he was sworn to maintain. The rejoinder was no doubt
+peremptory. It can very properly be used in answer to Mr. Bourassa's
+plea for the independence of Canada.
+
+However, the question having been so unwisely raised, to say the least,
+for the obvious purpose of disheartening the French Canadians from their
+present situation and raising in their minds extravagant hopes of a
+change for the better, I believed it advisable to tell them not to be
+carried away by dreams of a too far distant possible realization.
+
+In all frankness, I must say that I have never taken any stock in the
+suggestion made from time to time, for the last fifty years, in favour
+of Canadian Independence. It always seemed to me that our destinies were
+not moving along that way. In my opinion, which nothing has happened to
+alter, the steady growth of the consolidation of the Empire was yearly
+working against the assumption of the prospective independence of the
+Dominion.
+
+But even supposing that the course of events would change and put an end
+to British connection, could we pride ourselves with having at last,
+though in a very peaceful way, achieved our national independence? I am
+more and more strongly impressed by the paramount consideration that,
+nominally independent, Canada would be very little so in reality.
+Situated as she would be, she could not help being under the
+protectorate of the United States. I have always thought so. I think it
+more firmly than ever, when I see looming larger every day on the
+American political horizon the fact that the neighbouring Republic will
+come out of the present war with flying Colours, taking rank as one of
+the most powerful nations on earth.
+
+Be that as it may, there is every certainty that the question of
+Canadian Independence is not within the range of practical politics. Mr.
+Bourassa's proposition is doomed to the failure it deserves.
+
+Consequently, it is much better to try and foresee what the future
+political conditions of Canada are more likely to be after the close of
+the hostilities. And this must be done with the only purpose of wisely,
+and patriotically,--in the larger sense of the word--contributing our
+due share to the sound and solid framing of the changes, if any, which
+the best interests of the Empire, generally, and of all her component
+parts, in particular, may require.
+
+We have not, and I most earnestly hope and pray that we shall not have,
+to consider what new political conditions would be as the consequence of
+the defeat of the Allies, or even as necessitated by a peace treaty due
+to a compromise. We must only look ahead for the encouraging days to
+follow the victory won by the united efforts and heroism of the nations
+who have rallied to put an end to Prussian militarism.
+
+One certainty is daily becoming more evident. All loyal British subjects
+will applaud the triumphant close of the war with the desire to do their
+best to maintain and consolidate the Empire they will have saved from
+destruction at the cost of so much sacrifices of heroic lives and
+resources.
+
+
+NO TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION.
+
+The great objection raised by Mr. Bourassa against the participation of
+Canada in the wars of the Empire is that the Dominion is not represented
+in the Parliament to which the British ministers, advising the Sovereign
+on all matters of foreign relations, are responsible. He draws the
+conclusion that the Colonies are called upon to pay for the war
+expenditures of Great Britain in violation of the constitutional
+principle:--NO TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION. The principle is no
+doubt true. But it is altogether wrong to pretend that so far it has
+been violated to coerce the Dominion to participate in the wars which
+England has been obliged to wage. Our "Nationalists" would be right in
+their opposition if the Imperial Parliament had attempted to pass laws
+compelling the autonomous Colonies to contribute men and money to a
+conflict. Had they claimed the right to raise revenues in Canada by an
+Imperial statute, we would certainly have been entitled to affirm that
+not being represented in the British House of Commons, we could not be
+taxed in any way for any Imperial purpose--war or others.
+
+Nothing of the kind has ever been done, ever been attempted, even ever
+been hinted at.
+
+The argument falls entirely to the ground, shattered to pieces, from the
+fact that Canada has only participated in the wars of the Empire of her
+own free will, in the full enjoyment of her constitutional rights.
+Whatever sums of money the Dominion has to pay for the conflicts into
+which we have freely and deliberately decided to intervene, are
+perceived by the Canadian treasury in virtue of laws passed by our
+federal Parliament upon the advice of our responsible Cabinet.
+
+Last year, the people of Canada were called upon to elect new members of
+our House of Commons. The citizens of the Dominion had the undoubted
+constitutional right to pass condemnation on the ministers and on the
+members of Parliament who had voted for the participation in the war
+with men and money. They could have elected a new House of Commons to
+discontinue such participation and recall our army from Europe. But had
+they not the equally undoubted right to do what they have done by such a
+solemn expression of a decided and matured opinion:--approve and order
+to fight until victory is won?
+
+In accepting with deep gratitude the noble and patriotic support we,
+Canadians, were giving her in the most terrible crisis of her Sovereign
+existence, was England in any way violating any of our cherished
+constitutional privileges? No sensible, no reasonable, no unprejudiced
+man can so pretend. The case being such as it is, there is not the
+shadow of common sense in the assertion that Canada is taxed without
+representation for Imperial war purposes.
+
+
+COLONIAL REPRESENTATION.
+
+If the question of Colonial representation is raised at the special
+Imperial Conference to be held as soon as possible after the war, Mr.
+Bourassa and his friends will not be welcomed to cry if it is settled
+very differently from their wishes, after their unwise clamour for an
+excursion into the unknown.
+
+The question of the readjustment of the constitutional relations of the
+component parts of the Empire, when duly brought up, will very likely
+take a wide range, so far at least as consideration goes. What will be
+the conclusions arrived at, nobody knows.
+
+Pending that time, any one is allowed to express his own views. I
+thought proper to explain mine in my book dedicated to the French
+Canadians. I now summarize them as follows:--
+
+Would it be advisable to have the Colonies represented in the present
+Imperial Parliament? After full consideration of the question, I must
+say that I have finally dismissed it from my mind as utterly
+impracticable. Can it be supposed for a moment that the electors of
+Great Britain would agree to have the Dominions overseas and India
+represented in their House of Commons, to participate in the government
+of the United Kingdom for all purposes? With representation in the
+present British House of Commons, would the Colonies be also represented
+in the British Cabinet, to advise the Crown on all matters respecting
+the good government of England?
+
+Would the Colonies be represented according to their population in the
+British House of Commons? If they were, India alone would have a number
+of representatives five times larger than all the other parts of the
+Empire.
+
+Is it within the range of possibility that the people of Great Britain
+would consent to colonial representatives interfering, even controlling
+the management of their internal affairs, whilst they would have no say
+whatever in the internal government of the Colonies?
+
+Would the colonial ministers in the British Cabinet be constitutionally
+responsible to the people of the United Kingdom without holding their
+mandate from them?
+
+Such a system would be so absurd, so radically impossible, that it is
+not necessary to argue to prove that it would not work for one single
+year.
+
+In my opinion, Colonial representation would be practicable only with
+the creation of a new truly Imperial Parliament, the present British
+Parliament to continue to exist but with constitutional powers reduced
+to the management of the internal affairs of the United Kingdom. If such
+is the scheme of the "Nationalists," then they are converts to that
+Imperial Federation which they have vehemently denounced for years, and
+to the largest measure possible of that Imperialism which has been
+cursed with their worst maledictions.
+
+If ever complete Imperial Federation becomes an accomplished fact, how
+will it be organized? Will the new Imperial Parliament consist of one
+Sovereign, one House of Lords--or Senate--one House of Commons?
+
+Would the Sovereign be King or Emperor? I, for one, would prefer the
+word EMPEROR. He might be titled His Majesty the Emperor of the British
+Commonwealth and the King of Great Britain.
+
+With Imperial Federation--a regime of complete Imperial autonomy--the
+word "colonies" would no longer apply. Would Canada, Australia, South
+Africa, India, New Zealand be called Kingdoms, like Prussia, Bavaria,
+Saxony, Wurtemberg, of the German Empire?
+
+Evidently, the constitutional powers of the new Parliament would be
+limited to external relations, to strictly Imperial affairs.
+
+The new constitutional organization of the British Empire would combine
+Imperial, National and Provincial autonomy, each operating within the
+well defined limits of their respective privileges and attributions.
+
+Under such a regime, there would be three sorts of responsible Cabinets:
+The Imperial Cabinet responsible to the whole Imperial electorate; the
+National Cabinets of the component Kingdoms of the British Empire
+responsible to the electorate of each one of those Kingdoms
+respectively; the Provincial Cabinets responsible to the electors of
+each province respectively.
+
+The Royal--or rather Imperial--Prerogative to declare war and to make
+peace would be exercised upon the responsibility of the Imperial
+Cabinet.
+
+To the new Imperial Parliament would undoubtedly be given the right and
+the duty to provide for Imperial defense. They would have to organize an
+Imperial army and an Imperial navy for the protection of the whole
+Empire.
+
+The whole of the reorganized Empire would have to pay the whole of the
+expenditures required for Imperial purposes, defense and others, on land
+and sea, out of revenues raised by laws of the Imperial Parliament.
+
+Under the new Imperial constitutional regime, would the Imperial
+Parliament be given the authority to regulate Imperial trade and
+commerce, the Imperial postal service, &c.?
+
+Would the new Parliament have the exclusive right to approve commercial
+treaties sanctioned by His Majesty the Emperor, upon the advice of his
+responsible Imperial Cabinet, without reference whatever to the National
+Parliaments of the component Kingdoms?
+
+How easily is it ascertained that numerous questions of paramount
+importance are at once brought to one's mind the moment the vast problem
+of a new and greater Imperial Commonwealth is considered. Shortsighted
+and inexperienced are the politicians and the publicists who imagine
+that it could be given a satisfactory solution after hasty and
+insufficient deliberations. It is very reassuring to know that the
+matter necessarily being suggested for consideration at the Imperial War
+Conference, last year, it was immediately decided, by a "Resolution,"
+adopted on the proposition of the Canadian Prime Minister, "THAT THE
+READJUSTMENT OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL RELATIONS OF THE COMPONENT PARTS OF
+THE EMPIRE IS TOO IMPORTANT AND INTRICATE A SUBJECT TO BE DEALT WITH
+DURING THE WAR."
+
+What would be the real meaning of such a radical change? It is worth
+while to enquire at once.
+
+The British Empire would no longer comprise a Metropolis holding
+autonomous Colonies and Crown Colonies, but would be organized in a new
+Sovereign State with an Imperial Parliament to which all the component
+parts--or Kingdoms--would send representatives.
+
+Indeed it would be a grand, a magnificent, political edifice. But to
+find shelter under it, Canada would have to renounce her right to decide
+alone, and freely, to participate, or not, in the wars of the Empire, to
+determine alone what her military organization should be, to raise
+ourselves, without the intervention of a superior Parliament, the
+revenue which we consider proper to apply to Imperial purposes.
+
+I, for one, do not foresee that such an important constitutional change,
+if ever it is made, will be suddenly brought about, in the dark, as the
+result of the machinations of a most mischievous Imperialism inspiring
+our "Nationalists" with shivering terror. It is positively sure that no
+one holding a responsible political position, or having a responsible
+standing in the British political world, will ever be mad enough to
+propose, suggest, or even hint, to build a new Imperial structure
+without the solid foundation of the deliberate consent of all the
+Colonies, of all the would-be component parts of such a vast
+Commonwealth.
+
+How many years of serious discussion, of earnest consideration, did it
+not take to bring about the creation of the Canadian, Australian and
+South African Dominions. It cannot be reasonably imagined that the
+creation of the new and greater Imperial Commonwealth will be a much
+easier task to accomplish with the necessary conditions of successful
+durability.
+
+I also thought proper in my French book to write a few lines on the
+important question respecting the mode of ascertaining the deliberate
+consent of the Colonies to any intended readjustment of the
+constitutional relations of the component parts of the Empire, specially
+if it was proposed to rear a new and larger political fabric. I did so
+because of late it has been frequently suggested to use the _plebiscit_
+or the _referendum_ as the most opportune way to consult public opinion.
+
+I must say that, without going to the length of denying that a public
+consultation may, in a particular case, be advantageously made by way of
+a _plebiscit_ or _referendum_, I am not a strong believer in the
+efficiency of either proposition, and why? Because I cannot help
+considering them as more or less contrary to the solid constitutional
+principle of ministerial responsibility which they would gradually
+undermine if frequently appealed to.
+
+I feel specially adverse to the _plebiscit_, because History proves
+that, by nature, it engenders DESPOTISM, CÆSARISM. Contemporary history
+offers two striking examples never to be forgotten.
+
+Napoleon the First, whose power was the legitimate result of his
+wonderful genius and of his eminent services to France, wanted his
+dynasty to rest on the _plebiscitary_ foundation. Millions of
+votes--almost the unanimity of French public opinion--answered
+enthusiastically to his call. He was not such a man as to refuse the
+chance offered him to exercise a supreme power so manifestly tendered
+to him. All know that he very soon unbridled his devouring ambition and
+ruled France with all the might of an absolutism strengthened by the
+glories of military campaigns truly marvellous. To any attempt at
+freedom of criticism, he could reply that his Imperial power--mightily
+supported by his commanding genius--was strongly entrenched on the
+unanimity of opinion of the French nation expressed by the result of the
+plebiscit.
+
+Napoleon III, favoured by the immortal prestige of his glorious uncle,
+but far behind him in genius, though intellectually well gifted, as he
+proved it during his Presidential term of the second French Republic and
+during the first years he occupied the Imperial Throne of France, used
+the plebiscit to have his famous _coup d'Etat_ of the second day of
+December 1851, prepared with consummate skill and carried out with great
+energy, ratified by the nation by an overwhelming majority of several
+millions of votes. He lost no time in drawing the final result of this
+first great success and in reaching the term of his ambition. The tide
+of popular enthusiasm was all flowing his way, carrying him to the
+Throne elevated for his uncle who had lost it after the hurricane which
+exhausted its strength at Waterloo. On the second of December of the
+following year--1852--the second French Empire was proclaimed to the
+international world. Following the example and the precedent of the
+first Bonaparte, Napoleon III also decided to use the plebiscit to
+legitimate his Imperial power. He triumphantly carried the day by some
+seven millions of votes--almost the unanimous voice of the French
+people.
+
+Thus, in less than half a century, after having twice tried the
+Republican system of government, and, in both cases, having overdone by
+deplorable excesses the experiment of Political Liberty--more specially
+during the years of terrorism of the first Republic--France, by a
+regular reaction, went back to the other extreme, and reestablished
+arbitrary power not, in the two instances, upon the principle of the
+Divine Right of the ancient Monarchy, but on that of the Sovereignty of
+the people, as expressed by the certain will of the whole nation. But
+ABSOLUTISM, whether the outcome of Divine Right or of popular
+sovereignty, is always the same and steadily works against the true
+principles of Political Liberty.
+
+It is a great mistake to suppose that ABSOLUTISM is possible only under
+monarchical institutions. The terrorist republican epoch, in France,
+from 1792 to 1795, was ABSOLUTISM of the worst kind, really with a
+vengeance. As much can be said of the present political situation in
+Russia, which has substituted REVOLUTIONARY ABSOLUTISM to that of the
+decayed Imperial regime, suddenly brought to a tragic end by the
+pressure of events too strong for its crumbling fabric, shaken to its
+foundation by a most unwise reactionary movement which only precipitated
+its downfall, instead of averting it, as extravagantly expected by the
+Petrograd Court, which betrayed Russia in favour of Germany, and
+unconsciously opened the road which led the weak and unfortunate Czar to
+his lamentable fate.
+
+In my humble opinion, PLEBISCITARY CÆSARISM is not compatible with a
+system of ministerial responsibility for all the official acts of the
+Sovereign.
+
+The frequent use of the plebiscit would certainly tend to diminish in
+the mind of political leaders the true sense of their responsibility. It
+would too often offer an easy way out of an awkward position without the
+consequence of having to give up power.
+
+If I understand right the real meaning of the two words: _plebiscit_ and
+_referendum_, the first would be used to try and ascertain how public
+opinion stands upon any given question of public policy, of proposed
+public legislation: the second would be employed for the ratification by
+the electorate of a law passed by Parliament. I have less objection to
+the second system which, in reality, is an appeal from Parliament to the
+Electorate. But to the well practised, the adverse vote of a majority of
+the electors should have the same result as a vote of the majority of
+the House of Commons rejecting an important public measure upon the
+carrying of which the Cabinet has ventured their existence.
+
+Without the immediate resignation of the ministers meeting with a
+reverse in a _referendum_, I consider that ministerial responsibility
+would soon become a farce destructive of constitutional government. The
+defeat of a Cabinet in a _referendum_ would be equivalent to one in
+general elections and should bear out the same consequence.
+
+Surely, no one having some clear notions of what MINISTERIAL
+RESPONSIBILITY means, will pretend for a moment that a Cabinet who, on
+being defeated in the House of Commons, advises the Sovereign--or his
+representative in Canada--to dissolve Parliament for an appeal to the
+people, could remain in power if the Electorate approved of the hostile
+stand taken by the House of Commons.
+
+I can see no difference whatever in the meaning of an hostile referendum
+vote and that following a regular constitutional appeal from an adverse
+majority of the popular House of representatives. In both cases, the
+downfall of the defeated ministers should be the result.
+
+From the above comments, I draw the sound conclusion, I firmly believe,
+that any important readjustment of the constitutional relations of the
+Colonies with Great Britain, should be first ratified by the actual
+Parliaments of the Dominions and subsequently by the electors of those
+Dominions. But I am also strongly of opinion that the ratification by
+the electorate should be taken upon the ministerial responsibility of
+the Cabinet who would have advised the Sovereign and asked Parliament
+to approve the proposed readjustment. It would be the safest way to have
+the Cabinet to consider the question very seriously before running the
+risk of a popular defeat which would have to be followed by their
+resignation.
+
+Another most important reason to quiet the fears of our "alarmists" at
+an impending wave of flooding Imperialism, is that any radical change in
+the constitutional relations of England with her Colonies for the unity
+and consolidation of the Empire, should be adopted by the Parliaments
+and the Electorates of all the Colonies to be affected by the new
+conditions.
+
+Consequently, from every standpoint the Dominions and the Empire herself
+are guaranteed against the dangers of rashness in changing the present
+status of the great British Commonwealth.
+
+
+THE FAR OFF FUTURE.
+
+Though it may be of little use, and perhaps perplexing, to look too far
+ahead to try and foresee what the distant future has in store for the
+generations to come, still a simple call to common sense tells one that
+the political destinies of any Commonwealth are, in a long course of
+time, largely and necessarily shaped by the increases in population and
+wealth, irrespective of the actual more or less harmonious working of
+present and immediately prospective constitutional institutions.
+
+Broadly speaking, was it to be supposed, for instance, that the two wide
+continents of America would have, when peopled by hundreds of millions,
+continued in a condition of vassalage to the European continent, though
+owing their discovery and early settlements to European genius and
+enterprise? No doubt the growing national families of the New World
+would have liked a much longer stay under the roofs where they were
+born, had they received better and kinder treatment from their fatherly
+States. But at best the hour of separation would only have come later,
+postponed as it would have been by the bonds of enduring affection made
+more lasting by mutual good relations. Do we not see, almost daily,
+desolated homes often the sad result of senseless misunderstandings, or
+of guilty outbursts of intemperate passions? Yet, family home life, even
+when blessed by the inspiring smile of a lovely wife, the sweet voice of
+a devoted mother, the manly and Christian example of a good father, the
+affectionate sentiments of well bred children, is far too short under
+the most favourable circumstances. And why? Because it has to follow the
+Divine decree ordering separation for the building of new homes, to keep
+Humanity advancing towards the final conclusion of her earthly
+existence.
+
+Had the American colonies been favoured by the constitutional liberties
+the Dominion of Canada enjoys, they would not have revolted and British
+connection would have endured many years longer. Still, one cannot
+conclude that those British provinces, realizing the marvellous
+development all can witness, would have for ever agreed to be satisfied
+with their colonial status. When they would have grown taller and bigger
+than the mother-country, most likely Great Britain herself would have
+taken the initiative of a friendly separation followed by a close
+alliance which would have perpetuated the familial bond actually so
+happily restored.
+
+As prophesied by Sir Erskine May, more than half a century ago, in
+speaking of the probable future of the then British colonies, the
+American Republic would _have grown out of the dependencies of the
+British Empire_.
+
+And to-day, when the United States are doing such a gigantic effort,
+conjointly with the whole British Empire, to save Humanity from German
+cruel domination, England, to use the very words of the distinguished
+writer and historian just cited, "MAY WELL BE PROUDER OF THE VIGOROUS
+FREEDOM OF HER PROSPEROUS SON THAN OF A HUNDRED PROVINCES SUBJECT TO THE
+IRON RULE OF BRITISH PRO-CONSULS."
+
+The possibilities of the material development of the Dominions of
+Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa--without counting India
+and the lesser colonies--on account of their immense natural resources,
+are such as to justify very great hopes for their future. The time will
+come when they will number together a much larger population than the
+United Kingdom. Will the British Empire, as foreseen by one of the
+greatest political minds Canada has produced, declared by his chief and
+worthy opponent the equal to the celebrated William Pitt, then develop
+into a grand Commonwealth of nations.
+
+If so, as wrote Sir Erskine May, England "_will reflect, with
+exultation, that her dominion ceased, not in oppression and bloodshed
+but in the expansive energies of freedom, and the hereditary capacity of
+her manly offspring for the privileges of self-government_."
+
+Several generations will certainly rise and disappear before such an
+important question, looming far off in the future, is likely to be--if
+ever--raised requiring a practical solution. But foreseeing such a
+distant possibility, it is still more our bounden duty to be true to our
+present and prospective obligations for many years to come, as
+foreshadowed by the actual course of events shaping themselves in the
+sense of the consolidation of the Empire which may never be really
+dissolved even by the separation of her manly _offspring_. Family bonds,
+strengthened by deep affection, are not broken because the faithful boy,
+grown up a healthy and strong man, leaves to go under his own blessed
+roof, taking with him to his last day the cherished recollections of the
+happy days he has passed in the equally blessed parental home.
+
+One of our most ardent desires must be that our successive generations
+of children be so well trained to the intelligent and patriotic use of
+Political Liberty, as to accumulate, in due course of time, an admirable
+heritage of sound principles of self-government enriched by the
+honourable examples of our faithful loyalty to the Mother land never
+grudged to her, but given with overflowing measure, not only as a matter
+of duty, but also as a reward from grateful subjects for the regard and
+respect always paid to their constitutional rights and privileges.
+
+If such is ever the natural outcome of our political achievements, the
+vast Empire reared with such a great success would truly survive
+separation, being merely transformed into a splendid galaxy of
+independent States still bound together by the strong ties created by
+centuries of reciprocal devotedness. It would constitute a real league
+of nations working in concert and with grandeur for the peace and the
+prosperity of the whole world.
+
+
+A MACHIAVELLIAN PROPOSITION.
+
+On reading Mr. Bourassa's pamphlet entitled:--_Yesterday, To-day,
+To-morrow_, I discovered what I have qualified a _Machiavellian
+proposition_. What _Machiavellism_ means is well known. It expresses the
+views of that most corrupt and contemptible politician and publicist,
+called MACHIAVEL, born at Florence, in 1649.
+
+At page 140 of the above mentioned pamphlet, Mr. Bourassa wrote:--
+
+"I WILL SPEAK MY MIND OPENLY--_JE VOUS LIVRE TOUTE MA PENSÉE_--: IF IN
+DEFAULT OF INDEPENDENCE, I CLAIM IMPERIAL REPRESENTATION, IT IS BECAUSE
+IT WOULD WEAKEN THE MILITARY ORGANIZATION OF ENGLAND,--_l'armature de
+guerre de l'Angleterre_--PRECIPITATE THE DISSOLUTION OF HER EMPIRE,
+HASTEN THE DAY OF DELIVERANCE, FOR US AND FOR THE WHOLE WORLD."
+
+Such are the loyal sentiments expressed by the "Nationalist" leader. He
+clamours for the Imperial representation of the Colonies, for the
+solemnly avowed object to use the privilege for the destruction of the
+Empire. To achieve this end he declares that the military power of
+England must first be weakened.
+
+No wonder then that he started his "Nationalist" campaign by fighting
+with all his might the two successive proposals of contribution to the
+great military naval fleet of Great Britain.
+
+No wonder that he opposed Canada's intervention in favour of England in
+the South African war.
+
+No wonder that from the outbreak of the hostilities, in 1914, until the
+day when he was shut up by the Order-in-Council censuring all disloyal
+speaking and writing detrimental to the winning of the war, he has tried
+to move heaven and earth to prevent Canada's participation in the
+conflict.
+
+He tells his countrymen that if he has become a convert to Imperial
+representation--in other words, Imperial Federation--it is because he
+considers it would be the best way of ruining the Empire and of
+delivering, not only Canada, but the whole world from British
+domination.
+
+For fear that the French Canadians, whom he especially wished to
+influence, would not be very easily caught in the disloyal trap, he
+tries hard to prevail upon them by the following reasons:--
+
+"_If we are not sufficiently clear-sighted and energetic to work for
+this salutary object by the most constitutional, the most British, means
+at our disposal, others, happily, will do it for us._
+
+"_The English-Canadians, the Australians, the New Zealanders persistingly
+claim representation in the government of the Empire. When the war is
+over, their claims will be reaffirmed with increased ampleness and
+energy. The Indians (les Hindous) themselves will do the same. Shall we
+remain alone to rot stupidly (croupir béatement) in colonial
+abjection._"
+
+Without the slightest doubt, there are many English-Canadians,
+Australians, New Zealanders, South Africans, Indians, in favour of
+Colonial Imperial representation. The number is increasing and likely to
+increase. But Mr. Bourassa is absolutely, I might as well say, absurdly,
+mistaken, if he really believes that they do so for his own purpose of
+destroying the British Empire. They want the very reverse: their object
+is TO CONSOLIDATE THE EMPIRE, not TO DISSOLVE HER. They will not accept
+as a very flattering compliment Mr. Bourassa's charge that their desire
+to strengthen the British Commonwealth proves that they prefer to
+continue _stupidly rotting in colonial abjection_ rather than work for
+their deliverance from British domination.
+
+But what in the world has brought the "Nationalist" leader to the
+conclusion that the surest way to save Canada from the peril of
+Imperialism was to secure Imperial representation for the treasonable
+purpose, on entering the fort, to pull down the flag and destroy the
+whole Empire? To frighten his French Canadian compatriots with terror at
+the slightest move in favour of an increased Imperialism, he waves
+before them, with wild gesticulation, any and every extravagant writings
+he lays his hand on preaching a ridiculous expansion of Imperialist
+aspirations. He is perhaps the only man in Canada who has read a most
+absurd work which he pretends to have been written by a General named
+Lea, and from which, in horror stricken, he summarized a few
+unbelievable views.
+
+Mr. Bourassa said that General Lea, _gifted with an astonishing
+foresight, predicted all that was happening in Europe and in the world.
+The General_, again affirms Mr. Bourassa, _has proved in a striking way
+that if England wishes to maintain her Empire and to continue exercising
+her domination over the world she must make the sacrifice of her
+political liberties and of those of her Colonies, abolish the
+Parliamentary and Representative Governments and resolutely adopt the
+ironed regime of the Romans of old, of the Germans of the present day_.
+
+Once so brilliantly inspired, General Lea went on in a splendid manner.
+He added, says Mr. Bourassa, _that England must transform her Empire
+into a vast armed camp, must keep in her own hands all the powers of
+command, must subdue all the non-British races to the supremacy of the
+Anglo-Saxons united together by the unique thought of dominating the
+world by brutal force_.
+
+These views--so says Mr. Bourassa--are to be found in a book entitled:
+"_The Day of the Saxon_." If they have been really expressed with the
+full sense given to them by Mr. Bourassa's translation into French, I
+cannot say less than that they are most absurd, most extravagant. The
+Nationalist leader would have proved himself a much more sensible, a
+wiser man, if, laughing at such senseless notions, he had refrained from
+quoting those lines for the purpose of telling the French-Canadians that
+like all non-British races on earth they were doomed to be
+devoured--flesh and bones--by the voracious Anglo-Saxons bent on
+swallowing humanity. And to save them from such a cruel fate, he
+implores them to clamour for Imperial representation with the criminal
+intent of betraying their trust, and to use the honourable privilege
+they would be granted to ruin the Empire they would swear to maintain
+and defend. So far as the political program of General Lea is
+concerned, we have not yet learned that its benevolent author was doing
+much in the war to carry it out. If I had the honour to meet the
+General, being presented, I presume, by Mr. Bourassa, I would ask him,
+first, when and where he has discovered that England was _dominating the
+world_.
+
+I know that there exists a great England holding a large situation on
+earth. Her Empire extends to almost a fourth of the globe. Her
+Sovereignty reigns over nearly four hundred million of human beings; a
+truly beneficient Sovereignty, because it rules according to the wishes,
+to the opinions of its subjects, managing their own affairs in virtue of
+the freest political institutions in the whole world.
+
+I know of no England dominating, or even aspiring to dominate, the
+world. Such an England only exists in the heated imagination of that
+General Lea and in the minds of all those, like the Nationalist leader,
+who are, or feign to be, tortured by the bugbear of military Imperialism
+of the old Roman ironed type.
+
+As long as three-fourths of the earth will remain independent of the
+British Empire, under numerous sovereignties, England's pretended
+domination of the world will ever only be an extravagant dream.
+
+Wishing England _to continue her domination of the world_, General Lea,
+no doubt to please Mr. Bourassa, was bound to suggest the means to do
+so. Let us analyze them.
+
+1.--England _must make the sacrifice of her political liberties and of
+those of her Colonies_.
+
+2.--She _must abolish parliamentary and representative governments_.
+
+It is beyond conception that Mr. Bourassa should have for one minute
+seriously considered such absurd notions.
+
+I would enjoy attending large public meetings in Great Britain, where
+General Lea would propose to British free men the sacrifice of all their
+political liberties, to witness the rather warm reception he would be
+favoured with. I am sure he would have to rush out of the halls much
+faster than he would have walked in.
+
+Where is the sane man who really believes that, dreaming of a domination
+of the world by _brute force_, British free men would consent to do away
+with their Parliamentary system _to transform the whole of the Empire
+into an armed camp_? Such a proposition was sheer madness, a most
+foolish talk, unworthy of the slightest attention from sensible people.
+Mr. Bourassa was very wrong in giving it publicity, and very unwise, to
+say the least, in using it to frighten his French-Canadian compatriots
+by blandishing before their eyes that ridiculous specimen of the phantom
+of Imperialism.
+
+Is it to be supposed for one single instant that the British people, so
+rightly proud of their political liberties, and of their representative
+government, which after centuries of efforts and trials they have
+successfully brought to such perfection, basing its future permanency on
+the solid rock of ministerial responsibility, would consent to sacrifice
+them for the sake of a vain, a ridiculous, an odious and impracticable
+scheme _to dominate the world by brute force_?
+
+It is ten times worse than madness to believe that the British people
+who have torn away from the British soil the last root of ABSOLUTISM,
+would, for any earthly reason, renounce their most legitimate conquests,
+to rebuild, on the burning ruins of their most sacred rights, an ironed
+political regime of the old Roman or present German type! Is it to be
+believed that they would agree to replace, on the glorious Throne which
+they protect with all the might of their loyal affection, their present
+constitutional Sovereign by a new Nero or another Wilhelm II?
+
+If it is with the purpose of preventing such a dire calamity that the
+Nationalist leader became a convert to Imperial Federation, he is
+absolutely losing his time and his energy in promoting such a regime.
+If ever Imperial Federation becomes a fact, we can all rest perfectly
+assured that the new Imperial Parliament will not vote their own
+destruction to be replaced by an autocratic and tyrannical government.
+
+I hope that Mr. Bourassa is the only believer, all over Canada, in the
+assertion of General Lea that England's aspirations is _to dominate the
+world by brute force_. It is a most injurious, I can say, calumnious,
+charge. All know, or should know, that England was the first nation to
+completely abolish slavery over all her Empire; that has granted, in the
+largest possible measure, Political Liberty to all her Colonies; that
+guarantees to all races the same rights and privileges, never
+interfering in colonial internal management. He is wilfully guilty of a
+calumnious charge the man who accuses the British race to aspire to
+dominate the world by an _ironed regime_, when he should know that Great
+Britain ran the risk of a crushing defeat, in refusing to organize a
+standing army of several millions of trained officers and men.
+
+
+A TREASONABLE PROPOSAL.
+
+The Nationalist leader wants the French-Canadians to support his scheme
+in order _to work for the salutary object of demolishing the British
+Empire by the so very constitutional means of Imperial Federation_. How
+he has failed to realize the infamous kind of suggestion he was making
+will always be a wonder to all those reading it.
+
+If, sooner or later, Great Britain and her Colonies are politically
+organized as an Imperial Federation, the Province of Quebec will have
+several French-Canadian representatives in the new Greater Imperial
+Parliament. The Nationalist leader wants those French-Canadian Members
+to go to London pledged to destroy the Empire to which they will have
+to swear allegiance and fealty before crossing the threshold of the
+House of Commons and taking their seats. Does he not understand that any
+French-Canadian doing what he wishes and recommends would deliberately
+perjure himself? Does he not comprehend that he was paying a rather poor
+compliment to his British countrymen from Canada, Australia, New Zealand
+and India, when he affirmed, without the shadow of truth, that they
+would elect to the Imperial Parliament members holding the mandate from
+them to work for the dissolution of the Empire?
+
+I notice, with surprise, that in the enumeration he has drawn of the
+future destroyers of the future federated British Empire, he has not
+convened his friends, the Boers, to his holy task. Does he not consider
+them as _farsighted_ and _energetic_ as the others he has pompously
+mentioned with such childish illusion. Or, has he not, unconsciously,
+paid them the high compliment to suppose that they would be unable to
+accomplish the treasonable act which, with confidence, and even
+certainty, he expects from the others. Our countrymen, the Boers of
+South Africa, have, by a large majority, become so loyal to the Crown,
+to the Empire,--and they have so gloriously proved it since the outbreak
+of the war--that it is manifestly evident that they are very well
+satisfied with their present position, that they have dispelled from
+their minds all bitter recollections of the struggle which, a few years
+ago, finally brought them within the Empire they are doing such a noble
+effort to maintain and save from the German tyrannical grasp.
+
+The following views, recently expressed, in London, by Mr. Burton,
+Minister of Railways and Harbours in the Government of South Africa, a
+leading public man of the far away sister Dominion, is refreshing
+reading after Mr. Bourassa's outrageous outburst above quoted. He
+said:--
+
+"_One of the motives which prompted South African support of the British
+cause was the fact, which appealed not only to the English-speaking
+population, but moved the Dutch population--the fact that the British
+cause had embraced all the progressive peoples of the world. It was not
+Britain's wealth, or influence, or power that appealed to them; it was
+the priceless privilege of the maintenance of our constitutional
+liberties. He could illustrate their attitude by a single incident which
+had come within his own experience in connection with a Transvaaler,
+born and bred, whom he had questioned as to his future in the military
+service in which he was an officer. The officer replied that he had been
+through the German South-West African campaign, that he was going
+through the German East African campaign, and when that was done he
+intended making for Flanders. He added: "I mean that as a man I could
+not act otherwise in view of the treatment dealt out to us by Great
+Britain. If she had not done what she did for us I should not have
+stirred hand or foot._""
+
+No one need be surprised that the South African Dominion is suffering a
+little from the "Nationalist" fever, a disease infesting many countries,
+in various degrees, and with time cured by the safe remedy of the sound
+common sense of the people. We know too much about it ourselves, after
+nearly eighty years of free responsible government, to wonder at the
+fact that a small minority of the Dutch South Africans--from the Boer
+element--is not yet fully reconciled with their lot under the British
+Crown. They apparently dream of Republicanism, in sullen recollection of
+a recent past which only some of the present generation still regret,
+but which the next will strive to cherish only as the stepping stone to
+their actual status so full of good promises for their future. The few
+South Africans suffering from this virus are almost exclusively
+recruited amongst the populations of the late Republics of South Africa.
+The people of the provinces of Natal and Cape Colony, with a long
+experience of British rule, have no faith in the "republican
+nationalism" desired by some, which does not in the least appeal to
+their good sense and their sound political foresight. Mr. Burton
+believes "_that the instigators of the movement are looking for votes
+more than for anything else_."
+
+Mr. Burton, moreover, truly said:--
+
+"_It was part of the history of all countries that what was called
+"Nationalism" made a powerful appeal to the finer classes of young men.
+It was an admirable sentiment, but what was complained of in South
+Africa was that the sentiment was expended upon a wrong conception of
+"nationalism" and what nationhood should be. In South Africa it was
+restricted, it was sectional, and practically racial. The energy and
+activity displayed were being spent upon a mistaken cause._"
+
+Every word of this quotation applies with still greater force to the
+"nationalism" of the Province of Quebec.
+
+Mr. Burton goes on saying:--
+
+"_It was the cause of South Africa first--as it should be--but it was
+more than that. It was South Africa first, last, and all the time, and
+South Africa alone. He and those who were associated with him could not
+accept that view. It would mean ruinous chaos in South Africa. They had
+obligations to Great Britain. It was not merely that they had received
+recognition from the beginning that their Constitutional cause was just.
+It was not merely that Great Britain in its relation with South Africa
+had been actuated by that beneficent influence which the British system
+of liberty effected under the sway of its flag throughout the world, but
+it was that the people of the Union realized the true inward
+significance of the struggle in which the Empire was engaged. They knew
+that the world's freedom was at stake, and with it their own. The people
+in South Africa had long ago awakened to this great fact, and they were
+realizing it more and more as the war went on. When he had spoken of
+putting "South Africa first" as the motto of a party he wished it to be
+understood that he and the people of South Africa generally accepted it,
+as every nation was bound to accept it. But they also realized that
+their future as a nation and their freedom as a nation were at stake,
+and that their interests were bound up with those of the British
+Empire._
+
+"_It was because they realized that fact that the Government of the
+Union had in these troublous times nailed its flag to the mast. It was
+the honourable course, the right course, and they had stuck to it
+through good report and ill report, and through much trial and
+sacrifice. His last message as representative of the Union Government
+was: Upon that attitude of the Union Government they might depend to the
+very last. They might be forced--he did not see any present prospect of
+it--to abandon office, but so long as they were in office they would
+adhere absolutely in the letter and in the spirit to the undertaking
+they had given and would continue in the path they had followed
+hitherto._"
+
+Sensible, truly political and patriotic, noble words, indeed. Are they
+not the complete expression of the powerful wave of enthusiasm which
+spread throughout the length and breadth of the whole British Dominions
+overseas, when, after exhausting to the last drop her efforts to
+maintain peace, Great Britain, in honour bound, threw her gallant sword
+in the balance in which the destinies of the world were to be weighed
+during the frightful years of the most terrific thundering storm ever
+witnessed by man?
+
+How weighty those words are is evident. They are still more so by the
+fact that they positively and firmly express the views and sentiments of
+the two most trusted and illustrious leaders of the Boers, who, both of
+them, took a very prominent part in the South African war, as generals
+commanding the forces of the South African Republics: General Botha and
+General Smuts.
+
+General Botha is, and has been for several years, the Prime Minister of
+the South African Dominion. General Smuts is minister of Defence in
+General Botha's Cabinet. He is the representative of the Government of
+the Union of South Africa in the Imperial War Cabinet. In June, 1917, he
+was, moreover, "invited to attend the meetings of the British War
+Cabinet during his stay in the British Isles."
+
+Both General Botha and General Smuts have often spoken about the present
+relations of their great Dominion with England. The press of the whole
+British Empire has published their speeches, most favourably commented
+by that of the Allied nations. In every case, they were brilliant with
+true and staunch loyalty, worthy of the real statesmen the speakers are,
+in every sense fully up to what could be expected from the illustrious
+military and political leaders of a valiant race deserving the respect
+of all by her heroism of the past and her loyalty of present days.
+
+If ever Mr. Bourassa, as I hope he will, reads the above quoted lines, I
+am sure he will find therein every reason to be satisfied with his
+decision not to call upon the South Africans to join with him and those
+he has summoned, in the unworthy task of bringing on Imperial Federation
+for the very treasonable purpose of destroying the British Empire. For
+once, his judgment did not fail him.
+
+Nobody knows if representatives from the whole present colonial
+Dominions and India will ever sit, in London, as members of a new
+Imperial Parliament. It is most unlikely, at all events, that any one,
+merely to please Mr. Bourassa, will help building such a political
+structure with the criminal and treasonable purpose of throwing it at
+once to the ground with a tremendous crash. But we can all safely join
+in the affirmation that in the event of such a great historical fact
+being accomplished as that of a federated British Commonwealth, the
+representatives of the Colonies overseas will meet in the Imperial
+Capital to do their duty with loyalty and honour. I have no hesitation
+whatever to pledge my word that the French Canadian representatives in
+London would be amongst the most loyal to their Sovereign and to the
+Empire, the most true to their oath.
+
+I solemnly protest against the injurious imputation the Nationalist
+leader has addressed to my French Canadian compatriots in charging them
+with the desire _to rot stupidly in colonial abjection_. Let us
+repulse the unfounded accusation from an elevated standpoint. I feel the
+utmost contempt for all kinds of narrow prejudices, of blind fanaticism.
+Nations, like individuals, all pursue Providential destinies in this
+human world. There is no more abjection in the colonial status than in
+any other. Canada is a British colony by the decree of Providence. Every
+nation--like every individual--has duties to perform in any situation
+she may occupy in the course of historical events. Abjection is not the
+result of the faithful discharge of duty, however trying the
+circumstances may be. It would be in its violation with the guilty
+intent to betray.
+
+A hundred times better it is to remain a colony as long as the Supreme
+Ruler of the world will so order, than to attempt to break through by
+the dark plot of an infamous conspiration.
+
+Let our destinies follow their natural development, striving to the best
+of our ability and patriotism to have them to achieve the happy
+conditions which we enjoy. Any man aspiring to a legitimate influence on
+the mind of our compatriots, must encourage them, by words and deeds, to
+faithfully accomplish their daily task in showing them the advantages of
+their position. Inconveniences are the outgrowth of any political
+standing. In the true Christian spirit, trials are everywhere to be met
+with. Sacrifice, when necessary, ennobles national as well, and as much,
+as individual life.
+
+It is very wrong on the part of any one to trouble the mind of our
+compatriots in purposely exhibiting to their view discouraging pictures
+of the difficulties of their situation. Their national existence is not,
+never will, never can be, exclusively rosy. Be it as it may, who can
+pretend, in good faith, that there exists, on the surface of the globe,
+a population, all things considered, happier than our own. Our race
+freely grows on a fertile and blessed soil which she cultivates with her
+vigorous and intelligent daily toils, which she waters from the sweat of
+her brow, to which she clings by all the affections of her heart, by the
+noblest aspirations of her soul. On week days, proudly working on her
+domains; on Sundays, kneeling before the Altars of her Church, fervently
+thanking Him for past graces and gifts, she prays to the Supreme Giver
+of all earthly goods to continue to favour her with peace, with order,
+in the legitimate enjoyment of her liberties, together with the moral,
+intellectual and material progress she is striving to deserve.
+
+Guilty is the man who tortures them with chimerical aspirations, who
+advises them to conspire against the legitimate authority which she
+must, and will, respect in spite of the seductions attempted to have her
+to fail in her duty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+OUTRAGES ARE NO REASONS.
+
+
+The failings of human nature, the differences of temper, of the
+qualities and defects of heart and soul, are such that harmony and
+good-will amongst men in private life are too often difficult to secure.
+The Divine precept, so frequently broken, should, however, always rule
+the relations between man and man. It should, with still more constant
+application, rule the relations between different races Providentially
+called to live together on the same soil, under the same Sovereign
+authority, enjoying the same institutions, the same liberties, protected
+by the same flag. That the house divided against itself is sure to fall
+is true of the nation as well as of the home. National and family
+happiness and prosperity are alike dependent on the feelings of real
+brotherhood which prevail in both. Any good hearted man appreciates how
+much kindness of speech, courtesy of dealings, cordiality of manners,
+contribute to reciprocal good-fellowship, brotherly in the home,
+inspiring in the daily intercourse of citizens, patriotic in the nation
+at large. The more a Sovereign State is inhabited by numerous ethnical
+groups, like the British Empire and the American Republic, the more
+important it is that the freedom of expressing one's opinion on all
+matters of public interest should be used with fairness, with respect
+for those holding different views, with due regard for the feelings
+which are the natural outcome of racial developments, of cherished
+recollections, of legitimate hopes.
+
+Such are the principles, I am most happy to say, that I have admired and
+try to practice in the exercise of my rights as a citizen of the
+Province where I saw the light of day, of Canada where I have lived and
+hope to live all my years, of the British Empire whose loyal subject I
+have been and am determined to remain to my last moment.
+
+How then could I have helped being shocked when I came to read the
+following lines I translate as follows from page 121 of Mr. Bourassa's
+pamphlet:--"_Yesterday, To-day, To-morrow_":--
+
+"_Were the French Canadians to persist in their obstination to rot in
+colonialism and to consider that it is for them the happiest and the
+most glorious condition of existence, the English Canadians would force
+them out of it. Our countrymen of the British races have grave defects:
+they are_ IGNORANT, PRETENTIOUS, ARROGANT, SHORT-SIGHTED, DOMINEERING.
+_They are, more than ourselves_, ROTTEN WITH MERCANTILISM. _They seem to
+have lost some of the best qualities of the English people, to have
+developed their faults and acquire many of the_ VICES NATURAL TO THE
+WORST CATEGORY OF YANKEES. _But they have not_, LIKE US, _totally_
+ABDICATED _the_ PROUD CHARACTER _and the_ PRIMORDIOUS RIGHTS _of the
+British peoples. When the war is over, they will claim, like the
+Australians, the New Zealanders, and the Indians (les Hindous), a
+readjustment of the powers of government_."
+
+Thus, in a few lines the Nationalist leader, in appealing to his
+disordered imagination, has succeeded in slapping, in one single stroke,
+with dynamical outrages, the faces of the English-speaking Canadians of
+the three great British races, of our neighbours, the Yankees, and of
+his own compatriots, the French-Canadians. How could he expect that such
+vitriolic language would promote, in the Dominion, that harmony of
+feelings never before so essential as at the very time he was writing
+that injurious paragraph of his work, surely not intended to help
+winning the war so full of the greatest consequences, for good or ill,
+for the World, the British Empire, Canada, and our own Province of
+Quebec.
+
+So far, Mr. Bourassa, having gone back on the admiration he was wont to
+profess for England, in his early youth, had reserved all his assaults
+for the English people. But the heart of man, once under the sway of an
+unlimited and unsatisfied ambition, is bound to drop to the lowest
+depths of the extremist's aberration. In the above quotation, he fires
+his battery of _Kruppic_ dimensions--loaded with poisonous invectives,
+at the THREE GREAT BRITISH RACES, ENGLISH, SCOTCH AND IRISH, living in
+Canada.
+
+Had his charge been intended for the English race alone, he would have
+been very particular in so saying. But, let there be no mistake about
+it, he deliberately wrote _our countrymen of the British races_.
+Wanting, I suppose, to prove his impartiality, he remembered that the
+United Kingdom is peopled by three illustrious races represented all
+over the globe by many millions of worthy sons, everywhere to be found
+hard at work for the intelligent development of the resources of the
+countries they live in and are rearing their children. More than four
+millions of them are Canadians by birth or born in Great Britain. Many
+more numerous they are in the United States where they form the solid
+stock upon which the future of the Republic is firmly grounded.
+
+With the same thrust, Mr. Bourassa strikes at the Yankees who, we may
+hope, have not trembled too much at the blow. He charges them with
+having infested his poor _countrymen of the British races_ with _many of
+the vices natural to the worst category of_ "YANKEEISM." Kind, cordial,
+courteous, indeed he was in such a mood of tender sympathies for the
+Canadian British races and their contagious cousins the Yankees of the
+most corrupted class!
+
+However, the finest flower of the whole _bouquet--the rose par
+excellence_--is the one he has gallantly presented to his
+French-Canadian compatriots. He tells them with the sweetest tones of
+his charming voice that they are pleased and happy to rot in
+"_colonialism_." But, evidently wishing to speak to them a few
+encouraging words, he mildly reminds them _that they are less rotten
+with "mercantilism" than their countrymen of the British races_.
+
+A man can be suffering less than his more sickly brother without, for
+all that, being in very good health. It is a poor consolation for the
+French Canadians to hear from the Nationalist leader that they are less
+infested with the mercantile virus than their brothers of the British
+races.
+
+All those who have followed with some attention Mr. Bourassa's course
+for the last twenty years, know that he is an equilibrist of the first
+class. Having favoured the French Canadians with the flattering
+compliment as above, he turns about and lashes them with the sweeping
+slap that, contrary to the stand the Canadians of the British races
+cling to with an obstination which he deigns to approve, they, the
+degenerated French Canadians whom he pities so much, "_have totally
+abdicated their proud character_ of old _and the primordial rights of
+British subjects_."
+
+So, in Mr. Bourassa's opinion, his French Canadian compatriots are
+infested to a high degree both with the _colonialist_ and _mercantile_
+corruptions. Hence, his fear that they are threatened with a premature
+national death if they do not at once listen to his brotherly warnings.
+
+I have already answered the Nationalist leader's charge that the French
+Canadians are stupidly rotting in "COLONIAL ABJECTION." The same reasons
+refute his assumption that "COLONIALISM" is an abject status for a
+people.
+
+A people, a race, who would enjoy living under the German autocratic
+colonial rule--for which the Nationalist leader has so little
+dislike--would indeed prove some disposition to _rot stupidly in
+abjection_. But the divers peoples, the different races, who appreciate
+all the beneficent advantages of the present British colonial rule, are
+of very superior stock. They know, from the clearest conception, that
+Monarchical democratic institutions are as much different from Imperial
+autocratic tyranny, as true broad patriotism is far above narrow and
+fanatical "Nationalism."
+
+I have only to say a few words about the "ROTTENNESS OF MERCANTILISM"
+against which, according to Mr. Bourassa, the French Canadian are not
+sufficiently protected.
+
+Going back to my recollections of the last sixty years, if there is a
+complaint which through all my life I have heard almost daily, with deep
+regret, it is that the French Canadians were not striving with
+sufficient energy and perseverance to achieve a better and larger
+position in the business world. Their leaders, religious, political and
+civil, to induce them to increased exertions, have always pointed to the
+example given them by their countrymen of the British races: by the
+clear headed and far-seeing English business man, the sturdy and hard
+working Scotch, the enterprising and witty Irish. Thank God, I have well
+enough understood my duty to do my humble but patriotic share to favour
+this progressive movement. Never, in so wisely advising the French
+Canadians, any one supposed for a minute that he was leading them to the
+infested pond of _mercantile corruption_. The change wished by all was
+becoming more urgent. All were looking for the best means to carry it
+out. Our leaders, having at their head, by right and merit, our
+religious chiefs under the authority of a prince of our Church, his
+Eminence the Cardinal-Archbishop of Quebec, took the initiative with an
+ever increasing interest in the success they considered so important.
+
+The establishment of a permanent school of high commercial education and
+of several technical schools was most favourably approved. Political
+economy is even, in a certain measure, taught in several of our
+classical colleges for secondary education. The necessity for our young
+men of knowing the English language, to succeed in commercial,
+industrial and financial pursuits in Canada and in the neighbouring
+Republic, is more and more generally admitted. The French Canadians,
+fully enjoying the undoubted right to do so, aspire to achieve an
+advantageous and honourable position in commerce, in industry, in
+finance, in transportation, in mine working. The more we realize this
+goal of our legitimate ambition, the more we are also intensifying our
+efforts to promote agricultural progress and the improvement of our
+country roads.
+
+If, in all the branches of our national activity, we obtain the success
+we hope for, one single man alone amongst us shudders at the idea that
+the French Canadians will blindly destroy their race with a mortal dose
+of the cursed "MERCANTILISM" so dishonourable to the British races.
+
+And Mr. Bourassa, instead of heartily joining with all the leaders of
+his race--Cardinal, Archbishops, Bishops, priests, statesmen, political
+men, judges, professional men, merchants, manufacturers, financiers,--to
+favour, as much as possible, the commercial and technical training of
+his compatriots, sneers at such efforts which, in his candid opinion,
+are only plunging them in the irremediable depths of "MERCANTILE
+CORRUPTION"!
+
+Are not such abominable teachings a curse to all those of the race to
+which they are addressed with an unsurpassed cynicism?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+HOW MR. BOURASSA PAID HIS COMPLIMENTS TO THE CANADIAN ARMY.
+
+
+With a most admirable unanimity--_nemine contradicente_, as
+Parliamentary procedure says--the Canadian Parliament decided at once,
+at the very outbreak of the hostilities, to organize a great army to go
+and defend the Empire of which the Dominion is an important component
+part, and Civilization in peril from the Teutonic crushing wave of
+barbarism, let loose over Belgium and France. In the most evidently
+constitutional ways, the Canadian people, as a whole, as they had the
+right and the bounden duty to do, approved the decision of Parliament.
+
+When Mr. Bourassa issued the pamphlets referred to, some four hundred
+thousands volunteers had already enlisted. A large number of them--over
+one hundred and sixty thousands had reached the western front--some the
+eastern--where they fought valiantly, heroically, on French soil,
+against the German hordes. Thousands of them had fallen on the field of
+honour, resting with imperishable glory, for them and for us all, in
+that ancestral land which we, and ever will, cherish.
+
+More than one hundred and twenty-five thousands were on British soil,
+being trained for the military operations of the following spring.
+
+The rest of the army, in numerous thousands, was still with us, getting
+organized for the noble task, and waiting to cross over the Atlantic to
+go on the field of battle.
+
+The Canadian army had in every way merited the respect and the
+admiration of all their countrymen who were very happy to so testify.
+
+However, in this admirable concert of praise and grateful
+congratulations, a very discordant note was one day heard resounding
+from the lowest inspiration of the human heart vibrating with feelings
+of shameful contempt. It is found at page 105 of the pamphlet previously
+quoted, and reads as follows in its naked outrageous language:--
+
+"_In Canada, a militarism is being forged unparalleled in any civilized
+country, a depraved and undisciplined soldiery, an armed scoundrelism,
+without faith nor law, as refractory to the call of individual honour as
+to the authority of its parading or patronage officers._"
+
+For all the treasures of the world, I would not agree to bear before my
+countrymen the responsibility of such injurious words addressed to the
+Canadian army whose valour is doing so much for our national honour.
+
+In one single masterly stroke of his poisoned pen the Nationalist leader
+decrees that the Canadian army is far below the worst type of German
+and Turkish soldiery, that no other civilized country is cursed with
+such a degraded, undisciplined, dishonoured militarism.
+
+For God's sake, whence and where has such an outrageous outburst
+originated? From what dark corner has the electric current been poured
+out with such infernal fury?
+
+I shall not pretend that all our volunteers, from first to last, had
+reached the saintly state of soul of their inexorable judge. As a rule
+poor mortals do not jump, by a single effort, up to that degree of
+Christian perfection shining with the great virtues of humility,
+charity, justice--by words and deeds. We must not suppose that many of
+our heroic volunteers had deserved, like their trusted friend and
+admirer, Mr. Bourassa, to be canonized during their life time. That some
+of them, whose past was perhaps not a very strong recommendation, have
+enlisted with the laudable purpose to rehabilitate themselves in their
+own self-estimation and in that of their countrymen, it is very likely.
+Far from blaming them for so doing, we must congratulate them and
+encourage them to persevere in the glorious task which will entitle them
+to the everlasting gratitude of their country. Such has been the case in
+the armies of all nations for many centuries past.
+
+Fortunately, far better and much more authorized judges of the devotion,
+courage and patriotism of the volunteers of the great Canadian army, as
+well as of the cause for the triumph of which they have offered, and in
+so many cases, given their lives, were easily found. They wrote and
+spoke with no uncertain voice.
+
+In a letter approving the publication of a very interesting pamphlet,
+entitled:--"_War controversy between Catholics_"--"_La controverse de
+guerre entre Catholiques_,"--His Eminence Cardinal Begin, Archbishop of
+Quebec, said:--
+
+"_Attentively read, as it deserves to be, this work will help to
+understand and to love to the limit of devotion, (jusqu'au dévouement)
+the beauty and the sovereign importance of the great cause--the
+protection of the world threatened by Germanism--for which our soldiers
+are so valiantly fighting together with those of England, France and
+Belgium._
+
+"_I pray God to bless those brave warriors and to grant peace to the
+Christian world by the reestablishment of Justice and Right._"
+
+What an encouraging contrast! On the one hand, a publicist, with the
+fury of its resounding organs, so widely used, vowing to eternal
+damnation, _the armed scoundrelism which Canada is_ forging, with
+conditions inferior to Teutonic and Turkish barbarism, considering that
+it has reached the lowest depth of "_a degradation unparalleled in any
+civilized country_."
+
+On the other, the Head of the Catholic Church in Canada, Cardinal Begin,
+blessing in the name of God Almighty _our brave warriors who fight so
+valiantly with those of England, France and Belgium_, because _they
+love with true devotion the beauty and the sovereign importance of the
+great cause_ to the triumph of which they sacrifice _their lives--the
+protection of the world threatened by Germanism_.
+
+On Thursday, October 26, 1916, Archbishop Bruchesi, of Montreal, present
+at a funeral service, in Notre-Dame Church, attended by many thousands,
+for the glorious victims of the sacred duty of defending the cause of
+the Allies, eloquently said in part:--
+
+"_They (our heroes) had voluntarily enlisted. Two years ago, they
+organized their Battalion, the glorious 22nd. They enlisted, conscious
+that they were defending the most just of all causes, that of
+Civilization, of Right, of Humanity. They enlisted with the conviction
+that they would serve the interests of their country, for, when oversea,
+they knew that they were defending Canada. They were young and strong;
+one could not see them without admiration._
+
+"_They have made their country's name and their own grand. They have for
+all times immortalized themselves in History, and, by them, Canada has
+been immortalized._
+
+"_The war is not over; it goes on horribly, but our hearts are hopeful.
+It is impossible that they should triumph the men who, during forty
+years, have prepared for the greatest war and who, during two years,
+have torn the world asunder and flooded the earth with blood.
+Impossible that they should triumph the men who have declared this war
+without a right to avenge, without a grievance to redress, without being
+menaced in any way. Impossible that they should triumph those who have
+torn, like a scrap of paper, a pact upon which the nations relied,
+having faith in the pledged word. Impossible that they should triumph
+those who have invaded the territory of valiant Belgium, whose only
+fault was_: TO REMAIN TRUE TO HER HONOUR. _They shall not triumph those
+who, on account of their military service, have made this war a carnage
+and a butchery without precedent in History. I believe in God of all
+Justice. Humanity wanted a suffering which purifies, but when mothers
+shall have wept long enough, God will have His Divine word heard._
+
+"_When this great work is accomplished, and when we shall sing the_ TE
+DEUM _of thanksgiving, we will be able to say that Canada, that all the
+Provinces of Canada, that our Province of Quebec, have deserved their
+share of glory_."
+
+On Tuesday, November 28, 1916, at a funeral service in the Quebec
+Basilica, addressing the large audience rallied to pray for the dead
+heroes, Reverend Mr. Camille Roy, one of the most distinguished
+professors of the Quebec Seminary, said in part:--
+
+"_They went, our officers and soldiers, to serve a great cause. Several
+reasons, perhaps intermingled in their conscience, have inspired their
+courageous decision...._
+
+"_But dominating, penetrating them all, purifying what in them was too
+personal and restricted, was the thought that in doing all this they
+were going to fight with heroic brothers and employ their strength to
+defend what is most venerable on earth: outraged justice._
+
+"_Perhaps they ignored historical secrets and diplomatic complications,
+but they knew the war brutally declared, the treaties torn away, Belgium
+violated, and agonizing, France mutilated and invaded, England, herself,
+chased over the moving frontier of her oceans invaded; they knew the
+destroyed homes, the profanated Cathedrals, the brutally murdered old
+men, women and children, and the flood of barbarians rushing in
+tumultuous waves over the fields of the sweetest country. They knew
+that, over there, two nations to whom we are attached by our political,
+or by our national, life, wanted the support of their sons far away,
+that they had to battle for sacred interests in a war requiring an
+endurance commanding an incessant renewal of our energies; and then,
+without halting to consider if they were obliged to it by laws, they
+have answered the most pressing call of their souls, and have freely
+made the devoted sacrifice._"
+
+What other edifying contrast between the appreciation of the part played
+by the Canadian army by three intellects, one overpowered by an
+inexplicable hostile passion, the two others, inspired by the noblest
+sentiments, rising to the sublime conception of the great sacrifice
+accepted by our brave volunteers, which they express by eloquent words
+who moved the hearts and brought _abundant and warm tears to the eyes of
+those who_ heard or read them.
+
+Where one only sees _depraved_ beings more contemptible _than all those
+which any other country_ could produce or _forge_, the two others, so
+much superior in every way, admire, the first, THOSE WHO WENT TO DEFEND
+THE MOST JUST OF ALL CAUSES, THAT OF CIVILIZATION, OF RIGHT, OF
+HUMANITY; the second, THE SUPERNATURAL BEAUTY OF SACRIFICE THAT THEIR
+BROTHERS IN ARMS HAVE MADE OF THEIR LIVES TO THE JUSTICE OF GOD.
+
+The pamphleteer cruelly attacks those who, to-morrow, will face with
+unfaltering courage the guns of the enemy to defend Civilization and
+avenge the martyrs of barbarity.
+
+The sacred orator blesses the mortal remains of our sons who have fallen
+on the field of honour, on the soil of France, where our forefathers
+were born and bred, with the fervent prayer of their grateful country
+that knows they died heroically "FOR A GREAT CAUSE" TO DEFEND WHAT IS
+MOST VENERABLE ON EARTH: "OUTRAGED JUSTICE."
+
+The following pages from a very eloquent Pastoral Letter by Bishop
+Emard, of the diocese of Valleyfield, will, I am sure, be read with most
+respectful interest by all. They are as follows:--
+
+ "Dear Brethren, we certainly have the right, and we even
+ consider that it is for us all, citizens of Canada, loyal
+ subjects of England, a duty to demand from God the success of
+ the arms of our Mother-country and of her Allies in the present
+ war. If we are not called upon, as a matter of faith, to pass
+ judgment on the true causes of the war, and to divide the
+ responsibilities respecting the calamity which covers Europe
+ with blood, we are surely allowed to think and to say that all
+ the circumstances actually known sufficiently prove that right
+ is on the side of the peoples who have checked the invasion, and
+ discouraged the overflowing of the enemy from his territory, in
+ order that the sentiment of justice may serve to support the
+ devotion of our soldiers, in this great conflict, called the
+ struggle of Civilization against barbarism.
+
+ "The Church of Christ, always the same by her doctrine, has been
+ marvellously constituted by the Divine Wisdom, to adapt her
+ externally everywhere and always, to the infinitely varied
+ circumstances consequent on the diversity of peoples, of
+ governments, of social relations. She has never ceased to
+ practice, by Her Pastors and her faithful children, the great
+ lesson given by Christ: "=Render therefore to Cæsar the things
+ that are Cæsar's and to God the things that are God's=," and to
+ claim with the Apostle all the rights as well as accept all the
+ duties of citizens and subjects."
+
+After recalling that from the day _Divine Providence, in Her mysterious
+designs_, allowed Canada to pass from the French to the English
+Sovereignty, _the Church, by Her Bishops, has declared that, henceforth,
+it was the duty of the French Canadians to transfer to the British
+Crown, without reserve, the cordial allegiance which the King of France
+had hitherto received from them_, and that since then until the present
+days, the Canadian Episcopate has remained true to his course, Bishop
+Emard proceeds as follows:--
+
+ "We are then, very dear Brethren, in perfect communion of
+ sentiments, action and language, with our venerable predecessors
+ of the Canadian Episcopate, in asking you to-day to address to
+ Heaven fervent prayers for the complete and final success of
+ England and her Allies in the frightful war which is covering
+ the earth with such unheard of horrors."
+
+ The Clergy, never forgetting Peter's word respecting the
+ submission all are in duty bound to practice towards Kings as
+ well as towards all those holding civil power, was always
+ faithful in obeying the Episcopal directions never ceasing to
+ deserve the eulogium which the Bishops expressed to the Pope in
+ their favour.
+
+ "The French-Canadian people, so taught by words and examples,
+ have given in all our history the admirable spectacle of a
+ constant fidelity which circumstances more than once rendered
+ highly meritorious. Such are the true religious and national
+ traditions of our country. They have in our own days, as in the
+ past, found the exact expression suggested by the situation.
+
+ "On the other hand, it appears to us a well established fact,
+ and the most serious minds so proclaim everywhere, that the
+ British Empire, together with France, martyred Belgium and their
+ Allies are actually struggling for the defence of the peoples'
+ Rights and true Liberty. (Card. Begin.) Therefore, very dear
+ Brethren, it must be acknowledged that Canada, herself
+ threatened by the possibilities of a war fought with conditions
+ heretofore unknown, has acted both wisely and loyally in giving,
+ in a manner as generous as it was spontaneous, all the support
+ in her power to the mother-country, England.
+
+ "The Catholics, and especially those of French origin, have not
+ remained behind in this manifestation of true patriotism. If it
+ was well to make a comparison between the other groups, from the
+ standpoint of the free and generous participation of all to the
+ European war, it would be necessary, in the respective figures
+ obtainable, to take into account several elements which are
+ perhaps not sufficiently considered.
+
+ "But this is not the real question. It is sufficient to show and
+ to note for historical authenticity that, with the encouragement
+ and the blessings of their Pastors, and true to their constant
+ tradition, the Canadian Catholics, as a whole, have, in this
+ frightful conflict proved the perfect loyalty which is the sound
+ expression of true patriotism, and which is blessed by the
+ Church and by God.
+
+ "Thousands and thousands of our young men, for a large number of
+ them at the cost of particular and most painful sacrifices, and
+ in many cases, without being able to give to their race the
+ benefit of their chivalrous devotion, have gone, oversea, to
+ fight and die for the cause which was proved to them noble and
+ urgent.
+
+ "Moreover, all over the country, the courage of our soldiers was
+ echoed and answered by many active and important works
+ characterized by charitable solidarity, and this universal
+ co-operative and sympathetic movement must be supported by the
+ sentiments of faith and piety.
+
+ "Since we are, at all costs, engaged in a disastrous war, the
+ causes of which we have not to discuss and judge, but the
+ consequences of which will necessarily reach our country, and
+ since our Canadian soldiers are battling under the British flag,
+ with the clear conscience of an honourable duty loyally and
+ freely accepted, it is just, it is legitimate that our prayers
+ do accompany them on the very fields of battles to support their
+ courage, and that these prayers ascend to Heaven to implore
+ victory for our armies."
+
+Evidently the venerable Bishop of Valleyfield is far from believing,
+like the publicist whose errors we must all deplore, that in organizing
+a powerful army "_to go overseas to fight and die for the noble and
+urgent cause so proved to them_," the Canadian Parliament "_were forging
+for us a militarism without parallel in any other civilized country, a
+depraved and undisciplined soldiery, an armed scoundrelism, without
+faith nor law_."
+
+The blessings of the Head of the Canadian Church and those of the whole
+Episcopate have consolated our brave volunteers for the outrages thrust
+at them, and have inspired them with the great Christian courage to
+forgive their author. The only revenge they have taken against their
+accuser has been to defend himself and his own against the barbarous
+Germans.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+RASH DENUNCIATION OF PUBLIC MEN.
+
+
+A long experience of public life, whether by daily observation, begun in
+my early youth, when the Union of the Provinces was finally discussed,
+carried and established, or, subsequently, during many years of active
+political life as a journalist and member of the Quebec and Ottawa
+representative Houses, has taught me to judge the actions of responsible
+men, whether ministerialists or oppositionists, with great fairness and
+respectful regard. At all times the government of a large progressive
+country peopled by several races, of different religious creeds, is a
+difficult problem. It should not be necessary to say that in days of
+warlike crisis, of previously unknown proportions, like the present one,
+the task becomes almost superhuman. Anyone taking into serious
+consideration the very trying ordeal through which, for instance, the
+rulers of Great Britain and France have been, and are still passing,
+since early in 1914, cannot help being indulgent for those who have the
+weighty and often crushing burden of the cares of State. Let so much be
+said without in the least contesting the right of free men to their own
+opinion about what is best to be done. But it was never more opportune
+to remember that the honourable privilege of constitutional criticism
+must have for its only superior object the good of the country by
+improved methods.
+
+We have reason to congratulate ourselves that this sound view has widely
+prevailed rallying almost as units great nations,--our own one of
+them--previously much divided in political thoughts and aspirations, for
+the noble and patriotic purpose of winning a disastrous war they were
+forced to wage, in spite of their most determined efforts to prevent it.
+
+Public men, nations rulers, like all others are human and liable to fail
+or to be found wanting. Unconscious inefficiency, however desirable to
+remove, cannot be fairly classed on the same footing as guilty failures.
+The first may, more or less, injure the bright prospects of a country;
+the second stains her honour which an exemplary punishment can alone
+redeem.
+
+But it is said with much truth that there are always exceptions to a
+general rule. That of the human heart to be fallible in public life, as
+well as in other callings, has met with only one solitary exception in
+Canada: the saintly Nationalist leader who will never have his equal,
+"nature having destroyed the mould when she cast him."
+
+Considering the outrageous language he thrusted at the Canadians of the
+three British races and at our heroic volunteers, it is not to be
+supposed that he was so tender-hearted as to spare the public men, not
+only of Canada, but of all the Allied Nations.
+
+When he affirmed that the real and only cause of the war had been, and
+was still, the voracious greed of capitalist speculators, especially of
+the two leading belligerents, Great Britain and Germany, united together
+to profit to the tune of hundreds of millions out of the production of
+warship building and materials of all sorts, was he not charging all the
+statesmen and leading politicians of all the peoples at war, of having
+bowed either consciously to the dictates of traitors to their countries,
+or of having been stupidly blind to the guilty manipulations of
+financial banditti?
+
+It would take many pages only to make a summary of the injurious words
+he has addressed to the Canadian public men of all shades of
+opinion--with the only exception of the Nationalist--on account of the
+support they have given, in one way or another, to the Dominion's
+participation in the war. He qualified as a _Revolution_ the policy by
+which we willingly decided to take part in the wars of the Empire
+whenever we came to the conclusion that England was fighting for a just
+cause.
+
+On the 23rd of April, 1917, he wrote as follows:--
+
+"_Very often we have shown the evident revolutionary character of the
+Canadian intervention in the European conflict._"
+
+After repeating his absolutely absurd pretention, according to the sound
+principles of Constitutional Law, that Canada could have intervened in
+the war as a "_nation_" he found fault with all and every one because
+"_we are fighting to defend the Empire_." He went on and said with his
+natural sweetness of language:--
+
+"_The politicians of the two parties and the whole servile and mercenary
+press have applied themselves to this revolutionary work.... For a long
+time past the party leaders are the tools of British Imperialism and of_
+BRITISH HIGH FINANCE."
+
+And not satisfied with having thus slashed all the party leaders, all
+the chiefs of the State, he turns round, in an access of passionate
+indignation, and charges not only all the leading social classes, but
+even the Bishops, the worthy leaders of the Church, as the accomplices
+of the Imperialist revolution. He thrusts the terrible blow as
+follows:--
+
+"_But what the war has produced of entirely new and most disconcerting,
+is the moral support and complicity which the_ "IMPERIALIST REVOLUTION"
+_has found in all the leading social classes_. BISHOPS, _financiers,
+publicists and professionals went into the movement with a unity, an
+ardour, a zeal which reveal the effective strength of the laborious
+propaganda of which Lord Grey has been the most powerful worker prior to
+the war_."
+
+So that there should be no mistake about its true meaning, he favoured
+his readers with a very clear explanation indeed of what, in his
+opinion, has transformed our meritorious and loyal intervention in the
+war into a guilty revolutionary movement. He wrote as follows:--
+
+"_But what the Imperialists wanted, and what they have succeeded in
+obtaining, was to bind Canada to the fate of England, in the name of the
+principle of Imperial solidarity and--as we shall see in a moment--to
+the cause of_ 'UNIVERSAL DEMOCRACY'."
+
+Thus, in the Nationalist leader's opinion, it is a great crime to help
+England and her Allies to win a war the loss of which would most likely
+have destroyed the British Empire, involving our own ruin in the
+downfall of the mighty political edifice to be replaced, in the glorious
+shelter it gives to human freedom, by the triumphant German autocratic
+rule and its universal domination. It is, to say the least, an
+extravagant notion to pretend that the war has afforded the Imperialists
+the opportunity--eagerly seized--"_to tie Canada_" hand and foot, "_to
+the fate of England_."
+
+If I am not mistaken--and I am positively sure I am right in so
+saying--Canada was bound to the fate of England the very day when--by
+Providential decree, in that instance as well as with regard to
+everything earthly--she passed under British Sovereignty. The worthy
+leaders of our Church so considered--and have since unanimously
+considered--at once taking the sound Christian stand that the French
+Canadians were, in duty bound, to accept their new political status in
+good faith, and to loyally support their new mother country whenever
+circumstances would require their devoted help, whilst revering the old
+as every child must do, if he is blessed with a good heart, when
+separated by unforeseen events from the home of his happy youth.
+
+I must acknowledge that with some of our French Canadians of the first
+class and standing, the word "Democracy" savours with soreness. Well
+read in all that pertains to the great epoch of the first French
+tremendous Revolution, they abhor, with much reason, the extravagant and
+false principles of the BOLSHEVIKISM of those days, which culminated in
+the frightful period of the "terrorism" which, for three long years and
+more, kept its strong knee on France's throat, her fair soil flooded
+with the innocent blood of her children. They are apt to be laid to the
+confusion that democratic government is in almost every case, if not
+always, synonymous of revolutionary institutions, in as much as it
+cannot, they believe and say, be otherwise than destructive of the
+principle of "Authority," certainly as essential as that of "Liberty,"
+both as the necessary fundamental basis of all good governments.
+
+Knowing this, the Nationalist leader, who has evidently abjured his
+liberalism of former days, which he was wont to parade in such
+resounding sentences, multiplies his efforts to capture the support of
+the few members of our most venerable Clergy whom he supposes labouring
+under the aforesaid delusion. He would not lose the chance of trading on
+their feelings and sincere conviction, in boldly declaring that his good
+friends, the cursed Imperialists, had managed to drag the Dominion
+through the mire of the European war by blandishing before the eyes of
+the Canadian people, so enamoured of their constitutional liberties, the
+supposed dangerous spectre of "_universal democracy_."
+
+If, in reality, democratic government could not help being either the
+"French revolutionary terrorism," of 1792-95,--which even frightened
+such a staunch friend of Political Liberty as Burke--or the Russian
+criminal bolshevikism of our own trying days, we would be forced, in
+dire sadness, to despair of the world's future, as Humanity would be
+forever doomed to ebb and flow between the sanguinary "absolutism"
+either of "autocratic" or "terrorist" tyrants.
+
+Happily, we can, in all sincerity, affirm that such is not the case. Is
+it not sufficient, as a most reassuring proof, to point at the wonderful
+achievements of free institutions, first, under the monarchical
+democratic system of Great Britain and her autonomous Dominions; second,
+under the republican regime of the United States.
+
+After many long years of earnest study and serious thinking, I cannot
+draw the very depressing conclusion that the two basic principles of
+sound government--Authority and Liberty--cannot be brought to work
+harmoniously together for the happiness and prosperity of nations, as
+far as they can be achieved in this world of sufferings and sacrifices.
+Such a conclusion would also be contrary to true Christian teachings,
+the Almighty having created man a free being with a responsible and
+immortal soul.
+
+Nations who, forgetful of the obligations of moral laws, indulge in
+guilty abuse of their liberties, are, sooner or later, as individuals
+doing alike, sure to meet with the due Providential punishment they have
+deserved. But, also like individuals, they can redeem themselves in
+repenting for their past errors, due to uncontrolled passions, and by
+resolutely and "FREELY" returning to the path of their sacred duty.
+
+The Nationalist leader also deplores, as one of their guilty
+achievements, the fact that the "_war had ended all equivocals and
+consummated the complete alliance of the two parties_," to favour, as he
+asserts, of course, the enterprises of the dreaded Imperialism.
+
+True to the kind appreciation he has pledged himself to make of the
+inspiring dark motives actuating the conduct of public men, he sweetly
+added:--
+
+"_The truce arrived at in 1914 could not, it is true, resist the thirst
+for power. "Blues" and "Reds" have recommenced tearing themselves about
+patronage, places, planturous contracts and "boodle." But with regard to
+the substantial question itself, and to the Imperialist revolution
+brought on and sanctioned by the war, they have remained in accord._"
+
+It could not strike such a prejudiced mind as that of the Nationalist
+leader, that political chieftains, and their respective supporters,
+could conscientiously unite to save their country, their Empire and the
+world from an impending terrible disaster, and yet freely and
+conscientiously differ as to the best means to achieve the sacred object
+to the success of which they have pledged, and they continue to make,
+their best and most patriotic efforts.
+
+The public men, and even the private citizens, who, not believing that
+he speaks and writes with Divine inspiration, dare to differ from the
+Nationalist leader, cannot, in his opinion, do so unless influenced by
+unworthy corrupt motives. And he further draws the awful conclusion
+"_that it is his duty to note the ever increasing revolutionary
+character that the European war, as a whole, is assuming on the side of
+the Allies_."
+
+To support this last and absolutely unfounded charge, he positively
+asserts that the joint "_policy of the statesmen, politicians and
+journalists, has much less for its object to liberate oppressed nations
+like Belgium, Servia_, IRELAND, _Poland and Finland, from a foreign
+yoke, than to overthrow in all the countries, allies or enemies, the
+monarchical form of government_."
+
+And then follows a most virulent diatribe by which he points, in
+support of his wild conclusion aforesaid, to the Russian revolution,
+charging "_the officious and reptile press of the Allied countries to
+have joined in spreading the legend that it had been precipitated by
+German intrigues at the Court of the Czar, and to have accused the
+ill-fated Emperor to have been the spy and the accomplice of the enemies
+of his country_."
+
+At this hour of the day, in the turmoil of flashing events perhaps never
+before equalled in suddenness, pregnant with such alarming, or
+comforting, prospective consequences, it is much too early to attempt
+passing a reliable judgment on the true causes which produced the
+Moscovite revolution so soon and so dastardly developed into criminal
+"bolshevikism." The question must be left for History to settle when
+peace is restored and the sources of truth are wide opened to the
+impartial investigations of high class historians.
+
+However, enough is known to prove that Mr. Bourassa's charge is
+altogether unfounded. Anyone conversant with Russian history for the two
+last centuries, is aware that German influences and intrigues have
+always played a great part in the Capital of that fallen Empire. From
+the very beginning of the war, it became evident that they were actively
+at work at the Petrograd Court, thwarting the Emperor's efforts and
+those of his advisers, military and civil, he could trust, to be true to
+the cause he had sworn to defend with France and England.
+
+The Nationalist leader, I hope, is the only man still to wonder at this,
+after all that has been discovered proving what Germany has tried to
+bribe the political leaders and the press of the Allies, with too much
+success in France, England and the United States.
+
+Russia has been for too many years the favourite soil where Germany was
+sowing her corrupt intrigues, to let any sensible man suppose that she
+would kindly withdraw from the preferred field of her infamous
+operations, at the very time she was exerting herself with such energy,
+and at the cost of so many millions, to extend her vast spy system
+almost all over the earth,--Canada included--debauching consciences
+right and left.
+
+Is it unfair to say, for instance, after the event as it developed, that
+Roumania was prematurely brought into the war in consequence of the dark
+German machinations at Petrograd, with the evident understanding that
+the military operations, both on the Teutonic and Moscovite sides, were
+to be so conducted as to rush poor Roumania into a most disastrous
+defeat, in order to feed the Central Empires with the products of the
+fertile Roumanian soil?
+
+No representative man of any consequence has pretended that the
+unfortunate Czar was himself a party to that treason of the Allied
+cause. He has likely been the victim of his own weakness in not using
+what was left to him of his personal autocratic power to silence the
+sympathies of the friends of Germany at his Imperial Court, and even in
+his most intimate circle, rather than exhausting it in a supreme, but
+doomed, attempt at checking the rising tide of popular aspirations sure,
+as always, to overflow to frightful excesses, if unwisely compressed.
+
+Almost daily witnessing the successive miscarriages of so many of the
+Russian military operations, too often by the failure of the
+ammunitions, supplied to such a large extent by the Allies, to reach the
+Russian soldiers, or by other inexplicable causes, it is not surprising
+that the people at large became suspicious of their government which
+they soon believed to be under German tutorage.
+
+The rapid, almost sudden, overthrow of the Russian autocratic Empire can
+be accepted as evidence that the movement in favour of a change which
+would more efficiently conduct Russia's share of the conflict, was
+widespread. The goal it aimed at, once reached, and Russia proclaimed a
+Republic, with a regular _de facto_ government under the leadership of
+abler men, whose patriotism was proved by their words, but more surely
+by their deeds, France, England, Italy and the United States cannot be
+reasonably reproached with having unduly opened diplomatic relations
+with the new Moscovite authorities.
+
+Unfortunately, once successful in her intrigues at the Petrograd Court,
+soon to fall under the weight of popular exasperation, Germany tried her
+hand in a triumphant, but shameful, way with the fiery sanguinary and
+treasonable element always to be found operating in the darkest corners
+for their own criminal purposes. The calamitous outcome has been
+"bolchevikism" betraying their country in the light of day, without
+blushing, without hiding their faces in eternal shame, and signing, with
+their hands stained with the blood of their own kin, the infamous treaty
+of Brest-Litovsk dismembering poor Russia, scattering to the winds her
+fond hopes of a grand future at the very dawn of the better days
+promised by a free constitution, and plunging her in the throes of
+German autocratic domination.
+
+With regard to the Nationalist leader's rash denunciation of public men,
+I have only a few more words to say. My personal recollections going
+back to the early sixties of the last century, for several years free
+from all party affiliations, unbiassed by any sympathies or prejudices,
+I consider it my duty to say that, on the whole, Canadian public life,
+as well as British public life, is honourable and entitled to the
+respect of public opinion. Out of hundreds and thousands of politicians,
+both in the Motherland and in our own Dominion, there may have been
+failings. It would be useless, even pernicious, to point at them. The
+revulsion of public feeling towards the fallen for cause, and the severe
+judgment of misdeeds by the impartial historian, has been the deserved
+punishment of the few who have prevaricated. I prefer by far to take my
+lofty inspiration from the galaxy of faithful public servants who, from
+all parties, and from various standpoints, have given the fruits of
+their intelligence, of their learning, of their hard work--and in many
+cases--of their private wealth, for the good of their country. In the
+course of the last fifty-five years, I have known hundreds of our public
+men who lived through, and came out of, a long political life getting
+poorer every day without being disheartened and retiring from the public
+service to which they were devoted to the last. Need I point, as
+examples, to the cases of several men who, departed for a better world,
+Parliament, irrespective of all party considerations, united to a man to
+vote a yearly allowance of a few hundred dollars to save their surviving
+widows and children from actual want and destitution!
+
+Just as well as the Canadians of the three British races, and the
+gallant volunteers of our heroic army, Canadian and British public men
+can rest assured that from the high position they occupy in the world's
+estimation, they are far above the fanatical aspersions of the
+Nationalist leader blinded by the wild suggestions of an inexhaustible
+thirst of rash condemnation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+MR. BOURASSA'S DANGEROUS PACIFISM.
+
+
+Two historical truths, undeniable, bright as the shining light of the
+finest summer day, which have triumphantly challenged the innumerable
+falsehoods to the contrary constantly circulated by Germany, even prior
+to the outbreak of the hostilities, are:--
+
+First, that all the countries united under the title--the Allies, have
+been energetically in favour of MAINTAINING THE PEACE OF THE WORLD, when
+it became evident, for all sensible people, that Germany was eagerly
+watching her opportunity to strike the blow she had prepared for the
+previous forty years on such a gigantic scale.
+
+Second, that, once engaged in the conflict against their deliberate
+will, and in spite of their noble efforts to prevent the war which they
+clearly foresaw would be most calamitous, they have always remained the
+staunch supporters of the RESTORATION OF PEACE upon the two _sine qua
+non_ conditions of JUSTICE and DURABILITY.
+
+To achieve these two objectives, they have been fighting for now more
+than four years, at tremendous cost of men and treasures, and they are
+determined to fight until victorious.
+
+They would all lay down their arms to-morrow, if the results so
+important for the future of Humanity could be secured with certainty.
+
+Like all great causes, PEACE WITH JUSTICE AND DURABILITY has had its
+TRUE and its FALSE friends.
+
+The TRUE friends of PEACE were those who realized from the very
+beginning of the frightful struggle that it was perfectly useless to
+expect it, if the disastrous Prussian Militarism was to be maintained
+and allowed to continue threatening Civilization.
+
+The TRUE friends of PEACE were those who pledged their honour not to
+sheathe the sword they had been forced to draw before Germany would
+acknowledge that she had no right to violate solemn treaties, and would
+agree to redeem the crime she had committed in invading the neutral
+territory of Belgium which she trampled under her ironed heels and
+crucified.
+
+The TRUE friends of PEACE were those who determined to bring Germany to
+renounce the abominable principles she has professed, training the mind
+of her peoples to believe and proclaim that MIGHT is RIGHT and the only
+sound basis of INTERNATIONAL LAW.
+
+The TRUE friends of PEACE were those who, however anxious they were to
+have it restored as soon as possible--fervently praying the Almighty to
+that purpose--, knowing what are the principles of International Law
+recognized by all truly civilized nations, could not forgive Germany,
+UNLESS SHE SINCERELY REPENTED, the barbarism she displayed in her
+murderous submarine campaign, and practised in Belgium, Northern France
+and in every piece of belligerent territory her armies occupied.
+
+The TRUE friends of PEACE were those who clearly understood that to meet
+the two essential conditions of JUSTICE and DURABILITY, it was
+PRACTICALLY IMPOSSIBLE to secure it by a compromise which could not, by
+any means, protect the world against further German attempts at
+universal military domination.
+
+The FALSE friends of PEACE were those who said and wrote, in sheer
+defiance of truth, that the Allies, more especially England and Russia,
+were as much responsible for the war as Germany herself.
+
+The FALSE friends of PEACE were those who falsely alleged that the
+Allies were preventing it by their repeated declarations that their
+principal war aim was to destroy, not only the German Empire, but also
+the German race, thus wilfully and maliciously pretending that to battle
+for the abolition of Teutonic militarism, weighing so heavily on all the
+nations, was equal, in guilty knowledge, to fighting for an enemy's race
+destruction.
+
+The FALSE friends of PEACE were those who were ready to sanction, at any
+time, a compromise between HEROIC and criminal war aims, which would
+leave future generations to the tender mercies of a Sovereign Power
+straining every nerve to dominate the world by the foulest means ever
+devised.
+
+The FALSE friends of PEACE were those whose daily effort was to
+dishearten their countrymen from the noble and patriotic task they had
+bravely undertaken with the strong will to accomplish it at all costs,
+knowing, as they did, that it was a question of life or death for human
+Civilization.
+
+"Defeatists," as they are called, to mean the shameless supporters of
+PEACE negotiations to be opened by the Allies acknowledging their defeat
+and the victory of Germany, there were, and there are, in all the
+"Allied" belligerent nations. No one need be too much surprised at the
+hideous fact. In all countries, at all times, under the direst
+circumstances, when it is most important, in very distressing hours,
+that all be of one mind, of one heart, to save the nation's existence,
+are to be found heartless, low minded, cowardly beings, ready to betray
+their countrymen rather than stand the strain of their due share of
+sacrifices, or, which is still far worse, for corrupt motives, to
+deliver them over to the enemy.
+
+"Defeatists" we have had, we have yet, in Canada, in the Province of
+Quebec. Most happily, they are few and far between.
+
+Imbued with the false notions he has so tenaciously ventilated
+respecting Canada's participation in the war, it is no wonder that the
+Nationalist leader was sure to be found at the head of the small group
+of PACIFISTS, at almost any cost, mustered amongst the French
+Canadians. A sower of prejudices, he was bound to watch with eagerness
+the growing crop of ill-feelings he was fostering.
+
+Those of us who oppose all, and any, participation by the Dominion in
+the wars of the Empire, be they even so just, so honourable, so
+necessary, under Mr. Bourassa's deplorable leadership, were naturally
+supporters of any kind of "PACIFISM."
+
+I will not classify the Nationalist leader and his dupes as
+"_defeatists_," who were ready to accept peace as the consequence of
+defeat. The real "_pacifists_," so far as it is possible to ascertain
+their views, unable, consciously or not, to see any difference in the
+respective responsibilities of the belligerents in opening the war,
+consider that they are equally guilty in not closing it.
+
+Most happily, such a disordered opinion is shared only by a small
+minority. It can be positively affirmed that public opinion, the world
+over, outside the Central Empires and their swayed allies, is almost
+unanimous that Germany, through her military party and the junkers
+element, is responsible for the dire calamity she has brought on
+Humanity. The question of the restoration of "PEACE" must be viewed from
+this starting point--the only true one.
+
+The standpoints of the TRUE and the FALSE friends of PEACE being so far
+apart, the conclusions they draw are naturally widely different.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+A MOST REPREHENSIBLE ABUSE OF SACRED APPEALS TO THE BELLIGERENT NATIONS.
+
+
+I cannot qualify in milder words the use Mr. Bourassa has made of the
+solemn appeals His Holiness the Pope of Rome has, at different dates,
+addressed to the belligerent nations in favour of the restoration of
+peace. I bear to the Head of the Church I am so happy to belong such a
+profound respect and devotion that I will scrupulously abstain from any
+comment of the Sovereign Pontiff's writings and addresses. I have read
+them several times over with the greatest attention and veneration, so
+sure I was that, emanating from the highest spiritual Authority in the
+world, they were exclusively inspired by the ardent desire to promote a
+recurrence to good-will amongst men, in obedience to the Divine precept.
+
+Having to reproach the Nationalist leader with having abused of the
+weighty words of His Holiness, to support his own misconceptions of duty
+as a loyal British subject and a Christian publicist, I will refrain
+with great care from writing a sentence which might be construed as the
+shadow of an attempt to do the same.
+
+I will take from Mr. Bourassa's own comments of the Sovereign Pontiff's
+appeals, the two conclusions upon which he lays great stress, and which
+clearly summarize the convictions of His Holiness Pope Benedict XV.
+
+Praying with all the powers of His heart and soul for the orderly future
+of the world, the Sovereign Pontiff implored, in the most touching
+terms, the belligerent nations to agree to a "JUST AND DURABLE PEACE."
+
+As it was certain, even if He had not said so with such pathetic
+expressions, His Holiness drew the saddest possible picture of the
+untold misfortunes war, carried on in such vast proportions, was
+inflicting upon the peoples waging the struggle.
+
+I will only quote the few following words from the first letter of His
+Holiness, dated July 28, 1915:--
+
+"_It cannot be said that the immense conflict cannot be terminated
+without armed violence._"
+
+No one can take exception to this truism, authoritatively expressed
+under circumstances greatly adding to its importance and to its solemn
+announcement. It is just as true to-day as it was,--and has been ever
+since,--when the whole world was passing through the crucial ordeal of
+the days during which England and France were almost imploring Germany
+not to plunge the earth into the horrors of the war she was determined
+to bring on.
+
+The questions at stake could then have been easily settled without
+"ARMED VIOLENCE," if the Imperial Government of Berlin had listened to
+the pressing demand of Great Britain in favour of the maintenance of
+peace.
+
+It is scarcely believable that the Nationalist leader has abused of
+those weighty words to the point of attempting to persuade the
+French-Canadians that the Allies, even more than the Rulers of the
+Central Empires, have refused to listen to the prayers of the Pope. In
+January last, he published a new pamphlet, entitled "THE POPE, ARBITER
+OF PEACE," in which he reproduced from "Le Devoir" his numerous
+articles, from August 1914, on the intervention of the Sovereign Pontiff
+in favour of the cessation of the hostilities, and on the current events
+of the times.
+
+The oft-repeated diatribes of Mr. Bourassa against England were bound to
+be once more edited in the above pamphlet. Their author, in a true
+fatherly way, not willing to allow them to die under the contempt they
+deserve, would not lose the chance to have them to survive in tackling
+them with his comments on His Holiness' letters.
+
+This pamphlet, the worthy sequel of its predecessors which, for the good
+of Mr. Bourassa's compatriots, should never have seen the light of day,
+would call for many more refutable quotations than I can undertake to
+make in this work. A few will suffice to show the deplorable purport of
+the whole book.
+
+In his letter dated, July 28, 1915, the Pope wrote:--
+
+"_In presence of Divine Providence, we conjure the belligerent nations,
+to henceforth put an end to the horrible carnage which, for a year,
+dishonours Europe._"
+
+Positively informed about the horrible crimes committed by command of
+the German military authorities in Belgium, and Northern France, and by
+the ferocious Turks in Armenia, well might His Holiness say that Europe
+was being dishonoured by such barbarous deeds. If the military
+operations had been conducted by the nations of the Alliance in
+conformity with the principles of International Law, most likely the
+Pope would not have used the same language. For, however much to be
+regretted are the sufferings inseparable from a military conflict
+carried on with the utmost regards for the fair claims of human feelings
+and justice, it could not have been pretended that such a war was a
+dishonour for the belligerents on both sides, especially when fighting
+with an equally sincere conviction that they are defending a just cause.
+
+Referring to recent history, none asserted, for instance, that the
+Russo-Japanese war was a dishonour to Europe and Asia. It was fought out
+honourably on both sides. Peace was restored without leaving bitter and
+burning recollections in the minds of either peoples. And when Germany
+dishonoured herself and stained Humanity with blushing shame, both
+Russia and Japan joined together to avenge Civilization.
+
+Let us now see how Mr. Bourassa distorted the words of the Pope so as to
+use them for his own purpose of misrepresenting the true stand of the
+Allies, and more especially of England.
+
+The first sentence of his article dated, August 3, 1915, to be found at
+page 11 of the pamphlet, under the title: "_The Pope's Appeal_," reads
+thus:--
+
+"_The anniversary of the hurling of the sanguinary fury which makes of
+Europe the shame of Humanity has inspired the Rulers of peoples with
+resounding words._"
+
+And after eulogizing the Pope's intervention, he adds:--"_that men will
+not hear his voice, drunk as they are with pride, revenge and blood_."
+
+This may be cunningly worded, but it should deceive nobody.
+
+One cannot help being indignant at the contemptible attempt to place the
+Allies on the same footing as the Central Empires with regard to the
+responsibility _in hurling the sanguinary fury in 1914_.
+
+The plain, incontrovertible, truth is that the outbreak of the war was a
+shame, not for Humanity, the victim of Teutonic treachery, but for
+Germany herself; whilst the sacred union of Belgium, France, England and
+their allies to resist the barbarous onslaught hurled at them all, was
+an honour for Civilization and the promise of an heroic redemption.
+
+At page 12 of the pamphlet, he closes the first paragraph with the
+following words:--"_since the fatal days when peoples supposed to be
+Christian hurled themselves at one another in a foolish rage of
+destruction, of revenge and hatred_." In French, it reads
+thus:--"_depuis le jour fatal ou les peuples soi-disant chrétiens se
+sont rués les uns contre les autres, dans une rage folle de destruction,
+de vengeance et de haine_."
+
+Read as a whole, with the full meaning they were intended to convey,
+those words constitute a daring falsehood. Historical events of the
+highest importance cannot be construed at will. There are facts so
+positively true, and known to be such, that they should preclude any
+possibility of deceit.
+
+It is absolutely false that, _on a fatal day_ of mid-summer, 1914,
+_peoples hurled themselves at one another_. What really took place, in
+the glaring light of day, was that Germany, fully prepared for the fray,
+_hurled_ herself at weak Belgium, throwing to the waste basket the
+scraps of the solemn treaties by which she was in honour bound to
+respect Belgian neutrality. She had first opened the disastrous game by
+_hurling_ her vassal, Austria, at weak Servia.
+
+Rushing her innumerable victorious armies over Belgian trodden soil, she
+_hurled_ herself at France with the ultimate design to _hurl_ herself at
+England.
+
+That in so doing, Germany was _raging_ with a _foolish_ thirst of
+_destruction, of revenge and hatred_, is certainly true. But Mr.
+Bourassa's guilt is in his assertion that the victims of Germany's
+_sanguinary fury_ were actuated by the same criminal motives in
+heroically defending their homes, their wives, their children, their
+all, against the barbarians once more bursting out of Central Europe,
+this time bent on overthrowing human freedom.
+
+Is the respectable citizen who bravely defends himself against the
+ruffian who _hurls_ himself at his throat, to be compared with his
+murderous assailant?
+
+But England was not alone in _hurling_ herself at Germany, as Mr.
+Bourassa so cordially says. Without a word, even a sign, by the only
+momentum of her _furious outburst of foolish destruction_, she was
+followed by the whole of her Empire. How much we, Canadians, were, for
+instance, deluded, the Nationalist leader is kind enough to tell us in
+his ever sweet language.
+
+When the Parliament of Ottawa unanimously decided that it was the duty
+of the British Dominion of Canada to participate in the war; when
+Canadian public opinion throughout the length and breadth of the land,
+almost unanimously approved of this loyal and patriotic decision, we,
+poor unfortunate Canadians, thought that we were heartily and nobly
+joining with the mother-country to avenge "OUTRAGED JUSTICE," to rush to
+the rescue of violated Belgium, of France, once more threatened with
+agony under the brutal Teutonic ironed heels, of the whole world--Mr.
+Bourassa's commanding personality included--menaced with the HUNS'
+DOMINATION.
+
+How sadly mistaken we were, Mr. Bourassa tells us. According to this
+infallible judge of the righteousness or criminality of historical
+events, we were labouring under a paroxysm of passion--_of a rage of
+foolish destruction, of vengeance and hatred_.
+
+Once overpowered by this vituperative mood of calumnious accusations,
+the Nationalist leader slashes England, as follows,--page 18--:--
+
+"_England has violently destroyed more national rights than all the
+other European countries united together. By force or deceit, she has
+swallowed up a fourth of the earthly globe; by conquest, and more
+especially by corruption and the purchase of consciences, she has
+subjugated more peoples than there were, in the whole human history,
+ever brought under the same sceptre._"
+
+Thus, in Mr. Bourassa's impartial estimation, the depredations and
+slaughters of the hordes commanded by Attila, the savagery of the Turks
+of old and present days, the crimes of Germany in this great war, are
+only insignificant trifles compared with the horrors of British history.
+Shame on such outrageous misrepresentation of historical truth.
+
+Mr. Bourassa accuses England to have _by force or deceit swallowed up a
+fourth of the earthly globe_. Considering the happy and flourishing
+condition of the vast British Empire, the Nationalist leader, as every
+one else, must admit that England is endowed with great digestive
+powers, as she does not show the least sign that she suffers from
+national dyspepsia from having swallowed up a fourth of the universe.
+Her national digestion is evidently sound and healthy, for instead of
+weakening and decaying, she grows every day in strength, in stature, in
+freedom, in prestige, and, above all, in WISDOM.
+
+The Nationalist leader has thought proper to express his formal hatred
+of militarism. One would naturally suppose that, in so doing, he should
+have pointed at the worst kind of militarism ever devised--the German
+type of our own days. Let no one be mistaken about it. At page 58 of his
+pamphlet, Mr. Bourassa bursts out as follows in the top paragraph:--
+
+"_As a matter of fact, of all kinds of militarism, of all the
+instruments of brutal domination, the naval supremacy of England is the
+most redoubtable, the most execrable for the whole world; for it rules
+over all the continents, hindering the free relations of all the
+peoples._"
+
+Was I really deluded when I felt sure that in peaceful times, British
+naval supremacy on the seas was not interfering in the least with the
+freest commercial intercourse of all the nations, whose mercantile ships
+can, by British laws, enter freely into all the ports of Great Britain?
+Mr. Bourassa's assertion to the contrary, I shall not, by the least
+shadow, alter my opinion which is positively sound.
+
+From the above last quotation, I have the right to infer that Mr.
+Bourassa is very sorry that, in war times like those we have seen since
+July 1914, British naval supremacy is sufficiently paramount to protect
+the United Kingdom from starvation, to keep the coasts of France opened
+to the mercantile ships of the Allies and of all the neutral nations, to
+"rule the waves" against both the German military and mercantile fleets,
+chased away from the oceans by the British guns thundering at the
+Teutonic pirates on land and sea. If he is, he can be sure that he is
+alone to cry and weep at a fact which rejoices all the true and loyal
+friends of freedom and justice.
+
+Mr. Bourassa cherishes a wish that will certainly not be granted. He
+will not be happy unless England agrees to give up her naval supremacy
+to please Germany. Let him rest quietly on his two ears; the dawn of
+such a calamitous day is yet very far distant.
+
+At the end of page 12, Mr. Bourassa asserts that _the Germans proclaim
+their_ RIGHT _to "Germanize" Europe and the world, and that the English
+imperiously affirm their_ RIGHT _to maintain their Imperial power over
+the seas and to oppose "Anglo-Saxonism" to "pan-Germanism."_--
+
+I have already refuted the Nationalist leader's pretention, and informed
+him that England, no more than any other country, has no "Sovereign
+rights" on the seas outside the coastal limits as prescribed by
+International Law. He appears totally unable to understand the simple
+truth that Great Britain's sea supremacy is nothing more nor less than
+the superiority of her naval strength created, at an immense cost, out
+of sheer necessity, to protect the United Kingdom from the domination of
+a great continental power.
+
+Does he not know that, in the days prior to England's creation of her
+mighty fleet, she has been easily conquered by invaders? Is he aware of
+the great British historical fact called the Norman Conquest? Has he
+never heard that before starting on his triumphant march across Europe,
+culminating at Austerlitz, the great Napoleon had planned an invasion of
+England, with every prospects of success, if he had not been deterred
+from carrying it out by the continental coalition which, calling into
+play the resources of his mighty genius, he so victoriously crushed and
+dispersed? Has he never read anything about panic stricken England until
+she was relieved from the dangers of the projected invasion?
+
+Does he not realize that, unless they were madmen, no British ministers
+will ever consent to renounce their "UNDOUBTED RIGHT" to be ever ready
+for any emergency, to save their country from enslavement by would-be
+dashing invaders? It is the height of political nonsense to suppose that
+responsible public men ever could be so blind, or so recreant to their
+most sacred duty, as to follow the wild course recommended by
+extravagantly prejudiced "Nationalists."
+
+The man who would throw away his weapons of defense would have nothing
+else to do but to kneel down and implore the tender mercy of his
+criminal aggressor. Truly loyal subjects of the Empire cannot clamour to
+bring England down to such an humiliating position. They know too well
+that if ever matters came to so disastrous a pass, Great Britain could
+easily be starved into irremediable submission with the consequent and
+immediate destruction of the whole fabric of the Empire. A Nationalist,
+yawning for such an end, may suggest the best way to reach it. But no
+loyal man, sincerely wishing the maintenance of the great British
+Commonwealth, will ever do so.
+
+No wonder that he who came out openly in favour of Imperial Federation
+for the express purpose of ruining the Empire, endeavours to achieve his
+most cherished object in first destroying British naval supremacy on the
+seas. Imperial Federation would then no longer be necessary for the
+consummation of his longing wishes.
+
+Freedom of the seas and British naval supremacy are not antagonistic by
+any means, as I have previously well explained. It is an unanswerable
+proposition--a truism--to say that supremacy on the ocean will always
+exist, held by one nation or another. The Power commanding the superior
+naval fleet will for ever be supreme on the seas. It is mere common
+sense to say so. Mr. Bourassa would vainly work his wind-mill for
+centuries without changing this eternal rule of sound sense.
+
+If, by whichever cause, England was to lose her sea supremacy, it would
+at once, as a matter of course, pass on to the next superior naval
+Power.
+
+In a subsequent chapter on the after-the-war military problem, I shall
+explain the way or ways, by which, in my opinion, the question of the
+freedom of the seas, so much misunderstood, could be settled to the
+satisfaction of all concerned.
+
+With regard to the supposed conflict of "anglo-saxonism" and
+"pan-germanism" I will merely say that it is only another sample of Mr.
+Bourassa's wily dreams.
+
+As I have already said, this last pamphlet of the Nationalist leader is,
+for a large part of it, but the repetition of his diatribes so often
+_hurled_ at England. I will close this chapter by quoting from page 57,
+the following paragraph which summarizes, in a striking way, the charges
+Mr. Bourassa is so fond to _hurl_ at the mother-country. It reads
+thus:--
+
+"_What has allowed England to bring Portugal into vassalage? to dominate
+Spain and keep Gibraltar, Spanish land? to deprive Greece of the Ionians
+and Cyprus Islands? to steal Malta? to foment Revolution in the Kingdom
+of Naples and the Papal States? to run, during thirty years, the foreign
+policy of Italy and to throw her in Austria's execrated arms? to take
+possession of Suez and to make her own thing of it? to chase France from
+the Upper Nile, and subsequently from the whole of Egypt, to intervene
+in the Berlin treaty to deprive Russia of the profits of her victory,
+to galvanize dying Turkey, to delay for thirty years the revival of the
+Balkan States and to make of Germany the main spring of continental
+Europe? In a word, what has permitted England to rule the roost in
+Europe and to accumulate the frightful storm let loose in 1914? Who?
+What? if it is not the "naval domination" of England ever since the
+destruction of the French and Spanish fleets at Trafalgar._"
+
+It would be most difficult to condense more erroneous historical
+appreciations and political absurdities in so few lines.
+
+Many will be quite surprised to learn, from Mr. Bourassa's resounding
+trumpet, that England had been for many years gathering the storm which
+broke out in 1914. So far all fairminded men were convinced that this
+rascally work had been done by Germany, in spite of England's
+exhortations to reduce military armaments.
+
+In all sincerity, I am unable to understand how Mr. Bourassa can expect
+to successfully give the lie to such incontrovertible truths as the
+guilt of Germany in preparing the war she finally brought on more than
+four years ago, and as the unceasing determination of England to
+maintain peace.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+A CASE FOR TRUE STATESMANSHIP.
+
+
+Whatever the TRUE and the FALSE friends of PEACE may hope and say, it is
+perfectly useless to close our eyes to the glaring fact that its
+restoration can only be the result of military effort combined with the
+highest practical statesmanship. After all what has happened, and the
+oft-repeated declaration of the Rulers of the belligerent nations, it
+would be a complete loss of a very valuable time to indulge any longer
+in the expression of views all acknowledge in principle, but which no
+one, however well disposed he may be, is actually able to traduce in
+practical form.
+
+When writing my French book, in the fall of 1916, reviewing the
+situation as it had so far developed, I said:--
+
+ "All are most anxious for peace. However it is infinitely better
+ to look at matters such as they are. It is evident that the
+ military situation does not offer the least hope that the war
+ can be immediately brought to an end. Successes have been
+ achieved on both sides. But nothing decisive has yet happened.
+ The armies are facing one another in defiant attitude. The
+ belligerent nations, on both sides, have yet, and for a long
+ time, great resources in man-power and money."
+
+ "If Germany, which should first give up the fight in
+ acknowledging her crime, is obdurate to final exhaustion, how
+ can it be possibly expected that the Allies who were forced to
+ fight, will submit to the humiliation and shame of soliciting
+ from their cruel enemy a peace the conditions of which, they
+ know, would be utterly unacceptable. Consequently they must with
+ an indomitable courage and an invincible perseverance go on
+ struggling to solve, for a long time, the redoubtable problem to
+ which they are pledged, in honour bound, to give the only
+ settlement which can reassure the world."
+
+I am still and absolutely of the same opinion. The present military
+situation has certainly much improved in favour of the Allies since
+1916. However, looking at the question, first, from the standpoint of
+the developing military operations, there is no actual, and there will
+not be for many months yet--more or less--practical possibility of a
+satisfactory peace settlement.
+
+Secondly, looking at the question from the standpoint of true
+statesmanship, it is very easy to draw the inexorable conclusion that,
+again, there is not actually the least chance of an immediate
+restoration of peace.
+
+Statesmen, responsible, not only for the future of their respective
+countries, but, actually, for that of the whole world, are not to be
+supposed liable to be carried away by a hasty desire to put an end to
+the war and to their own arduous task in carrying it to the only
+possible solution:--A JUST AND DURABLE PEACE.
+
+A broad and certain fact, staring every one, is that the Berlin
+Government will not accept the only settlement to which the Allies can
+possibly agree as long as her armies occupy French and Belgian
+territories. If Mr. Bourassa and his "pacifists" friends--or dupes--have
+really entertained a faint hope to the contrary, they were utterly
+mistaken.
+
+Present military events, however proportionately enlarged by the
+increased resources, in man-power and money, of the belligerents, are
+not without many appropriate precedents. History is always repeating
+itself. Great Powers having risked their all in a drawn battle, do not
+give in as long as they can stand the strain, considering the importance
+of the interests they have at stake.
+
+For the same reason above stated, but reversed, the Allies will not
+negotiate for peace before they have thrown the German armies out of
+French and Belgian soil, and repulsed them over Teutonic territory. I do
+not mean to say that peace must necessarily be proclaimed either from
+Berlin or from Paris. But it will only be signed as the inevitable
+result of a final triumphant march on the way either to Berlin or to
+Paris. There is no possible escape from the alternative. In such
+matters, there is no halfway station.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+AFTER-THE-WAR MILITARY PROBLEM.
+
+
+Two of the most important propositions of His Holiness the Pope more
+especially deserve earnest consideration. They are indeed supported by
+the Allies who are purposely fighting for their adoption.
+
+In his note of the first of August, 1917, addressed to the Rulers of the
+belligerent nations, the Pope says in part:--
+
+"AT FIRST, THE FUNDAMENTAL POINT MUST BE TO SUBSTITUTE THE MORAL FORCE
+OF RIGHT TO THE MATERIAL FORCE OF ARMS."
+
+No truer proposition could be enounced. If Germany had put this
+principle into practice, she never would have violated Belgian
+territory.
+
+When England protested against the proposed invasion of Belgium, she did
+so in obedience to the sacred principle enunciated by the Sovereign
+Pontiff. She strongly insisted to the last minute that _the moral force_
+of solemn treaties should prevail upon _the material force of arms_.
+
+In a letter dated October 7, 1917, His Eminence Cardinal Gasparri,
+Secretary of State to His Holiness, addressing the Archbishop of Lens,
+wrote as follows respecting conscription:--
+
+ "The Holy See, in his Appeal of the first of August, did not
+ consider, out of deference for the leaders of the belligerent
+ peoples, that he should mention it, preferring to leave to
+ themselves the care of determining it, but for him, the only
+ practical system and, moreover, easy to apply with some good
+ will on both sides, would be the following: to suppress, with
+ one accord between civilized nations, military obligatory
+ service; to constitute an arbitration tribunal, as already said
+ in the Pontifical Appeal, to settle international questions;
+ finally, to prevent infractions, to establish universal
+ "boycottage" against any nation attempting to reestablish
+ military obligatory service, on refusing either to lay an
+ international question before the arbitration tribunal, or to
+ abide by its decision."
+
+Cardinal Gasparri then points to the ante-war British and American
+systems of military "voluntarism", in the following terms:--
+
+ "As a matter of fact, omitting other considerations, the recent
+ example of England and America testifies in favour of the
+ adoption of this system. England and America had, in effect,
+ voluntary service, and, to take an efficient part in the present
+ war, they were obliged to adopt conscription. It proves that
+ voluntary service well supplies the necessary contingent to
+ maintain public order (and is public order not maintained in
+ England and America just as well, if not better, than in the
+ other nations?) but it does not supply the enormous armies
+ required for modern warfare. Consequently in suppressing, with
+ one accord between civilized nations, obligatory service to
+ replace it by voluntary service, disarmament with all the happy
+ consequences above indicated would be automatically obtained
+ without any perturbation of public order."
+
+ "For the last century, conscription has been the true cause of
+ calamities which have afflicted society: to reach a simultaneous
+ and reciprocal suppression will be the true remedy. In fact,
+ once suppressed, conscription could be reestablished only by a
+ law; and for such a law, even with the present constitution of
+ the Central Empires, Parliamentary approbation would be required
+ (which approbation would be most improbable for many reasons and
+ above all on account of the sad experience of the present war);
+ in this way, what is so much desired, for the maintenance of
+ agreements, would be obtained: the peoples' guarantee. If, on the
+ other hand, the right to make peace or war was given to the
+ people by way of =referendum=, or at least to Parliament, peace
+ between nations would be assured, as much at least as it is
+ possible in this world."
+
+It should be very gratifying indeed to all the loyal subjects of the
+British Empire to ascertain, from the declarations of Cardinal Gasparri,
+that the Pope is in so complete accord with England on this the most
+important question to be settled by the future peace treaty.
+
+As proved in one of the first chapters of this work, the Government of
+Great Britain, supported in this course by almost the unanimous opinion
+of the peoples of the United Kingdom, was the first to suggest the
+holding of the Hague conferences to consider the best means to adopt to
+favour the world with the blessings of permanent peace. Their own view,
+which they forcibly expressed, was that the surest way to reach that
+much desired result was to limit the military armaments, both on land
+and sea. For more than twenty years previous to the war, they pressed,
+and even implored, for the adoption of their program.
+
+I have also proved how obdurate Germany was in resisting England's
+propositions, and her successful intrigues to thwart Great Britain's
+efforts to have them adopted and put into practice.
+
+England's policy has not changed. On the contrary, it is more than ever
+favourable to the limitation, and even to the complete abolition, of
+armaments, if one or the other can be achieved. It is the principal war
+aim of Great Britain, only coming next after her determination to
+avenge Belgium.
+
+The future peace of the world could no doubt be well guaranteed by a
+large measure of disarmament. But it would certainly be much more so, if
+complete abolition could be obtained by an international agreement
+binding on all nations, with, of course, the allowance of the necessary
+forces required for the maintenance of interior public order.
+
+The whole world can safely depend on the strenuous support of England
+for either the limitation or the abolition of armaments whenever the
+question is seriously taken up for consideration.
+
+Evidently the problem will be difficult to solve. However, it should not
+be beyond the resources of statesmanship which, assuredly, ought to rise
+superior to all prejudiced aspirations after the terrible ordeal
+Humanity will have experienced during the present war.
+
+The maintenance of internal public order, and permanent preparedness for
+foreign wars, are two very different questions to examine. The first can
+safely be left to the care of every nation sure to attend to it if
+willing to maintain her authority. The second has a much wider scope and
+will tax the ability of statesmanship to the utmost limit.
+
+Will the great civilized nations decide, when the war is over, to
+completely abolish conscription to return to voluntary military service
+within a very limited organization, thus doing away by a bold and
+single stroke with a system which, for more than a hundred years, has
+been the curse of continental Europe?
+
+Or will they, at least as an initial attempt, come to the conclusion to
+only limit armaments, maintaining compulsory service for the reduced
+strength of the armies?
+
+If armaments are either abolished, or merely reduced, will they be so on
+sea as well as on land? I would answer at once:--of course, they should.
+
+Looking at the question from the British stand-point--and I can also say
+from that of the United States--it should be easily solved.
+
+Public opinion in Great Britain and all over the British Empire, as well
+as in the United States, has always been against conscription in peace
+times, until the present war.
+
+Not exactly foreseeing the full extent of the effort she would be called
+upon to make, England entered into the conflict determined to meet the
+requirements of her military situation out of the resources of voluntary
+enlistment. Canada, joining in the struggle, did the same. Both have
+done wonderfully well during the three first years of the prolonged war.
+
+I can, without the slightest hesitation, positively assert that public
+opinion, in the whole British Empire, and, not only in the United
+States, but in the whole of the two American continents, is, as a matter
+of principle, as much hostile to compulsory military service as it was
+before the present war, and would exult at its complete abolition as one
+of the happiest results of the gigantic contest still going on.
+
+It is to be deplored, but still it is a fact, that great questions of
+public interest too often cannot be settled solely in conformity with
+the principles they imply.
+
+If Great Britain, if the United States, if Canada, could consider the
+question of conscription exclusively from their own stand-point, they
+would most surely decide at once, and with great enthusiasm, to abolish
+the obligatory military service they have adopted only as a last resort
+under the stress of imperious necessity.
+
+Moreover, I have no hesitation to express my own opinion that whatever
+will be the military system of continental Europe after the war, the
+British Empire and the United States will certainly not be cursed with
+permanent conscription. They are both so happily situated that, in peace
+times, they cannot be called upon to go very extensively into the costly
+preparedness which the European continental nations will have again to
+submit themselves to, if they are not wise enough to put an end forever
+to the barbarous militarism they have too long endured for fear of
+Teutonic domination.
+
+Under the worst European situation, England, with a territorial army of
+a million of men ready to be called to the Colours, or actually flying
+them, backed by her mighty fleet maintained to its highest state of
+efficiency, could always face any continental enemy. And such an army of
+a ready million of well trained officers and men, voluntary service
+would easily produce.
+
+If future conditions would require it, Canada herself could do her share
+to prepare for any emergency by reverting to voluntary enlistment, but
+in improving the service so as to produce more immediate efficiency.
+
+Very apparently, the United States will come out of the present conflict
+with flying Colours and will dispense with compulsory service under any
+circumstances in the peace days to follow.
+
+What then will the continental powers do? Blessed they will be, if they
+make up their mind to do away, once for all, with a system which has
+crushed the peoples so unmercifully.
+
+To speak in all frankness, I believe it would be almost vain, however
+much desirable it is, to indulge in fond hopes of the complete abolition
+of militarism on the European continent. The canker is too deep in the
+flesh and blood of nations to be extirpated as if by magic. Such a
+reversal of conditions grown to extravagant proportions, during more
+than a century, will not likely be accomplished at the first stroke. Let
+us all hope that, at least, a good start will be made by a large
+limitation of armaments which may, with time, lead to the final
+achievement for which the whole world would be forever grateful to the
+Almighty. I have positively stated that extravagant militarism should
+be discontinued on sea as well as on land. Such has been the policy of
+England for many years past. I have proved it by the diplomatic
+correspondence between Great Britain and Germany, and the solemn
+declarations of all the leading British statesmen for the last quarter
+of a century. How persistingly England has implored Germany to agree
+with her in stopping that ruinous race in the building of war vessels,
+we have seen.
+
+So, the assent, nay more, the determination of England to adhere to her
+old and noble policy, is a foregone conclusion.
+
+The closing sentence of the last quoted paragraph of Cardinal Gasparri's
+letter expresses the opinion that "_the right to make peace or war
+should be given to the people by way of referendum, or at least to
+Parliament_."
+
+The system preconized by the Eminent Cardinal has been in existence in
+England for a number of years; ever since the day when complete
+ministerial responsibility was adopted as the fundamental principle of
+the British constitution. That system was carried to the letter by Great
+Britain with regard to her intervention in the present war.
+
+The right to declare war and to make peace is one of the most important
+prerogatives of the British Crown. This prerogative of the Crown, like
+all the others, is held in trust by the Sovereign for the benefit of
+the people and exercised by Him ONLY UPON THE ADVICE AND RESPONSIBILITY
+OF HIS MINISTERS.
+
+In conformity with this great British constitutional principle, what
+happened in London, in August, 1914? The then Prime Minister, Mr.
+Asquith, in his own name and in those of his colleagues, advised His
+Majesty King George V. to declare war against Germany because she had
+invaded Belgian territory in violation of the treaties by which these
+two countries were, in honour bound, to protect Belgium's neutrality.
+They were constitutionally responsible to the Imperial Parliament and to
+the people of the United Kingdom for their advice to their Sovereign.
+
+In his admirable statement to the British House of Commons, Sir Edward
+Grey, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, said:--
+
+"_I have assured the House--and the Prime Minister has assured the House
+more than once--that if any crisis such as this arose, we should come
+before the House of Commons and be able to say to the House that it was
+free to decide what the British attitude should be, that we would have
+no secret engagement which we should spring upon the House, and tell the
+House that, because we had entered into that engagement, there was an
+obligation of honour upon the country._"
+
+The British House of Commons, had they considered it to be their duty,
+had the right to disapprove the foreign policy of the Cabinet and to
+censure the ministers for the advice they had given, or had decided to
+give, to the Sovereign. On the other hand, the House of Commons had the
+right to approve the stand taken by the Government. They did so
+unanimously, and were most admirably supported by the people.
+
+I must say that I consider it would be very difficult, if not absolutely
+impracticable, to have questions of war or peace dealt with by way of
+"_Referendum_." Crises suddenly created lead almost instantly to
+declarations of war. But this outcome could hardly be so rapidly
+produced that Parliament could not be called to deal with the emergency.
+
+How could France have been able to oppose the crushing German invasion,
+in 1914, if her Government and her representative Houses had been
+obliged to wait for the result of a "_Referendum_" whether she would
+fight or kneel down?
+
+But the whole world--outside the Central Empires and their
+Allies--witnessed with unbounded delight the spontaneous and unanimous
+decision of the heroic French nation to fight to the last. She threw
+herself with the most admirable courage against the invading waves of
+Teutonic barbarism, and succeeded by the great and glorious Marne
+victory in forcing them to ebb, thus giving England and the other Allies
+the time necessary to organize and train their armies which, by their
+united efforts will save Civilization from destruction and the world
+from the threatened German domination.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+THE INTERVENTION OF THE UNITED STATES IN THE WAR.
+
+
+The hostilities, once opened as the direct consequence of Germany's
+obduracy, many of the most influential leaders of public opinion in the
+United States foresaw that the conflict taking such a wide range, the
+great American Republic was most likely to be, sooner or later, involved
+in the European struggle. They were of two classes. Those out of office,
+holding for the time no official position, were, of course, not bound to
+the same careful discretion in judging the daily developments of the
+military operations, and their far reaching consequences, as those who
+were at the helm of State.
+
+In appreciating the course followed by the United States since the war
+commenced, it must never be forgotten that if an autocratic Empire,
+trampled upon by a domineering military party, can be thrown in a minute
+into a great conflict, a Republic like that of our powerful neighbours
+cannot be dragooned into any hasty action. In a free country, under a
+responsible government, public opinion is the basis of the success of
+any important official decision.
+
+The political men and the numerous publicists who incessantly called the
+attention of our neighbours to what was going on in Europe and on the
+seas, have rendered a great service in moulding public opinion for the
+grand duty the Republic would eventually be obliged to accomplish.
+
+Having ourselves decided to participate in the war at once after its
+outbreak, and deeply engaged in the task, we, Canadians, felt somewhat
+uneasy about the apparent determination of our neighbours to stand
+aside, and let the European Powers settle the ugly question. As a rule,
+we were all wishing to see the United States joining with the Allies in
+the fray.
+
+Once again, we had some black sheep with us. Whilst all the loyal
+Canadians were anxiously waiting for the day when they would applaud the
+American Republic's declaration of war against Germany, our Nationalists
+were getting more nervous at the increasing signs of the growth of
+public opinion amongst our neighbours against the criminal German cause
+and the crimes by which the Teutons were supporting it. Their leader,
+Mr. Bourassa, was doing his best to persuade the Americans that they had
+much better to remain out of the struggle. He expected he would succeed,
+as he had done in the Province of Quebec, in influencing, by his
+erroneous theories, many of the French Canadian element in the United
+States.
+
+The wish being always father to the thought, Mr. Bourassa easily came to
+the conclusion that Mr. Wilson, the president of the United States, was
+decidedly opposed to any intervention of the Republic in the war, and
+would prevent it at all hazards. How prodigal he was of his eulogiums,
+of his advices, to the American "pacifists," with the President as their
+leader, to know one has only to read his newspaper "_Le Devoir_."
+
+How disappointed, how crest-fallen, he was when he discovered how much
+mistaken he had been!
+
+When Mr. Wilson, who had long been waiting for the right hour to strike
+the blow at the Teutonic autocratic attempt at domination, rising
+grandly to the rank of a great statesman, supported by the splendid
+strength of the public opinion he had wisely and skilfully rallied in
+favour of the decision he had taken, was a sad day for our Nationalists
+and their heart-broken leader. Blind, prejudiced, as they were, meekly
+pandering to pan-Germanism which they considered as the best antidote to
+the Anglo-Saxonism they abhor, they could not understand that the
+Lusitania horror, the slaughtering of hundreds of American citizens in
+violation of all the principles of International Law, the crimes of the
+Teutonic submarine campaign more than justified the intervention of the
+United States in the war.
+
+What our neighbours have done since they have joined with the Allies,
+what they are doing and promise to do, is worthy of all admiration. Like
+the British Empire, like France, the United States have given the
+inspiring example of a most enlightened patriotism, of a splendid unity
+of purpose, of a boundless confidence in the triumph of the cause of
+Justice and Right.
+
+Such a grand spectacle of true national unity offered a striking
+contrast with the sad exhibition of the narrow Nationalism Canada has
+had to endure without, however, hindering to any appreciable extent our
+loyal and patriotic effort to help winning the war.
+
+Mr. Bourassa, who had been out of his natural vituperative tune in
+complimenting Mr. Wilson on his supposed peace proclivities, was sure to
+turn his guns against the President of the Republic the moment he boldly
+and energetically took his stand against German barbarism as exhibited
+since the beginning of the war. Mr. Wilson had especially protested
+against such outrages as were perpetrated on the seas by Teutonic
+orders. He had repeatedly warned the Berlin Government what the
+inevitable consequences of such proceedings would be, and going to the
+full length of what friendly relations between two Sovereign States
+could permit, had demanded that an end be put to a kind of warfare most
+formally condemned by International Law, contrary to all justice, to all
+human notions of civilization.
+
+When the cup of German iniquities overflowed with new crimes, American
+reprobation was also raised to the high water mark. Indignation was at
+the height of its exasperation. Public opinion had rapidly rallied and
+ripened at the horrible sight of so many American citizens, women and
+children, murdered in mid-ocean, their dead bodies floating over the
+waves, and their souls from above crying for vengeance.
+
+Then the President, Congress, statesmen, politicians, publicists, loyal
+Americans numbering almost a hundred million, all of one mind, of one
+heart, pledged their national honour to avenge the foul deeds of
+Teutonic barbarity, and to do their mighty share in rescuing Freedom and
+Civilization from the threatening sanguinary cataclysm which was cruelly
+saddening our times and darkening the prospects of our children.
+
+How powerfully, how grandly, how admirably they have kept their word,
+all know. The laws necessary to prosecute the war with the utmost vigour
+were unanimously passed by Congress. The organization of the man-power
+of our neighbours has been made on a grand scale. The calls to the
+financial resources of the Republic have been patriotically answered by
+the people who poured out billions and billions of their hard earned and
+prudently saved money to support the national cause so closely
+identified with that of the Allies. Besides spending innumerable
+millions for their own gigantic military effort, the United States are
+lending billions of dollars to their associates in the great struggle to
+curb down German autocratic criminal ambition.
+
+The universe, as a whole, gratefully applauded the magnificent effort
+of the leading nation of the New-World in defending the old continents
+of Europe, Asia and Africa against the new invasion of the Huns.
+
+The only shadow to this ennobling picture is that which our
+Nationalists, from this side of the boundary line, try to breathe on it,
+expecting that their treacherous whisper will find some echo amongst the
+French Canadian and the German elements of the Republic.
+
+The following lines are a sample of the kind words Mr. Bourassa has
+addressed to Mr. Wilson--the warrior--not the pacifist. On August 30,
+1917, respecting the answer of the President of the United States to the
+Pope's appeal in favour of peace, he wrote in a gentle mood:--
+
+"_Truth and falsehood, sincerity and deceit, logic and sophism are
+sporting with gracefulness in this singularly astonishing document. One
+would imagine that the President, persuaded that the European
+Governments are playing an immense game of "poker" having the life of
+the peoples at stake, wanted to go further and to prove to them that at
+such a game the great American democracy is their master. Perhaps did he
+believe that the "bluff" outbidding would succeed in tearing to pieces
+the mask of falsehoods, of ambiguities and hypocrisy, by which the
+national Rulers are blinding the peoples in order to lead them more
+readily to be slaughtered._"
+
+On perusing such outrageous writing, one cannot help being convinced
+that Mr. Bourassa considers all the distinguished and most patriotic
+political leaders who, for the last four years, have guided with so much
+talent and devotion France, the British Empire, and their Allies through
+the unprecedented crisis they have had to face, are a criminal gang of
+murderers.
+
+So, in Mr. Bourassa's kind opinion, when Mr. Wilson and all the members
+of the two Houses of Congress, with a most admirable unanimity of
+thought and aspirations, called upon the American nation to avenge their
+countrymen, countrywomen and children, murdered on the broad sea, they
+were criminally joining with European Rulers in a game of "bluff", going
+further than all of them in order to tear to pieces the falsehoods and
+hypocrisy they were using to blind their peoples to the facile
+acceptance of the slaughtering process. A very strange way, indeed, of
+unmasking others' hypocrisy by being more hypocritical than them all.
+
+The next day, in a second article on the same subject, the Nationalist
+leader said:--
+
+"_Since the outbreak of the war, more especially since the exhausted
+peoples have commenced to ask themselves what will be the result of this
+frightful slaughter, the supporters of war to the utmost have tried hard
+to create the legend that Germany wants to impose her political,
+military and economical domination over the whole universe. To this
+first falsehood, they add another one, still more complete: the only way
+to assure peace, they say, is to democratize Germany, Austria and all
+the nations of the Globe._"
+
+Two falsehoods no doubt there are, but they are not asserted by those
+who affirm Germany's aspiration at universal domination, and who believe
+that if true free democratic institutions were to replace autocratic
+rule in many countries, peace could be much more easily maintained. They
+are circulated by those who deny that such are the two cases.
+
+Whose fault is it if the almost universal opinion, outside the Central
+Empires and their few allies, is that Teutonic ambition, for many years
+past, has been to dominate the world?
+
+Whose fault is it if, for the last forty years, autocratic rule has once
+more proved to be the curse of the nations which it governs, and of the
+peoples it subjugates?
+
+Has not Germany only herself to blame? If she had respected the eternal
+principles of Divine Morals; if she had been contented of her lot and
+mindful of the rights of other nations; if she had been guided by the
+true law that Right is above Might; if she had followed the ever
+glorious path of Justice, she would not be presently under the ban of
+the civilized world rising in a mighty effort to crush her threatening
+tyranny out of existence.
+
+So much the worse for her, if she falls a victim to her insane ambitious
+dreams and to the atrocious crimes they have inspired her to commit. In
+her calamity, the Nationalists' sympathies will avail her very little,
+as they will everywhere meet with the contempt they fully deserve.
+
+At page 116, in a virulent charge, Mr. Bourassa says that Mr. Wilson
+_though a passionate and obstinate pedantic of democracy, is as much of
+an autocrat as William of Prussia_.
+
+Blinded by his fanatical antipathies towards every one and every thing,
+directly or indirectly, favouring England, the Nationalist leader fails
+to see any difference between the man who blasphemously claims by Divine
+Right the power to hurl his whole Empire at the throat of staggering
+Humanity, to satisfy his frenzied lust of domination, denying to his
+subjects any say whatever in the matter, and the responsible chief of
+State who, holding his temporary functions from the expressed will of
+the people who trusted him, calls upon that same nation to avenge the
+murder of a large number of her citizens, of her women and children, and
+the barbarous crimes committed in violation of her Sovereign Rights.
+
+If Mr. Bourassa is conscious of the enormity of the stand he has taken,
+and of the views he has expressed, he is indeed much to be blamed; if he
+is not, he is greatly to be pitied.
+
+At page 109 of his pamphlet--entitled:--"_The Pope, arbiter of peace_,"
+Mr. Bourassa has written the following monstrous proposition, after
+having said that peace must be restored "_without victory_":--
+
+"_The more the results of the war are null, for both sides, the more
+chances there are for the peoples, astounded at the frightful
+uselessness of those monstrous slaughters, to protect themselves against
+a new fit of furious folly. To become odious to men, war must be
+barren._"
+
+So Mr. Bourassa has emphatically proclaimed that the war must be barren
+of any practical results, that the extraordinary sacrifices of lives, of
+resources of wealth, must be without reward of any kind; that the world
+must return to the ante-war conditions. And this, he asserts, would be
+the best means of preventing a renewal of the monstrous slaughters which
+have been the outcome of Germany's horrible attempt at dominating an
+enslaved Humanity.
+
+In all sincerity, it is very difficult to suppose that the exponent of
+such outrageously abominable views is conscious of what he says.
+
+A red hot "pacifist," Mr. Bourassa clamoured as best he could for "PEACE
+WITHOUT VICTORY," claiming that it was _the only kind of peace that
+could be "just and durable."_ The time was when he pretended--surely
+without any show of reason--that such was the sort of peace Mr. Wilson
+wanted and suggested.
+
+Even as far back as December 31, 1915, Mr. Bourassa, no doubt desirous
+of giving full vent to his new year's wishes to all, had written:--
+
+"_In spite of the lies, of the impudent "bluff," of the sanguinary
+appeals and of the false promises of victory of the partisans of war to
+excess, in all the warring countries, popular good sense commences to
+discern truth.... The more victory_ (the issue) _will be materially null
+and sterile for all the nations at war, the more chances there will be
+that peace will be lasting and that the peoples will be convinced that
+war is not only an abominable crime but an incommensurable folly_."
+
+Evidently it had already become a hobby on the brain of the Nationalist
+leader. He dogmatically proclaims that war between peoples--not the wars
+formerly fought by mercenary armies,--is a _crime_,--_abominable_,--and
+a _folly_,--_incommensurable_.
+
+True it is on the part of a State tramping upon all the principles of
+Justice and of International Law to gratify her guilty ambition.
+
+But honourable, glorious, is war on the part of peoples rising in their
+patriotic might to resist a sanguinary enemy, to defend their countries,
+their homes, their mothers, their wives and their children from
+oppression, to stem the conquering efforts of barbarous invaders.
+
+No doubt it was a crime on the part of Germany to break her pledged
+honour by solemn treaties, and to violate Belgium's territory.
+
+No doubt it was a crime for Germany--and one abominable--to overrun
+Belgium, spreading everywhere desolation, devastation, incendiarism,
+murder.
+
+But can it be said that the admirable and heroic resistance Belgium has
+opposed to her tyrannical invaders was a dastardly crime?
+
+No doubt it was a crime--and one most abominable--for Germany to order
+the sinking of the Lusitania and hundreds of merchant ships, without the
+warning required by the Law of Nations, murdering by hundreds
+non-combatants, children, women, and old men.
+
+But can any one be justified in asserting that, after exhausting, for
+the redress of such abominable wrongs, all the resources of diplomacy,
+the United States were committing a crime when they accepted the
+criminal teutonic challenge and decided to join with the British Empire,
+with France, Italy and their Allies, to rescue human Freedom and
+Civilization from the impending destruction?
+
+It is an aberration of mind--incommensurable in depth--for a publicist,
+or any one else, to be so blinded by prejudices, so lost to all sense of
+justice, as to place on the same footing, on the same level, the
+assailant and he who defends his all, the murderer and the victim.
+
+I positively affirm that I am not actuated by the least ill-will or
+ill-feeling against the Nationalist leader, in judging his course and
+his views as I do. Thank God, I know enough of the teachings of
+Christianity to wish good to all men. But I cannot help being deeply
+sorry and deploring that one of my French Canadian compatriots is buried
+in such mental darkness as to be unable to perceive the
+difference--incommensurable--there is in the present war between the
+hideous Teutonic guilt, and the commendable and meritorious defence by
+the Allied nations of the most sacred cause on earth:--outraged Justice.
+
+And with all sincerity, I express the profound wish that during the
+prolonged recess the timely war measure adopted to censure and prevent
+all utterances detrimental to the best Canadian effort in the conflict,
+the Nationalist leader has the pleasure to enjoy, he will reconsider the
+whole situation and his opinions--too much widely circulated. Is it yet
+possible to hope that, at last, he will see the dawn which will lead him
+to the full light with which the great and noble cause of his country
+and of the world is shining?
+
+It is no surprise that such opinions utterly failed to have any echo
+amongst the liberty loving people of the neighbouring Republic. They
+died their merited shameful death before crossing over the boundary
+line, buried deep under the heap of the profound feelings of reprobation
+they provoked.
+
+The Nationalist leader even missed the mark where he felt sure his shot
+would strike. We can rest assured that the large majority of the United
+States Germans, by birth or origin, would not change the responsible
+President of their new country for the autocrat Kaiser from whose
+absolutist power so many of them fled to breathe freely in the new land
+of promise it was their happy lot to enter.
+
+Mr. Bourassa met with a complete failure in his expectation to arouse
+the feelings of his compatriots over the frontier against the
+intervention of the Republic in the war.
+
+It has been a profound satisfaction for us, French Canadians, to learn
+that from the very moment war was declared by the Republic against
+Germany, the French Canadian element in the United States has been to
+the forefront of the most loyal of our friendly neighbours in fighting
+the common enemy.
+
+The French Canadians of the United States, either by birth or origin,
+have wisely turned a deaf ear to the Nationalist leader's seductive but
+prejudiced theories, to the wild charges he was wont to level at all the
+national rulers of the Allies, and, as a final attempt, at those of the
+American Republic. They have rallied to their Colours with enthusiastic
+patriotism.
+
+They have nobly done their duty. They are doing it, and will continue to
+do so to the last: to the final victory for which they are fighting with
+the patriotic desire to share in the glory of the triumph of their
+country.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+THE ALLIES--RUSSIA--JAPAN.
+
+
+Since its outbreak the great war has, and, before it is over, will have,
+played havoc in many ways in the wide world. Criminal aspirations have
+been quashed, extravagant hopes shattered, an ancient throne overthrown
+almost without a clash, an autocrat sovereign murdered, another forced
+to abdicate and go into exile.
+
+In the open airs, on land, over the waves, under sea, the fighting demon
+has been most actively at work, ordering one of the belligerent, eager
+to obey, to spare no one, young, weak or old. Death has been dropped
+from the skies on sleeping non-combatants, assassinating right and left.
+On the soil Providentially provided with the resources necessary to
+human life, homes have been ruined, their so far happy owners brutally
+murdered. On the ocean the treacherous and barbarous submariner,
+operating in the broad light of the day, or in the darkness of the
+night, has sent, without remorse, to the fathomless bottom, thousands
+and thousands of innocent victims, children, women, old men, wounded
+soldiers spared on land but drowned at sea.
+
+Viewed from the height of a much nobler standpoint, the war has
+developed a superior degree of heroism perhaps never equalled. Belgians,
+Serbians, Poles, Armenians have endured, and are still suffering, their
+prolonged martyrdom with a fortitude deserving the greatest admiration.
+
+The nations united to withstand the torrent of German cruel and depraved
+ambition are writing, with the purest of their blood, pages of history
+which, for all times to come, will offer to posterity unrivalled
+examples of the sound and unswerving patriotism which has elevated them
+all to the indomitable determination to bear patiently, perseveringly,
+all the sacrifices, in lives courageously given, in resources profusely
+spent, in taxation willingly accepted and paid, in works of all kinds
+cheerfully performed, which the salvation of human Liberty and
+Civilization shall require.
+
+The collapse of the ancient and hitherto mighty Empire of Russia will
+undoubtedly be one of the most startling events of the "Great War." For
+the present, I shall not comment, on the causes of this momentous
+episode, incidental to the wonderful drama being played on the worldly
+stage, more than I have done in a previous chapter. Still the important
+change it has made in the respective situation of the belligerents, with
+the prospective consequences likely to follow, one way or the other,
+calls for some timely consideration.
+
+Evidently, the downfall, first, of the Imperial regime, second, of the
+_de facto_ Republican government by which it was replaced, throwing the
+great Eastern ally of Great Britain, France and Italy under the
+tyrannical sway of the "bolchevikis" terrorists, most considerably
+altered the relative strength of the fighting power of the belligerents.
+Very detrimental to the Allies, it was largely favourable to the Central
+Empires. The "Triple Entente" as first constituted, was much weakened by
+the desertion of one of the great partners in the heavy task they had
+undertaken, whilst the "Triple Alliance" was strengthened in a relative
+proportion, at least for the time being and the very near future.
+
+Evidence, incontrovertible, is coming to light, proving what had been
+soundly presumed, that "bolchevikism" was not merely the result, as in
+other instances, of the violence of sanguinary revolutionists
+overpowering a regular progressive movement of political freedom and
+reform, but that it has been the outcome of German intrigue easily
+succeeding in corrupting into shameless treason the "bolchevikis"
+leaders.
+
+As a Sovereign State, as an independent nation, Russia was, in honour
+bound, pledged not to consent to a separate peace, and to make peace
+with Germany only with conditions to which all the Allies would agree.
+Acceptance of, and concurrence in, all peace agreements, were the
+essential clause of the pledge Great Britain, France and Russia had
+reciprocally taken in going to war with the Central Empires. With this
+sacred pledge Italy concurred fully on joining the Allies.
+
+To that solemn pledge, the American Republic has emphatically assented
+when she threw her weighty sword in the balance against blood stained
+and murderous Germany.
+
+The "bolchevikis'" treacherous government repudiated the solemn
+engagement of their country, threw her honour to the winds, sold her
+dearest national interests by the infamous Brest-Litovsk treaty.
+Betrayed Russia was out of the war, leaving her Allies to their fate.
+
+From a military point of view, the consequences were easily foreseen.
+Freed from the danger of further attacks on the eastern front, both
+Germany and Austria could send their eastern armies, the first, on the
+western front in France, the second, on the Italian front. Germany, only
+requiring a sufficient force to keep down trodden Russia under the yoke
+treacherously fastened on her neck by the traitors who had ignominiously
+sold their country to her enemy, and anxious to profit to the utmost by
+her success in coercing the Russians to agree to dishonourable peace
+conditions, hurried more than a million men over to the western front.
+Austria did likewise, sending a large force with the hope of smashing
+the Italians out of the fight.
+
+Those were no doubt very anxious days. All remember how the Italian army
+lost in a very short time all the ground they had so stubbornly
+conquered.
+
+Germany made formidable preparations to strike, in the very early spring
+of the present year, a decisive blow by which she fully expected to
+reach and take Paris. We shall never forget the feverish hours we lived
+when came the successive reports of the crushing advance of the Teutonic
+hordes so close to the illustrious capital of France.
+
+For a while, it seemed to be--and really it was--a renewal of the first
+terrific invasion of northern France, in 1914. Fortunately, it was
+Providentially decreed that the second onslaught was to meet with a
+second Marne disaster. The Huns were forced to retire after a tremendous
+loss of men and war materials, the allied armies, brilliantly led and
+fighting heroically, redeeming all the lost territory and, at the moment
+I am writing, moving steadily towards the German frontier.
+
+The great good luck of the Allies, treasonably sacrificed by the Russian
+bolchevikis terrorist government, was the solemn entry of the United
+States into the European conflict.
+
+Preparing for the grand effort which she confidently expected would be
+final, Germany rashly decided to resume her barbarous submarine
+campaign, positively determined to criminally violate all the principles
+of International Law regulating warfare on the seas. That outrageous
+decision was her fatal doom.
+
+Its direct result was to bring the American Republic into the war. And
+then the whole world was called upon to witness, with unbounded delight,
+the very impressive spectacle of millions of fighting free men being
+successfully transported over the sea, and landed on the French soil, to
+join the grand army which, for the last four years, had been resisting
+the full might of the autocratic forces.
+
+However difficult it is to foretell what the political developments of
+the present deplorable Russian situation will be, still it is not
+illusory to believe that, history once more repeating itself, the
+present sanguinary Russian regime will hasten its well deserved
+ignominious downfall by the very brutal excesses it multiplies in its
+delirious tyranny. There are too many elements of the immense population
+of Russia favourable to an orderly and sensible government, to suppose
+that they will long fail to gather their strength in order to redeem
+their country's honour, and to remove from power the traitors who are
+the shame of their fair land. When the infallible reaction sets in, it
+will increase the more in momentum that it will have been longer
+repressed by foul means.
+
+The most important point of the present Russian situation to consider is
+that of the best initiative the Allies could, and ought to, take
+respecting the military question.
+
+Many are of opinion that it would be possible, for the Allies, to help
+Russia out of the present difficulties by an armed support. Such views
+have been more especially expressed in the United States. Could they, or
+can they be carried out? I must say that in a large measure I share the
+opinion of those who would give an affirmative answer to the question.
+
+It is well known that the matter has been most seriously considered by
+the Allies, and a favourable solution seems on the way of a satisfactory
+realization.
+
+To the armed intervention of the Allies in Russia, following closely
+upon the infamous Brest-Litovsk peace treaty, there was a very serious
+obstacle of German creation.
+
+It was evident, at the very start, that if intervention there was to be,
+the one Ally to play the most important part in the great undertaking
+would be Japan.
+
+The British statesmen who, several years ago, brought about the treaty
+of alliance between Great Britain and Japan have deserved much from the
+Empire and from the world generally. Surely they had a clear insight of
+the future. True to her treaty obligations Japan at once sided with
+Great Britain in the war. All those who have closely followed the trend
+of events since the outbreak of the hostilities, know how much Japan has
+done to assist in chasing the German military and mercantile fleets from
+the high seas, more especially from the Pacific ocean. Canada owes her a
+debt of gratitude for the protection she has afforded our western
+British Columbia coast from the raids of German war ships.
+
+Foreseeing that the proximity of Japan to eastern Russia was an
+inducement for the Allies to decide upon an armed intervention which,
+starting from Siberia, might roll westward over the broad lands leading
+back to the European eastern war front, Germany lost no time in trying
+to poison Russian public opinion against the Japanese. Her numerous
+representatives and agents told the Russians that if they allowed Japan
+to send her army on Russian territory, they would be doomed to fall
+under Japanese sway. They recalled the still recent Russo-Japanese war,
+amplifying the supposed aims of Japan so as to stir up the national
+feelings of the Russians. Such a cry, assiduously and widely spread, was
+no doubt a dangerous one.
+
+Under those circumstances, Japan wisely decided to remain in the
+expectation of further developments before moving. She took the safe
+stand that she would intervene only upon the request of the Russians
+themselves, pledging her word of honour that her only purpose would be
+to free Russia from German domination, and that she would withdraw from
+Russian territory as soon as complete Russian independence would have
+been restored and the treacherous Teutonic aims foiled.
+
+Evidences are increasing in number and importance that the Huns'
+propaganda in Russia against Japan is being successfully counteracted by
+the good sense of the people, realizing how much their vital national
+interests have been trampled upon by Germany in imposing her peace
+conditions on their country betrayed by the bolchevikis rulers.
+
+An armed Allied force has been sent to, and has been, for some weeks,
+operating, in Siberia so far with commendable results.
+
+For one, I have most at heart an expectation which I would be most happy
+to see realized. It seems to me that there ought to be a chance, nay
+more, a possibility, for the Allies to organize, between this day and
+next spring, a strongly supported intervention in Russia. In that event,
+Japan of course, would take the lead. She could rapidly send to help the
+Russians to resume their part in the war against Germany at least a
+million of men; two millions if they were needed. As a guarantee of
+Japan's good faith, the Allies, more especially the United States, could
+send over contingents to Siberia.
+
+There is no doubt whatever that so supported, the revulsion of Russian
+public feeling, once set in motion, would soon overwhelm the
+bolchevikis. A sensible and patriotic government, once at the helm of
+the state, could easily and rapidly reorganize a powerful army out of
+the numerous available millions. The financial aspect of the question
+would certainly be the most difficult for Russia to meet, after the
+exhaustive strain she has had to bear. But however great their moneyed
+effort, the United States could yet do a great deal to help Russia
+financially.
+
+Will the hopes of so many be realized, and will Russia, resuming her
+place of honour in the glorious ranks of the Allies, be found battling
+once more with them when together they will finally crush the German
+tyrannical militarism? God only knows, and time will tell.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+THE LAST PEACE PROPOSALS.
+
+
+I was writing the last pages of this work when the surprising news was
+flashed over the cable that Austria-Hungary had taken the initiative of
+suggesting peace discussion, which proposition she had communicated to
+all the belligerents, to the neutral governments and even to the Holy
+See. Without delay the rumour proved to be true. The very next day the
+full text of Austria's communication was published all over the world.
+
+I have read it with great care and, I confess, with profound amazement.
+
+From several stand-points, this document is astonishing and weighty:
+astonishing as it reveals more than ever before the astuteness of the
+inspiration which dictated it; weighty because it derives its importance
+from one of the most serious situation of the world's affairs ever
+recorded in History.
+
+It is difficult to suppose that the Austrian Government really expected
+that their move would be considered as the outcome of their own
+initiative. Not the hand, but the sword--the dominating sword--behind
+the Throne is clearly visible.
+
+The carefully drafted document, issued from Vienna, was evidently
+dictated from Berlin. It is stamped with the Teutonic seal.
+
+After the experience of the last four years--I can safely say of the
+last half century as well--over credulous is he who believes that,
+swayed as she has been by her overpowering northern neighbour, Austria
+would have dared to address such a proposition to the Allies if she had
+not been asked by Germany to do so.
+
+It is rather amusing to read the news cabled from Amsterdam, Holland, on
+the 20th of September, that an official communication issued in Berlin
+said that the German Ambassador in Vienna that day presented Germany's
+reply to the recent Austro-Hungarian peace note. The purport of the note
+was that Germany agreed to participate in the proposed exchange of
+views. This is indeed high class cynicism.
+
+The document would certainly call for somewhat lengthy and strong
+comments, but they can be dispensed with after the curt, sharp and
+decisive reply it has elicited from those it was intended to seduce and
+deceive.
+
+President Wilson was the first to answer a positive, a formidable NO,
+which, thundered out from Washington, was echoed with equal force in
+London, Paris and Rome. So that the astute attempt to deter the Allies
+from the glorious course they were forced to adopt by Germany, and by
+Austria herself, was doomed to failure, and bound to meet with the
+contempt it deserved.
+
+But a few remarks expressing the retort that strikes one's mind on
+reading the Austrian communication, are in order and had better be made.
+The whole stress of the document is that peace should be restored as
+soon as possible on account of the sacrifices and sufferings war
+nowadays entail, and in conformity with the unanimous wishes of the
+peoples engaged in the conflict.
+
+Did Austria ever suppose that, when she addressed that sadly famous and
+outrageous ultimatum to Servia, dated the 23rd of July, 1914, which she
+well knew would bring about the cataclysm she now feigns to deplore--and
+which Germany and herself were longing for--the war would be only a
+child's play, a game of golf, or something of the kind? Was Austria at
+that time cherishing the kind feelings of the German Kronprinz who, on
+being asked by an American lady, in a social event, at Berlin, why he
+was so desirous of seeing a great war, replied that "_it was only for
+the fun of the thing_?"
+
+That war, when once declared, would have terrible consequences, would
+cost millions of dear lives, would cripple many more millions for the
+rest of their earthly days, would cost innumerable millions--even
+billions--of hard earned money, would destroy an immense amount of
+accumulated wealth, would delay for years the onward march of Humanity
+towards more and more prosperous destinies, was not only long foreseen
+before it broke out, but was positively known to be pregnant with all
+such disasters.
+
+But what was not foreseen, not known, nor imagined as at all possible,
+after nearly twenty centuries of Christianity, was that, war being on,
+Germany, the Power responsible for it, guilty of the crime of having let
+loose the frightful hurricane, would multiply the horrors inseparable
+from military operations, with unconceivable barbarous acts condemned by
+all international, moral and Divine laws.
+
+It was not foreseen, nor supposed possible, that heroism would be
+challenged by murder, that the glorious defenders of their country's
+rights would have to fight against sanguinary savages obeying the
+barbarian orders of a modern Attila.
+
+It was not foreseen that hundreds of children, women, old men, wounded
+soldiers, would be assassinated on the open sea and sent to their
+eternal watery graves.
+
+So far as the horrors of regular warfare were concerned, they were, as I
+have just said, very well known. And was it not on account of this
+knowledge that Great Britain and France had exhausted all their efforts
+in favour of the maintenance of peace?
+
+Was it not out of this knowledge that England had, for more than twenty
+years, implored the Berlin Government to agree at least to partial
+disarmament, to discontinue, or, at the least, to reduce war ship
+building operations?
+
+When Austria, bowing herself down to the ground under the German
+tyrannical lash, unjustly and cruelly declared war against weak Servia,
+she knew what the horrors of the conflict could not fail to be. How is
+it that at that time she was not moved by the sympathetic feelings
+expressed in her recent appeal for peace negotiations?
+
+How is it that Austria, and her inspiring angel, Germany, are getting so
+nervous about the misfortunes of war, just at the time when they are
+forced to admit that they are utterly unable to realize the aims for
+which they brought on the frightful struggle?
+
+How is it that those who could order with clear conscience and fiendish
+delight the violation of Belgium guaranteed neutrality, the sinking of
+the Lusitania and so many other ships carrying non-combatants, children,
+women and old men, the murder of so many innocent victims, the Belgian
+deportations, the destruction of the monuments of art--the work of human
+genius--are suddenly moved to pity just as they see the hand writing on
+the wall warning them that their days of foul enjoyments are at end?
+
+How is it that the voice who dictated the following sentence was not
+silenced and choked by the abominable lie it contains? How is it that
+the hand that wrote it was not instantly dried up at the impudent
+falsehood it expresses?
+
+Austria's official communication says in part:--
+
+"_The Central Powers leave it in no doubt that they are only waging a
+war of defence for the integrity and the security of their
+territories._"
+
+But why is it that the Central Empires are now only waging a defensive
+war, if it is not because after having opened the game with the
+certainty of crushing their opponents by the tremendous power of their
+formidable military organization, they are getting beaten and
+overpowered by the unrivalled heroism called forth by their criminal
+attempt at destroying weak nations and enslaving Humanity?
+
+The Austrian and German Governments wilfully forget that the important
+point is not to consider who are the belligerents that are NOW forced by
+the fortune of arms to wage a defensive struggle. It is to ascertain who
+started the conflict of an OFFENSIVE war.
+
+To that question, the voice of the truly civilized world has answered
+with no uncertain sound. It was given, and ever since most energetically
+emphasized, the very day the first Austrian shot was fired at Belgrade,
+the first thundering German gun and the first German soldier ordered to
+cross over the Belgian frontier.
+
+The Austrian tentative peace document pretends "_that all peoples, on
+whatever side they may be fighting, long for a speedy end to the bloody
+struggle_."
+
+This is so evidently true that the writer of the communication might
+very properly have dispensed with asserting it.
+
+But have the Austrian and the German Governments forgotten that the
+peoples were equally longing for the maintenance of peace during the
+many years of intense war preparation prior to the outbreak of the
+hostilities in 1914?
+
+If they are not yet aware of it, the Central Empires must be taught that
+the Allied nations have another longing than that for peace, to which
+they have given precedence and for which they will continue to fight
+strenuously until it is fully gratified. They long for an honourable, a
+just and lasting peace. They long to see once more the old landmarks of
+Civilization and Political Liberty emerging safe and radiant from the
+waves of Teutonic Barbarism. They long, and most earnestly, for peace
+restored under such conditions as will put an end to extravagant,
+ruinous and autocratic militarism, which will henceforth relieve the
+peoples from the drastic obligation of maintaining, at a cost more and
+more crushing, an ever increasing military organization for fear of
+being suddenly subjugated by an ambitious foe bent on dominating the
+world.
+
+Using the very words of the most admirable speech addressed by President
+Wilson to the United States Congress, on the 11th of February last, the
+Allied Nations long for a peace which will provide "_that peoples and
+provinces are no longer to be bartered about from sovereignty to
+sovereignty as if they were mere chattels and pawns in a game, even the
+great game now for ever discredited of the balance of power; but that
+every territorial settlement involved in this war must be made in the
+interest and for the benefit of the populations concerned and not as a
+part of any mere adjustment or compromise of claims amongst rival
+states_."
+
+The Allied peoples are longing for a peace by which "_all well defined
+national aspirations shall be accorded the utmost satisfaction that can
+be accorded them without introducing new or perpetuating old elements of
+discord, and antagonism that would be likely in time to break the peace
+of Europe and consequently of the world_."
+
+The _pacifists_ of the Allied nations who have, like the Nationalist
+leader and his henchmen in the Province of Quebec, clamoured for peace
+by compromise, must have had a few hours of delightful enjoyment after
+reading Austria's communication. It is evidently the echo of their oft
+repeated views and has been carefully drafted to stir them to further
+exertions in favour of a settlement which will gratify their ill
+disguised Teutonic sympathies.
+
+Austria's document is a plea intended to be strong for peace by
+negotiations irrespective of the war situation and its probable result.
+
+This is the kind of peace dear to the heart of the Nationalist leader
+and his friends. The newspaper "_Le Devoir_" is their daily organ in
+Montreal. A Sunday paper called "_Le Nationaliste_" is the weekly
+edition of the daily organ.
+
+By what mysterious inspiration was "_Le Nationaliste_" able to forestall
+the publication of the Austrian peace document by an article in its
+issue of Sunday, the 13th of August, which summarizes the leading
+reasons given by the Government of Vienna to induce the Allied
+Governments to agree "_to a confidential and unbinding discussion_" of
+the conditions of peace, "_at a neutral meeting place_?"
+
+Since the official publication of the document, our Nationalists, who
+had been subdued by the Order-in-Council tightening the censure of
+disloyal writings and speaking, and reduced to the necessity of merely
+whispering their fond hopes of an early peace which would relieve the
+Central Empires, Turkey and Bulgaria from the deserved chastisement of
+their crimes, are getting again more outspoken in the expression of
+their views and of their Teutonic proclivities. The street corner
+propaganda is being resumed with more discreet vigour than formerly when
+loud talk was considered safe. New efforts, better guarded against a
+compromising responsibility, to instil the virus in the body politic,
+are tried over again. They creep in a few newspapers well known for
+their hardly disguised hostility to the cause of the Allies and to the
+participation of Canada to its defence. All this under the hypocritical
+cover of a longing for the restoration of peace and the cessation of the
+sacrifices the country is still making for the victory for which all
+loyal British subjects are praying and doing their best to secure.
+
+Germany has prudently--cowardly is the more proper word--remained
+behind, satisfied, for the time being, to play the part of prompter to
+her vassal, Austria. But, however desirous of remaining free to
+repudiate publicly, if considered more advisable, Austria's move, she
+could not help showing her hand. She betrayed herself by the peace offer
+she has had the outrageous audacity to make to Belgium she has
+barbarously crucified.
+
+And what are the terms of this astonishing proposal? I will mention only
+two of them.
+
+First: "THAT BELGIUM SHALL REMAIN NEUTRAL UNTIL THE END OF THE WAR."
+
+That Germany should have decided to address such a demand to Belgium is
+truly inconceivable. Has she forgotten the days when Belgium was
+neutral, and determined to remain so, under the joint protection of
+England, France and Germany, bound by solemn treaty to uphold Belgian
+independence? Does she not realize that if Belgium has not been neutral
+up to this day, she has been the cause of it in tearing to pieces the
+_scrap of paper_ which should have been the sacred shield of the nation
+she criminally martyred? After having violated Belgium's frontier,
+overrun her territory, destroyed her happy homes, murdered by thousands
+her children, her women, her mothers, her old men, ransomed her to the
+tune of hundreds of millions, without granting her liberty, shattered
+her monuments of arts, she has the impudence to ask her to betray those
+who hastened to her defence, and who are pledged to require the
+restoration of her complete independence with due reparation as one of
+the essential conditions of peace. A more brazen outrage cannot be
+imagined. It is on a par with that addressed to England whose neutrality
+Germany wanted to secure at the cost of her honour in betraying France.
+
+What was the true object of Germany in making such a proposition? Was it
+not to protect herself against the increasing likelihood that the Allied
+army would soon be able to enter on German soil by passing through
+Belgium. But in that event, so much to be hoped for, there would be that
+difference that whilst Germany invaded Belgium in sheer violation of her
+solemn treaty obligations, France, England and the United States would
+honour themselves in turning the guilty invaders out of the soil they
+have sullied by their hideous presence and their horrible savageness.
+
+The second German peace proposition to Belgium reads as follows:--"_That
+Belgium shall use her good offices to secure the return of the German
+colonies_."
+
+And such a request is made by the Power that, in spite of the treaties
+it was in honour bound to respect, ordered the German army to conquer
+Belgium in a dastardly rush, in order to reach France at once and crush
+her out of the conflict before she could be helped by Great Britain and
+her Colonies! Incredible indeed!
+
+Germany and Austria knew very well that their proposals would be
+indignantly and contemptuously rejected. But they had a twofold object
+in making them. First, they wanted to stir up their own peoples to
+further efforts in carrying on the struggle by throwing upon the Allies
+the apparent responsibility of refusing even a confidential and
+unbinding discussion of the question of the restoration of peace.
+
+Second, they were anxious to make a strong bid for the support of the
+_pacifists_ of the Allied countries.
+
+How much will they succeed in galvanizing the enthusiasm of their
+peoples for another grand effort, remains to be seen.
+
+So far as their attempt to move our _pacifists_ to exert themselves in
+favour of a peace by compromise, it has already met with a complete
+failure. Our Nationalist _pacifists_ are getting so few and so far
+between, that they will most likely once more disappear and give up the
+street propaganda.
+
+On completing the reading of the official communication of Austria,
+President Wilson at once gave his reply, authorizing the Secretary of
+State to issue the following statement, dated the 16th of September and
+published broadcast on the next day:--
+
+"_I am authorized by the President to state that the following will be
+the reply of this Government to the Austro-Hungarian note proposing an
+unofficial conference of belligerents_:
+
+"'_The Government of the United States feels that there is only one
+reply which it can make to the suggestion of the Imperial
+Austro-Hungarian Government. It has repeatedly and with entire candor
+stated the terms upon which the United States would consider peace and
+can and will entertain no proposal for a conference upon a matter
+concerning which it has made its position and purpose so plain.'_"
+
+On the eleventh day of February, 1918, President Wilson, instead of
+addressing as usual a message to the two Houses, went personally to meet
+the Senate and the House of Representatives, in Congress assembled, and,
+in a most admirable speech, replied to the then recent peace utterances
+of Count von Hertling, the German Chancellor, and Count Czernin, the
+Austro-Hungarian Foreign Minister, fully explaining the only principles
+by which the Government of the United States would be guided when peace
+negotiations do take place. This most important statement is published
+as an appendix to this book. It is worthy of the great statesman who
+made it, and deserves the most attentive reading on account of the lofty
+views and noble principles it expresses, of the large issues it involves
+and of the ardent patriotism it inspires.
+
+The prime ministers of Great Britain and France have signified their
+entire assent to the energetic stand taken by President Wilson in the
+above quoted reply to Austria's peace communication.
+
+The whole British Empire, France, the United States and Italy are a unit
+in refusing to consider for a moment Austria's cynical peace proposals.
+
+Belgium, from the cross of martyrdom to which the Huns' barbarity has
+nailed her, has summoned all her wonderful courage, in her long and
+cruel agony, to repudiate with scorn the infamous German proposition to
+betray those who are pledged to be her saviours.
+
+Consequently, the peace offensive, so cleverly planned by Germany and
+opened by her contemptible Austrian satellite, has met with as dismal a
+failure as the military offensive launched on the twenty-first day of
+March last, with such superior numerical forces, and unbounded
+confidence that this gigantic effort would at last smash the Allies'
+resistance.
+
+Just as the Teutonic hordes are hurled back by the matchless strategy of
+the Chief Commander of the Allied armies and their incomparable heroism,
+the Austrian peace offensive communication is returned to their authors
+a miserable "_scrap of paper_".
+
+And the grand and noble fight will go on until Germany is brought to her
+knees and forced to recognize that "THE RESOURCES OF CIVILIZATION ARE
+NOT YET EXHAUSTED."
+
+The modern Huns are doomed to a very sad awakening from their dream of
+universal domination.
+
+Germany has challenged the world to a deadly struggle. She must bear the
+consequences, however sad they may be. Four years ago, anticipating a
+crushing victory, she exulted over the early fall of her enemies, madly
+certain that in a few weeks they would kneel down crying for mercy. She
+trusted her all to the fortunes of war. They will at last go against
+her. She would have been cruelly triumphant. Will she be cowardly in
+defeat?
+
+Austria has blindly served Germany's criminal ambition. She must abide
+by the result of her blindness.
+
+Both carried away by passion, they forgot that there would be a terrible
+reckoning day for their atrocious crime. It is near at hand, and they
+cannot avoid being called to a severe account for their foul deeds.
+
+Kaiser Wilhelm II will soon find out that Divine Justice is very
+different from what he fondly believed. He will receive the proper
+answer to his blasphemous appeals to the Almighty to bless with success
+his guilty ambition to dominate the world. He will learn that from above
+the innocent victims whom he has mercilessly sacrificed to his lust of
+autocratic power, have cried for vengeance and have been heard. He bears
+the guilt of blood and sacrilegious war. He shall receive his deserts in
+due time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+NECESSARY PEACE CONDITIONS.
+
+
+It can be positively affirmed that, taking no account whatever of the
+treasonable views of the _defeatists_, and no more of the disloyal
+opinions of the _pacifists_--because they only deserve absolute contempt
+and reprobation--the peoples called the Allies have been long ago, are
+now, and will remain to the last, unanimous on the essential PEACE
+CONDITIONS without which all the sacrifices they have made and are
+making would be a total irreparable loss.
+
+It has been proclaimed with the highest authority, and universally
+approved, that henceforth PEACE MUST BE JUST AND DURABLE. Such it should
+always have been.
+
+The principle is no doubt very easily enunciated. It is applauded by all
+and every where, even by Germany and Austria. The great, the
+insuperable, difficulty is to agree upon SUCH CONDITIONS as will
+PERMANENTLY, and to the COMPLETE SATISFACTION OF ALL CONCERNED, bless
+the world with the maintenance of a TRULY JUST AND DURABLE PEACE.
+
+It is better to admit at once that the very moment the question is
+considered, the presently contending belligerents are as far apart as
+the two poles of the earthly globe.
+
+It is extremely easy to prove it.
+
+No one now ignores--or at least should fail to realize--what kind of
+peace would be accepted by Germany as JUST AND DURABLE.
+
+To be satisfied with a settlement of peace, Germany would require the
+sanction by her opponents of her right to maintain, develop and
+strengthen her MILITARISM so threatening to the universe.
+
+At the time she was exulting over the great and crushing victory which
+she was sure to have within her powerful grasp, in debating with her
+vanquished enemies, the conditions of peace, Germany, elated as she
+would certainly have been by her triumph, would have positively claimed
+the annexation of Belgium and of all the northern part of France by
+right of conquest. She would not have been less exacting than she was,
+in 1870, when in the face of indignant but powerless Europe, she
+stripped France of her two fine and wealthy provinces, Alsace and
+Lorraine.
+
+She would have claimed the right to supersede England as mistress of the
+seas,--German supremacy replacing the British and henceforth ruling the
+waves.
+
+She would have claimed the annexation of Russian Poland, and that of
+Servia to Austria.
+
+She would have claimed the recognition of her imperial paramount power
+over the Balkans, which she would have united under the direct sway of
+her ally and vassal, Bulgaria.
+
+Victorious over all continental Europe and equally over Great Britain,
+she would most likely have claimed the cession to her of the great
+British autonomous Colonies for the purpose of pouring over to Canada,
+Australia and South Africa her increasingly overflowing population. And
+to better achieve that most coveted result, she would have destroyed at
+once the free institutions they enjoy under the British Crown to replace
+them by her autocratic rule.
+
+In one of his illogical pamphlets, abounding in extravagant views, the
+Nationalist leader has denied with scorn that Germany had ever intended
+to acquire Canada by force of arms. He supported his assertion by the
+declaration made to the contrary by a German Minister. But he failed to
+explain that this German public man said so only when the Berlin
+Government had fully realized that they could not succeed in breaking
+asunder the mighty British Empire. The Teutonic declaration was
+hypocritical, intended to deceive, and to supply our Nationalist
+"_pacifists_" with what would seem a plausible argument to cover their
+sympathies for the gentle cause of the tender hearted Huns. It is very
+easy to disclaim any aspiration to possess what one is sure never to
+get.
+
+Triumphant Germany would have bargained very hard to lay her powerful
+hand on the great Indian Empire.
+
+She would have dismembered Russia, as she has effectively done--at least
+temporarily--by the infamous Brest-Litovsk treaty.
+
+She would have strongly supported Austria in destroying for ever Italy's
+legitimate aspirations to round off her national territory by the
+annexation of that part of Austria's possessions called _The Trentino_,
+which is hers by nature.
+
+Following the precedent she had laid down, in 1870, after her triumph
+over France, Germany would undoubtedly have exacted from her fallen
+enemies, billions and billions of dollars as indemnities of war.
+
+And Germany, with such a peace treaty imposed to her despairing enemies
+with her sanguinary sword at their throat ready to murder them--as she
+did at Brest-Litovsk--would have swayed the world with her UNIVERSAL
+DOMINATION.
+
+But I hear--I must say without being the least frightened--the
+thundering clamour of the Nationalist leader crying that Germany does
+not NOW claim such peace conditions as above enumerated.
+
+Very true, and why?
+
+Only because she is no longer able to exact and impose them!
+
+In 1914, Germany being victorious over all Europe, England included,
+after a four months overpowering campaign, as she expected, would
+certainly not have been satisfied with less than the conditions just
+specified. They were the goal for which she had been strenuously
+preparing for fifty years, her success, in 1870, being the preliminary
+opening of her conquests.
+
+To bring Germany to renounce--temporarily--to her fond hopes of
+domination, it has required the heroic efforts and the untold
+sacrifices, in men and money, which Great Britain, her Colonial Empire,
+France, Italy, Belgium, Japan, betrayed Russia, and, LAST BUT NOT LEAST,
+the United States, have made during more than the last four years and
+which they are pledged to make until a successful issue.
+
+The kind of peace as above would have been what can be very properly
+called--Germany's "OFFENSIVE PEACE." In Germany's opinion this would
+have been the just and durable peace dear to her so kind heart.
+
+But having failed to carry the tremendous victory for which she had so
+powerfully prepared, Germany would NOW likely agree to negotiate what
+can be as properly called a "DEFENSIVE PEACE."
+
+By "DEFENSIVE PEACE", I mean Germany negotiating NOW with her opponents
+with the determination to repulse, as much as possible, their just
+claims, to prevent them to the utmost limit to reap the legitimate
+fruits of their admirable endeavours, to thwart the realization of their
+noble aspirations to protect the world hereafter against her guilty and
+barbarous militarism.
+
+Germany--I mean, of course, the Teutonic Imperial Government--has yet
+given no sign of a change of mind on the vital points at stake in the
+consideration of the restoration of peace. If the fortune of arms was
+once more to favour her armies, her blood stained for Colours, she
+would, to-morrow, be as mercilessly exacting as she would have been, in
+1914, had she triumphantly entered Paris inside of two months after her
+challenge to the civilized world.
+
+Germany is surely not a convert to sound Christian principles. She will
+not repent for her crimes. She does not feel the tortures of remorse at
+her foul deeds. She would certainly be a relapser, in the near future,
+if the Allies, unwisely heeding the clamour of the "_pacifists_",
+imprudently gratified her ACTUAL wish for a peace compromise.
+
+And before long Humanity would be forced to go again, in much aggravated
+conditions, over the way of the cross she has been threading along for
+nearly five years, steeped to the knees in the blood of millions of her
+heroic sons, with a reorganized Germany this time straining all the
+Huns' accumulated power to lead Civilization to her Calvary.
+
+With God's grace, that shall not be. Five years of martyrdom have
+deserved and will receive JUSTICE.
+
+After having explained what Germany, from her stand-point, considers a
+JUST AND DURABLE PEACE, let us see what such a peace means from the
+Allies' stand-point.
+
+Every free man has a right to his own opinion. However, he must never
+forget that Liberty of opinion does not mean--never meant--absence of
+knowledge, ignorance of the basic principles of political society.
+
+I do not hesitate to expound what the real conditions of the coming
+peace MUST BE to make it JUST AND DURABLE.
+
+Let the inveterate opponents of Political Liberty say what they please,
+it is undeniable that the present war has rapidly developed into a
+deadly conflict between Autocratic Power and Political Freedom.
+
+Consequently a peace patched up to uphold Autocracy and destroy free
+institutions could not be JUST and DURABLE.
+
+Under the dominating circumstances of the present struggle, to bring it
+to a satisfactory conclusion, peace, to be Just and Durable, must be
+restored with all the necessary guarantees that Political Liberty will
+hereafter be safe against the foul attempts of military despotism.
+
+This _sine qua non_ condition is general in its nature and equally
+interests all the contending Allied nations.
+
+Let us now consider the peace conditions which, though of general
+importance so far as they are NECESSARY for its permanency, are
+essential from the particular stand-point of each one of the Allies
+separately.
+
+I shall begin the review by considering the particular case of Great
+Britain.
+
+To be JUST and DURABLE for the British Empire, the future peace treaty
+must not be so drafted as to supersede British sea supremacy by that of
+Germany.
+
+The question of what is to be done with the great German African
+Colonies, conquered by the South African Dominion army, is next in
+importance to England's sea supremacy, from the British Empire
+stand-point.
+
+Germany, very far from foreseeing what was to happen, deliberately
+opened that question when she precipitated the present conflict by
+coercing Austria to crush weak Servia, herself challenging Russia and
+France, and thundering at Belgium in violation of her most sacred treaty
+obligations.
+
+Great Britain, as in honour bound, standing by Belgium, was forced to
+fight with Germany. The great autonomous Colonies nobly rallying to her
+support, the South African Dominion, Boers and British admirably united
+for the purpose, undertook for her share to conquer the German African
+Colonies. She has grandly succeeded.
+
+If, as we all hope, the Allies are finally victorious, would it be just
+to relinquish Great Britain's right over the German African Colonies,
+more especially if the South African Dominion is strongly opposed--as
+there is no doubt she will be--to their retrocession?
+
+And what about Belgium and France? No peace treaty could be called JUST
+nor could be DURABLE, which would not completely restore Belgium's
+independence; which would not oblige Germany to indemnify Belgium for
+the damages wrought upon her, more especially those which were inflicted
+to the Belgian weak but heroic nation out of sheer barbarous
+destruction.
+
+To France, the northern part of her presently occupied territory,
+together with Alsace and Lorraine, MUST be restored.
+
+The Germans are loudly crying that in exacting the restoration to France
+of the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine, the Allies would be partly
+dismembering the German Empire.
+
+Quite so, and why not? Does the victim of the highway man lose the right
+to claim his property from the ruffian who has stolen it by brutal
+force?
+
+In 1870, under the circumstances all know, Prussia imposed upon France
+the cession of Alsace and Lorraine, rounding off the territory of the
+new German Empire.
+
+France naturally smarted under the cruelty of the condition which she
+could not help accepting. For many years she cherished the hope that the
+lost provinces would ultimately return to the parental home.
+
+But it is well known how TIME is an efficient cure of many ills.
+France's yearning for the restoration of Alsace and Lorraine had
+gradually subsided. The general opinion was spreading that the
+Alsace-Lorraine matter was more and more becoming a finally settled
+question.
+
+Before the war, no Power, European or American, would have countenanced
+France in any attempt to break peace to run her chance of reconquering
+Alsace and Lorraine. France knew it perfectly well and at last bowed to
+her fate.
+
+Who has reopened the closed question of Alsace and Lorraine? Is it not
+Germany herself?
+
+Great Britain, Russia, the United States and Italy, who would not have
+supported France in an OFFENSIVE WAR with the objective of getting back
+her lost provinces, are now a most determined unit in favour of the
+restoration of Alsace and Lorraine to France as a result of the
+DEFENSIVE war Germany forced her to wage.
+
+That would be JUSTICE pure and simple: the peace treaty MUST do it.
+
+Germany having run the risk of reopening the Alsace-Lorraine acute
+question, the Allies MUST close it anew but this time against the Huns.
+
+Germany MUST also pay for the devastation she has savagely spread in
+France.
+
+I stand firm for a final settlement of the Austro-Italian too long
+pending question by giving to Italy the Trentino territory to which she
+has an evident national claim supported by the best of geographical
+conditions.
+
+Servia's independence MUST be once more secured, and Poland SHOULD be
+resuscitated.
+
+The United States part in the war is truly a grand, a noble one. They
+have no particular territorial interest to serve. Their only object is
+the general public good. They will be the benefactors of Humanity in
+claiming for their Allies the above enunciated conditions without which
+no JUST and DURABLE peace can be expected nor obtained.
+
+It is most important to caution the public against the insidious
+clamours of our _"pacifists"_, trying again to deceive the people by
+asserting that Germany is ready to negotiate for peace on fair terms.
+
+The Huns will acquiesce only to such peace terms as they will be forced
+to.
+
+The Allies are better to be guided in consequence in their unfaltering
+determination to realize a JUST and DURABLE peace by a GLORIOUS
+VICTORY.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+My ardent desire to speak the plain truth and only the truth, is just as
+strong to-day as it was when, in concluding my French work, I summarized
+the situation such as it was at the end of the year 1916, to show the
+hard duty incumbent on all the Allies, Canada included. It has been
+perhaps still more intensified by the outrageous efforts of those
+amongst us whose sole object has been, since the outbreak of the
+hostilities, to discourage our people from the herculean task they had
+bravely undertaken.
+
+Two years have since elapsed--years full of great events, and of
+untiring heroism on the part of the glorious defenders of Justice and
+Right--and I do not see the slightest reason to modify the conclusions I
+then arrived at as a matter of strict duty. Unworthy of public
+confidence is the man who, pandering to the supposed prejudices of his
+countrymen, refrains out of weakness, or of more guilty considerations,
+to tell them what they are bound to do for their own country, for their
+Empire, for the world, in the supreme crisis of our time.
+
+True every one is longing for the restoration of peace. But few are
+those who, even before being tired of the war, were ready to curb their
+heads under the German yoke, are now praying for a compromise between
+the Allies and their enemies. There are some left, it is sad to admit.
+Everywhere they are chased by the indignant public opinion daily growing
+more determined that millions of heroes shall not have given their lives
+in vain, that millions of others, wounded on the fields of battles,
+shall not, until the last of them is gone for ever, be the betrayed
+victims of Teutonic dastardly ambition.
+
+True, peace is sorely wanted, and would be welcomed by the thanksgivings
+to the Almighty of grateful peoples, who have borne with undaunted
+courage such untold and admirable sacrifices to uphold their Rights and
+their Honour. But it cannot be sued for by the nations whom Germany
+wanted to enslave by the might of her crushing militarism operating
+under the dictates of a new code of International Law of her own
+barbarous creation.
+
+Thank God, the flowing tide of unlimited Teutonic ambition let loose
+over the world, more than four years ago, has met with inaccessible
+summits where love of Justice, respect of Right, devotion to human
+Civilization, obedience to Christian Law, heroism of sacrifices, were so
+deeply entrenched, that they could not be reached and conquered. From
+this commanding altitude, they not only continue to defy the tyrants
+bent on dominating the universe, but they are mightily smashing their
+power.
+
+From the overshadowing point of view which cannot be forgotten, or
+wilfully abandoned, nothing has changed since the German Empire, in her
+delirious aspirations, challenged the world to the almost superhuman
+conflict by which she felt certain to succeed in realizing her fond
+dream of universal domination.
+
+At the outbreak of the war, ever since, to-day, to-morrow, there were,
+there are and there will be but three alternatives to the restoration of
+peace:--
+
+1.--A victorious German peace imposed on beaten and cowed belligerents:
+the peace of the "_defeatists_."
+
+2.--A peace by compromise, patched up by disheartened "_pacifists_,"
+lured by cunningness, winning where force would have failed to succeed,
+to agree to conditions pregnant with all the horrors of a new and still
+greater struggle in the near future.
+
+3.--A peace the result of the indomitable courage and perseverance of
+all the nations who have joined together to put an end to Germany's
+ambition to rule the world, and to destroy the instrument created for
+that iniquitous purpose: Prussian militarism.
+
+There could be a fourth alternative to peace, but it would be possible
+only by a miracle which, we can grant without hesitation, the world has
+perhaps not yet deserved.
+
+It would be peace restored by the sudden conversion of Germany to the
+practice of sound Christian principles, acknowledging how guilty she has
+been, repenting for her crimes, agreeing to atone for them as much as
+possible, and taking the unconditional pledge to henceforth behave like
+a civilized nation.
+
+All must admit that there is not the slightest hope of such a move from
+a nation whose autocratic Kaiser, answering, in February last, an
+address presented to him by the burgomaster of Hamburg, thundered out,
+in his usual blasting manner, that the neighbouring peoples, to enjoy
+the sweetness of Germany's friendship, "MUST FIRST RECOGNIZE THE VICTORY
+OF GERMAN ARMS."
+
+As an inducement to the Allies to bow to his wishes, he pointed to
+Germany's achievement in Russia, where a beaten enemy, "_perceiving no
+reason for fighting longer_," clasped hands with the generous Huns. The
+world has since learned with appalling horror with what tender mercy the
+barbarous Teutons reciprocated the grasping of hands of defeated Russia,
+tendered to them by the "bolshevikis" traitors.
+
+The Allies had then to select one of the three above mentioned
+alternatives.
+
+They have made their choice and they will stick close to it until it is
+achieved by the victory of their arms.
+
+Knowing as they do that the future of their peoples, and that of the
+whole world, are at stake, they will not waver in their heroic
+determination to free Humanity from Germany's cruel yoke.
+
+Viewed from the commanding height it requires to be worthily
+appreciated, the joint military effort of the Allies offers a truly
+grand spectacle, daily enlarging and getting more gloriously
+magnificent.
+
+All the Allies--every one of them--are doing their duty and their
+respective share in the great crisis they are pledged to bring to a
+triumphant conclusion.
+
+Belgium and Servia were the first to be martyred, but the hour of their
+resurrection is getting nearer every day.
+
+France, the British Empire, the United States, Italy, have done and are
+doing wonders. There can, there must be no question of appraising their
+respective merit with the intention of giving more credit either to the
+one or to the other. With the greatest possible sincerity, I affirm my
+humble, but positive, opinion that each one of the Allies has done and
+is doing, with overflowing measure, all that courage could and can
+earnestly perform, all that patriotism and the noblest national virtues
+can inspire.
+
+France has been heroic to the highest limit.
+
+The British Empire--Great Britain and her Colonies--has been grand in
+her unswerving determination to fight to a finish.
+
+The great American Republic is putting forth a wonderful exhibition of
+pluck, of strength, of boldness, of inexhaustible resources.
+
+Italy has stood nobly with her new friends ever since she broke away
+from the Triple Alliance, to escape the dishonour of remaining on good
+terms with the Central Empires in the shameful depth of their
+ignominious course. She has bravely gone through days of disaster which
+she has heroically redeemed.
+
+All the Allies, bound together by the most admirable unity of purpose,
+only rivalling in the might of their respective patriotic effort,
+having nobly _"chosen their course upon principle,"_ can never turn
+back. They must move steadily forward until victorious. They are
+indomitable in their decision not to live, under any circumstances, "_in
+a world governed by intrigue and force_."
+
+Echoing the wise and inspiring words addressed by President Wilson to
+Congress, on the eleventh of February last, we can affirm that the
+"_desire of enlightened men everywhere is for a new international order
+under which reason, justice and the common interests of mankind shall
+prevail. Without that new order the world will be without peace, and
+human life will lack tolerable conditions of existence and
+development_."
+
+A most encouraging achievement was realized, a few months ago,
+emphasizing to the utmost the unity of purpose of the Allies. Every one
+of them have millions of men under arms and at the front. It is easily
+conceived how tremendous is the task of properly directing the military
+operations of such immense armies, unprecedented in the whole human
+history. Most patriotically putting aside all national susceptibilities,
+the statesmen governing the Allied nations acknowledged the necessity of
+supporting unity of purpose by unity of military command. Their decision
+was heartily approved and applauded by all and every where.
+
+It is important to note the great difference between the standing of the
+two groups of belligerents with regard to the leadership of the armies.
+Whilst the Powers dominated by Germany, and fighting with her, are
+coerced to endure the Teutonic military supremacy of command, those
+warring on the side of France have all most cordially agreed to the
+appointment of a Commander-in-Chief out of the profound conviction that
+unity of command was more and more becoming a necessity for the
+successful prosecution of the war.
+
+Since this most urgent decision has been taken, events have surely
+proved its wisdom and usefulness. Evidently, the same as unity of
+purpose, to bear all its fruits, must be wrought out by statesmanship of
+a high order, unity of military command, to produce its natural
+advantages, must be exercised with superiority of leadership.
+
+Great statesmen, in a free country, are successful in the management of
+State affairs, just as much as they inspire an increasing confidence in
+their political genius, developed by a wide experience, honesty of
+purpose, a constant patriotic devotion to the public weal.
+
+Great military leaders can do wonders when their achievements are such
+as to create unbounded reliance on their ability. Superiority of
+command, proved by victories won in very difficult circumstances, is
+always sure to be rewarded by an enlightened enthusiasm permeating the
+whole rank and file of an army, and trebling the strength and heroism of
+every combatant.
+
+Added to the widespread renewal of confidence produced by the timely
+decision of the Allies to rely on unity of military command, is the
+reassuring evidence that the Commander-in-Chief to whom has been imposed
+the grand task of leading the unified armies to a final and glorious
+triumph, is trusted by all, soldiers and others alike.
+
+The cause for which the Allied nations are fighting with so much
+tenacity and courage being that of the salvation of Civilization,
+threatened by a wave of barbarism equal at least to, if not surpassing,
+any to which Humanity has so far survived, all must admire the wonderful
+spectacle offered by those millions and millions of men, under arms,
+from so many different countries, united, under one command, into a
+military organization which can most properly be called the GRAND ARMY
+OF HUMAN FREEDOM.
+
+It has been said by one who has presided over the destinies of the
+American Republic, as the chief of State, that peace must be dictated
+from Berlin. Can we really hope to behold the dawn of such a glorious
+day? It is hardly to be supposed that Germany would wait this last
+extremity to realize that she must abandon for ever her dream of
+universal domination, relieve the world from the enervating menace of
+her military terrorism, and redeem her past diabolical course by the
+repentant determination to join with her former enemies to deserve for
+Mankind long years of perpetual peace with all the Providential
+blessings of order, freedom, truly intellectual, moral and material
+progress.
+
+When the Kaiser ordered his hordes to violate Belgium's territory, to
+overrun France in order to crush her out of existence as a military and
+political Power, preparatory to their triumphant march to St.
+Petersburg, in his wild ambition, which he made blasphemous by
+pretending that it was divinely inspired, he felt sure that his really
+wonderful army, which he believed was, and would remain, matchless,
+would in a few weeks enter Paris.
+
+What a reverse of fortune, what a downfall from extravagant
+expectations, would be a return of the tide which, after flowing to the
+very gates of Paris, spreading devastation and crimes all over the fair
+lands it submerged, would ebb, broken and powerless, to Berlin,
+bringing the haughty tyrant to his knees before his victors!
+
+If such a day of deliverance is Providentially granted the world, having
+deserved it by an indomitable courage in resisting oppression, history
+would again repeat itself but with a different result. The French
+"TRICOLORE" would once more enter proud Berlin, but this time it would
+not be alone to be hoisted over the conquered capital of the modern
+Huns, scarcely less savage than their forefathers. It would be entwined
+with the "UNION JACK" of Great Britain and Ireland, the "STARS AND
+STRIPES" of the United States, the Colours of Italy, and, I add with an
+inexpressible feeling of loyal and national pride, with the Dominion
+Colours so brilliantly glorified by the heroism of our Canadian soldiers
+who have proved themselves the equals of the bravest through the
+protracted but ever glorious campaign, unfolded with those of Australia
+and South Africa into the glorious flag of the British Empire.
+
+When after the glorious battle of Iena, the great Napoleon, who could
+have ruined for ever the rising Prussian monarchy, entered Berlin at the
+head of his victorious legions, the new Cæsar, then already the victim
+of his unlimited ambition, represented, though issued from a powerful
+popular movement, triumphant absolutism.
+
+In our days, on entering Berlin, as the final act of this wonderful
+drama, the entwined Colours of the Allies would symbolize Human Freedom,
+delivering Germany herself and the whole world from autocratic rule.
+
+Such a memorable event taking place, and rank with the most remarkable
+in the world's history, the great satisfaction of all those who would
+have contributed to its achievement, would be that the joint Colours of
+the Allies would not be raised over Germany's capital to crush the
+defeated nation under despotic cæsarism, but to deliver her from
+autocratic tyrannical rule. Waving with dignity over the great Empire
+they would have freed from the thraldom of absolutist militarism, they
+could be welcomed as the promise of the renewal, for her as well as for
+her victorious rivals, of the reign of Justice, of Christian precepts,
+of Right, Order and Peace, of honest and productive Labour, of science
+applied to works creative of human happiness instead of diverting the
+marvellous resources of the great modern discoveries to criminal uses
+for the calamitous misfortune of the peoples.
+
+I will close this work with the expression of two of the wishes I have
+most at heart, cherishing the confident hope that they will be realized.
+
+England, France and the United States, fighting as they do for the
+triumph of such a sacred cause, should emerge indissolubly united from
+the great struggle they have pledged themselves to carry to a successful
+issue. I cannot conceive that so many millions of their heroic defenders
+will have given their lives only for a temporary achievement, soon to be
+forgotten. They will be gone for ever. Their sacrifices will be eternal.
+They must bear permanent fruits. United in death, buried together in the
+soil of France flooded with their blood, from their glorious graves they
+will implore their surviving countrymen to remain shoulder to shoulder
+in peace as they are in war. Their holocaust should be the holy seed
+from which loyal amity ought to grow ever stronger between the future
+generations of their countrymen who could not testify in a more eloquent
+and noble way their everlasting gratitude for the glorious heritage of
+permanent freedom they will have derived from their heroism.
+
+A most enthusiastic daily witness of the immortal deeds of the millions
+of our brothers, sons and friends, fighting with such splendid courage
+in the land of my forefathers for our common cause, how often have I,
+for the last four years, ardently vowed to God from the very bottom of
+my heart, deeply moved by the reports of their noble achievements, that
+those who will rest for ever in the ground over which they fell
+heroically, may enjoy from above the inspiring spectacle of the union
+for the permanent triumph of Liberty and Christian Civilization, of the
+great nations for whose grand future they gave their lives!
+
+I also most earnestly hope that the more fortunate of our defenders who
+will return either safe from the fields of battle, or proudly bearing
+the glorious wounds which will have crippled their bodies, but not their
+hearts, will enjoy from the sanctuary of their homes, made comfortable
+by their grateful compatriots, the profound satisfaction to see the holy
+union cemented on the thundering firing line perpetuated for the lasting
+prosperity and happiness of Mankind.
+
+The last shadow of the recollections of the feuds of past ages between
+England and France should be forever sunk in patriotic oblivion, buried
+deep beneath the glory both valorous nations will have jointly reaped in
+their mighty efforts to rescue the world from the frightful wave of
+barbarism which they will have forced to recede.
+
+All the well wishers of peaceful and happy days for future generations
+are very much gratified at knowing that in joining with the Allies in
+the mighty struggle they were carrying with such undaunted courage, the
+great American Republic was also inspired by a feeling of gratitude for
+France in remembrance of what she has done to help her to achieve her
+independence. Let us behold anew the inscrutable designs of Providence.
+Nearly a century and a half has elapsed since France, England and her
+American Colonies seemed to be for all times irreconcilable opponents.
+What a change in Destiny! Years have rolled by. New and unforeseen
+conditions have been developed the world over. Gradually two great
+currents of thoughts and aspirations have been flowing with increased
+strength preparing a formidable clash which was to threaten Civilization
+with utter destruction.
+
+Autocratic ambition was for many long years challenging Political
+Liberty to a deadly conflict. At last from the cloudy sky came the flash
+of lightning, and the thunderbolt was on the earth shaking it to its
+depth by the tremendous shock.
+
+Germany, having fired the wonderful autocratic shot, fully expected that
+her rivals would be thunderstruck beyond possibility of resurrection.
+But to her great dismay, the friends of Political Liberty the world over
+rallied as one man to its defence. And Germany trembled at seeing
+England burying for ever all ill-feelings against France, her ancient
+foe, rushing to her support with millions of her brave sons, after
+having drawn around her ally the protecting chain of her matchless
+fleet.
+
+Another very discomforting surprise was in store for the cruel Huns. The
+American Republic, grateful to France for past services, was also moved
+by renovated feelings of affection for the mother-country from whom she
+had parted without disowning her. Determined to be at the forefront of
+the battle for the triumph of human Freedom--after unsuccessfully
+exhausting every means of bringing Germany to her senses--she clasped
+hands with England and France and valiantly rallied to their sides to
+share the merit and the glory of saving Political Liberty from the
+terrible Teutonic onslaught.
+
+In my humble but sincere and profound opinion, the present spectacle
+offered to the world's admiration by the sacred and mighty union of the
+British Empire, France and the United States, every patriotic home of
+theirs thrilling with undiminished enthusiasm for the success of their
+heroic efforts, is a truly grand one inspiring unbounded faith in the
+future of Humanity. Let no one forget for a moment that the present war,
+certainly NATIONAL so far as the existence of each one of the Allied
+States is concerned, is, above all preeminently a world's conflict which
+favourable issue deeply concerns the destinies of all the peoples of
+the earthly globe.
+
+The whole question is whether autocratic tyranny will henceforth rule
+the world, or if Humanity will yet enjoy the blessings of Liberty, of
+free institutions!
+
+In all hearts must abide the supreme desire that when peace is restored
+with all and the only conditions to which they can agree, the British
+Empire, France and the American Republic will forever remain united to
+promote the prosperity and the welfare of all the nations of the earth,
+large, middle-sized or small. The duty of those of Imperialist
+proportions will be as hitherto performed by England and the United
+States in their democratic way, to protect the independence of the small
+States, never aspiring to any territorial acquisitions but those
+accruing to them with the full and free consent of the new populations
+asking the protection of their ægis and the advantages of their union.
+
+When I consider the grand and magnificent part the three above named
+leading nations can play for the happy future of Humanity, by working
+hand in hand, and shoulder to shoulder, for general peace, order and
+prosperity, my heart is full with the ardent desire to witness them
+accepting that glorious task with the stern determination to
+accomplish it to its better end. In spite of the vicissitudes and the
+failings of their past, they have done a great deal for the general
+good. They can do still more in the future. Like everyman bearing with
+fortitude the trials of life with the worthy design of profiting by the
+experience thus acquired to elevate himself to a higher conception of
+his duty, the British Empire, France and the United States will
+undoubtedly emerge from behind the dark clouds of the present days with
+aspirations ennobled by the sacrifices they are making, purified by the
+sufferings and the holocaust of so many of their own, with a stronger
+will to help working out the world's destiny by maintaining permanent
+peace and good-will amongst men. If they pursue that dignified course of
+high ideals they will fully deserve the admiration and the gratitude of
+all those who will benefit by their examples, and reap the abundant
+fruits of their devoted and enlightened leadership.
+
+It is one of the blessings of true Political Liberty, when duly
+understood and intelligently practised, to produce a class of
+politicians and statesmen of wide experience, of commanding character,
+of high culture, of great attainments, with a superior training in the
+management of public affairs, who are readily acknowledged as national
+leaders by the people who confidently trust them, reserving, of course,
+their constitutional right to call new men to office whenever they
+consider in the public interest to do so. Those trusted leaders do not
+claim, as the German autocratic Kaiser, the power, by Divine Right, to
+do anything they please, asserting that in every imaginable case they do
+the will of the Almighty.
+
+When charged with the Government of their country, they understand very
+well that their duty is to manage the national affairs under their
+responsibility, first, to the Divine Ruler, as any other man in any
+other calling; secondly, to those who, having required their services,
+have the constitutional right to call them to account for their
+stewardship.
+
+Just as confidence is the basis of sound national credit, trust, on the
+part of the people, and responsibility, on that of the national leaders,
+are the two cornerstones of free institutions.
+
+Great Britain,--and her great autonomous Colonies also--for many long
+years past, have been most fortunate in the choice of the national
+leaders whom they have successively entrusted with the affairs of State.
+
+In that momentous occurrence, more than four years ago, when the whole
+question whether Great Britain would go to war, or not, was laid before
+the Imperial Parliament supported by the strongest possible reasons in
+favour of the decision to accept the challenge of Germany, and fight
+with the firm determination not to sheathe the sword before victory was
+won, no British public man would have dared, like the German Emperor, to
+claim, by Divine Authority, the right to violate the solemn treaties the
+provisions of which his country was in honour and duty bound to carry
+out to the very letter.
+
+The commanding parts national leaders play in a free country, in
+consequence of the public confidence they inspire and enjoy, can have
+their counterparts in the great society of nations.
+
+Whatever shall be the final settlement of all the difficult matters
+brought up for solution by the war, it is certain that the management of
+the world's affairs will be well served by the legitimate influence of
+great nations whose leadership will be beneficial just in proportion as
+it is itself directed by the true principles of political Freedom, and
+an uncompromising respect of the rights of weaker nations always
+entitled to the fairest dealings on the part of their stronger
+associates in the great commonwealth of Sovereign States.
+
+There cannot be the slightest doubt that the British Empire, France and
+the United States, until Providentially ordered otherwise, will
+hereafter be the three leading nations of the world. Their union
+maintained sacred in peace, as it is in war, will be the safest
+guarantee that the days of autocratic domination have ended. Henceforth
+the tide of political Freedom will flow with increased rapidity and
+strength. The only danger ahead, against which it is always wise to
+provide with due care and foresight, is that which would be the result
+of abuse and wild expectations always sure to react in favour of
+absolutist principles. Political Liberty and Order, Governmental
+Authority and Freedom, both well directed, must work hand in hand for
+the national welfare.
+
+The British Empire, France and the American Republic are free countries.
+More and better than any others they should and must, by example and
+friendly advice, lead the peoples in the successful practice of
+self-government.
+
+Considering more especially the part the British Empire will be called
+upon to play in the reorganized world, freed from autocratic terrorism,
+we must not lose sight of the much larger place England's great
+autonomous Colonies will occupy in the broadened English Commonwealth.
+We, Canadians, together with our brethren from Australia, New Zealand
+and South Africa, will have done our glorious share to win the war. We
+shall have to perform with equal devotion the new duty of sharing the
+British Empire's task in gradually elevating the nations to an
+enlightened practice of Political Liberty.
+
+Evidently to do so with the success this noble cause will deserve, we
+must first strive to utilize our admirable free institutions to the best
+advantage, for ourselves, for our own future, and for the grand
+destinies of our Empire.
+
+As an instrument of good government our constitutional charter is almost
+perfect, as much so as any thing worldly can be. Let us never forget
+that the best weapon for self-protection may become useless, or even
+dangerous for us, if not handled with the required intelligence, justice
+and skill. We would lose all claims to contribute guiding others in the
+enjoyment of free institutions if we, ourselves, were mistaken in the
+proper working of our own constitution from a misconception of its
+literal wording or of its largeness of spirit. We must never challenge
+the truth that "spirit giveth life."
+
+More than ever the supreme difficulties of governing numerous racial
+groups, issued from ancient stocks so long divided by endless
+feuds,--the result of the many sudden changes of territorial limits to
+be wrought by the restoration of peace--will be very hard to settle
+satisfactorily. The task will require the constant effort of
+statesmanship of a high order.
+
+Many of those who will hereafter be trained to self-government will look
+to us for their guidance. We must give them the inspiring example of
+fair play, of justice for all, of unity of purpose and aspirations in
+the diversity of ethnical offsprings.
+
+Need I say that the most urgent duty of all fair minded Canadians is,
+and will ever be, to heartily join together, to bless our dear country
+with concord, good feeling, harmony and kindly dispositions to grant an
+overflowing measure of justice to all our countrymen of all origins and
+creeds.
+
+Writing this book with the express purpose of explaining and strongly
+disapproving the deplorable efforts of a few to deter my French Canadian
+compatriots from doing their bounden duty through the dire crisis we are
+all undergoing, I will close these pages by calling anew upon my English
+speaking countrymen not to judge them by the sayings and deeds of
+persons who can at times somewhat stir up dangerous prejudices, but who
+are utterly incompetent to lead them as they should and deserve to be.
+Silenced at last by a patriotic measure to censure any disloyal
+expression of sentiments, matters have easily resumed their regular and
+honourable course. All loyal citizens, throughout the length and breadth
+of the land, have, I am sure, much rejoiced at the loyalty with which
+the French Canadians, of all classes, religious, social, commercial,
+industrial, financial, agricultural, have united to obey a statute of
+military service to which many of them did not agree, as long as they
+had the constitutional right to differ from the opinion of the large
+majority of our people, but to the successful operation of which they
+rallied the moment it was the law of the land. The worthy leaders of our
+Church strongly recommended obedience to the decision of the constituted
+authority, firmly condemned any guilty attempt at disturbing public
+order, and ordered all the members of their flocks to fervously pray the
+Almighty for PEACE WITH VICTORY FOR THE ALLIES.
+
+Our "pacifists at all hazards" once more silenced, this time by the very
+religious leaders under whose ægis they had shamefully tried to shield
+themselves, the patriotic impulse was moved to most commendable action.
+Without waiting for the call of the law, hundreds of young men from the
+better classes, from the universities and other educational
+institutions, well educated, voluntarily enlisted and rallied to the
+Colours. At least as much as in the other provinces, the class of our
+young manhood called by law heartily responded, all the real leaders of
+public opinion uniting to give the only advice loyal men could express.
+
+For one, I was most happy to ascertain how favourably western public
+feeling was impressed by the new turn of thoughts and events in the
+Province of Quebec. The reaction of sentiments operating both ways,--in
+Ontario, the western Provinces and Quebec--augurs well for the final
+abatement of the excitement which for a time menaced our fair Dominion
+with regrettable racial strifes so much to be deprecated.
+
+It can be positively affirmed that the whole people of Canada, east to
+west, north to south, are now more than ever a unit in their patriotic
+determination to fight the war to its final victorious issue. To this
+end the two millions of French British subjects in Canada, in perfect
+communion of thoughts and aspirations with the two millions of the
+neighbouring Republic's subjects of French Canadian origin, are loyally
+doing, and will continue to do, their share. Their representatives at
+the front are gloriously fighting the common enemy. Their valour and
+their achievements during the Allies' offensive so masterly planned and
+carried out by the Commander-in-Chief, Foch, have been worthy of their
+victories at Ypres, Vimy, Courcelette, Passchandaele. Many have, during
+the last three months, given their lives for the cause they defend. Many
+more have been wounded and are anxiously waiting their cure, when
+possible, to return to the field of honour. Daily reports from the
+front tell of their enthusiasm, of their bravery, of their heroism!
+
+The French Canadians--I have no hesitation whatever in vouching for
+it--will continue to bear stoically with the sacrifices of so many kinds
+the conflict imposes upon them. Though smarting, as all others, under
+the burden, yet they cheerfully pay the heavy taxes required from the
+country to meet our national obligations the outcome of the war.
+
+So all is for the best under the strenuous present conditions of our
+national existence.
+
+In closing, I pray leave to reiterate, from the Introduction to this
+work, the following lines expressing my most sincere and profound
+conviction:--
+
+I hope,--and most ardently wish--that all my readers will agree with me
+that next to the necessity of winning the war--and may I say, even as of
+almost equal importance for the future grandeur of our beloved
+country--range that of promoting by all lawful means harmony and good
+will amongst all our countrymen, whatever may be their racial origin,
+their religious faith, their particular aspirations not conflicting with
+their devotion to Canada as a whole, nor with their loyalty to the
+British Empire, whose grandeur and prestige they want to firmly help to
+uphold with the inspiring confidence that more and more they will be the
+unconquerable bulwark of Freedom, Justice, Civilization and Right.
+
+May I be allowed to conclude by saying that my most earnest desire is to
+do all in my power, in the rank and file of the great army of free men,
+to reach the goal which ought to be the most persevering and patriotic
+ambition of loyal Canadians of all origins and creeds.
+
+And I repeat, wishing my words to be re-echoed throughout the length and
+breadth of the land I so heartily cherish:--I have always been, I am and
+will ever be, to my last breath, true to my oath of allegiance to my
+Sovereign and to my country.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX--A.
+
+PRESIDENT WILSON'S SPEECH
+
+TO THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS--11TH DAY OF FEBRUARY, 1918.
+
+
+On the above mentioned date, Mr. Wilson, the President of the great
+American Republic, delivered the following speech to the Congress, in
+Washington. This noble and statesmanlike utterance met with the
+unanimous and enthusiastic approval of the members of both Houses, and
+was highly applauded, not only in the United States, but over all the
+truly civilized world. It reads thus:--
+
+ "On the eighth of January, I had the honor of addressing you on
+ the objects of the war as our people conceive them. The Prime
+ Minister of Great Britain had spoken in similar terms on the
+ fifth of January. To these addresses the German Chancellor
+ replied on the 24th and Count Czernin for Austria on the same
+ day. It is gratifying to have our desire so promptly realized
+ that all exchanges of view on this great matter should be made
+ in the hearing of all the world.
+
+ "Count Czernin's reply, which is directed chiefly to my own
+ address, on the eighth of January, is uttered in a very friendly
+ tone.
+
+ "He finds in my statement a sufficiently encouraging approach to
+ the views of his own government to justify him in believing that
+ it furnishes a basis for a more detailed discussion of purposes
+ by the two governments. He is represented to have intimated that
+ the views he was expressing had been communicated to me
+ beforehand and that I was aware of them at the time he was
+ uttering them; but in this I am sure he was misunderstood. I had
+ received no intimation of what he intended to say. There was, of
+ course, no reason why he should communicate privately with me. I
+ am quite content to be one of his public audiences.
+
+ "Count von Hertling's reply is, I may say, very vague and very
+ confusing. It is full of equivocal phrases and leads, it is not
+ clear where. But it is certainly in a very different tone from
+ that of Count Czernin and apparently of an opposite purpose. It
+ confirms, I am sorry to say, rather than removes, the
+ unfortunate impression made by what we had learned of the
+ conferences at Brest-Litovsk. His discussion and acceptance of
+ our general principles leads him to no practical conclusions. He
+ refuses to apply them to the substantiate items which must
+ constitute the body of any final settlement. He is jealous of
+ international action and of international council. He accepts,
+ he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to
+ insist that it be confined at any rate in this case, to
+ generalities and that the several particular questions of
+ territory and sovereignty, the several questions upon whose
+ settlement must depend the acceptance of peace by the
+ twenty-three states now engaged in the war, must be discussed
+ and settled, not in general council but severally by the nations
+ most immediately concerned by interest of neighbourhood. He
+ agrees that the seas should be free, but looks askance at any
+ limitation to that freedom by international action in the
+ interest of the common order. He would, without reserve, be glad
+ to see economic barriers removed between nation and nation, for
+ that could in no way impede the ambitions of the military party
+ with whom he seems constrained to keep on terms. Neither does he
+ raise objection to a limitation of armaments. That matter will
+ be settled of itself, he thinks, by the economic conditions
+ which must follow the war. But the German colonies, he demands,
+ must be returned without debate. He will discuss with no one but
+ the representatives of Russia what disposition shall be made of
+ the peoples and the lands of the Baltic provinces; with no one
+ but the Government of France the "conditions" under which French
+ territory shall be evacuated and only with Austria what shall be
+ done with Poland. In the determination of all questions
+ affecting the Balkan states he defers, as I understand him, to
+ Austria and Turkey and with regard to the agreements to be
+ entered into concerning the non-Turkish peoples of the present
+ Ottoman Empire, to the Turkish authorities themselves. After a
+ settlement all around effected in this fashion, by individual
+ barter and concession, he would have no objection, if I
+ correctly interpret his statement, to a league of nations which
+ would undertake to hold the balance of power steady against
+ external disturbance.
+
+ "It must be evident to everyone who understands what this war
+ has wrought in the opinion and temper of the world that no
+ general peace, no peace worth the infinite sacrifices of these
+ years of tragical suffering, can possibly be arrived at in any
+ such fashion. The method the German Chancellor proposes is the
+ method of the Congress of Vienna. We cannot and will not return
+ to that. What is at stake now is the peace of the world. What we
+ are striving for is a new international order based upon broad
+ and universal principles of right and justice--no mere peace of
+ shreds and patches. Is it possible that Count von Hertling does
+ not see that, does not grasp it, is in fact living in his
+ thought in a world dead and gone? Has he utterly forgotten the
+ Reichstag resolutions of the 19th of July, or does he
+ deliberately ignore them? They spoke of the conditions of a
+ general peace, not of national aggrandizement or of arrangements
+ between state and state. The peace of the world depends upon
+ just settlement of each of the several problems to which I
+ adverted in my recent address to Congress. I, of course, do not
+ mean that the peace of the world depends upon the acceptance of
+ any particular set of suggestions as to the way in which those
+ problems are to be dealt with. I mean only that those problems,
+ each and all, affect the whole world; that unless they are dealt
+ with in a spirit of unselfish and unbiassed justice, with a view
+ to the wishes, the natural connections, the racial aspirations,
+ the security and peace of mind of the peoples involved, no
+ permanent peace will have been attained. They cannot be
+ discussed separately or in corners. None of them constitutes a
+ private or separate interest from which the opinion of the world
+ may be shut out. Whatever affects the peace affects mankind,
+ and nothing settled by military force, if settled wrong, is
+ settled at all. It will presently have to be re-opened.
+
+ "Is Count von Hertling not aware that he is speaking in the
+ court of mankind, that all the awakened nations of the world now
+ sit in judgment on what every public man, of whatever nation,
+ may say on the issues of a conflict which has spread to every
+ region of the world? The Reichstag resolutions of July 19
+ themselves frankly accepted the decisions of that court. There
+ shall be no annexations, no contributions, no punitive damages.
+ Peoples are not to be handed about from one sovereignty to
+ another by an international conference or an understanding
+ between rivals and antagonists. National aspirations must be
+ respected; peoples may now be dominated and governed only by
+ their own consent. "Self-determination," is not a mere phrase.
+ It is an imperative principle of action, which statesmen will
+ henceforth ignore at their peril. We cannot have general peace
+ for the asking, or by the mere arrangements of a peace
+ conference. It cannot be pieced together out of individual
+ understandings between powerful states. All the parties to this
+ war must join in the settlement of every issue anywhere involved
+ in it because what we are seeking is a peace that we can all
+ unite to guarantee and maintain whether it be right and fair, an
+ act of justice, rather than a bargain between sovereigns.
+
+ "The United States has no desire to interfere in European
+ affairs or to act as arbiter in European territorial disputes.
+ We would disdain to take advantage of any internal weakness or
+ disorder to impose her own will upon another people. She is
+ quite ready to be shown that the settlements she has suggested
+ are not the best or the most enduring. They are only her own
+ provisional sketch of principles, and of the way in which they
+ should be applied. But she entered this war because she was made
+ a partner, whether she would or not, in the sufferings and
+ indignities inflicted by the military masters of Germany,
+ against the peace and security of mankind; and the conditions of
+ peace will touch her as nearly as they will touch any other
+ nation to which is entrusted a leading part in the maintenance
+ of civilization. She cannot see her way to peace until the
+ causes of this war are removed, its renewal rendered, as nearly
+ as may be, impossible.
+
+ "This war had its roots in the disregard of the rights of small
+ nations and of nationalities which lacked the union and the
+ force to make good their claim to determine their own
+ allegiances and their own forms of political life. Covenants
+ must now be entered into which will render such things
+ impossible for the future; and those covenants must be backed by
+ the united force of all the nations that love justice and are
+ willing to maintain it at any cost. If territorial settlements
+ and the political relations of great populations which have not
+ the organized power to resist are to be determined by the
+ contracts of the powerful governments which consider themselves
+ most directly affected, as Count von Hertling proposes, why may
+ not economic questions also? It has come about in the altered
+ world in which we now find ourselves that justice and the rights
+ of peoples affect the whole field of international dealing as
+ much as access to raw materials and fair and equal conditions of
+ trade. Count von Hertling wants the essential basis of
+ commercial and industrial life to be safeguarded by common
+ agreement and guarantee, but he cannot expect that to be
+ conceded him if the other matters to be determined by the
+ articles of peace are not handled in the same way as it was in
+ the final accounting. He cannot ask the benefit of common
+ agreement in the one field without according it in the other. I
+ take it for granted that he sees that separate and selfish
+ compacts with regard to trade and the essential materials of
+ manufacture would afford no foundation for peace. Neither, he
+ may rest assured, will separate and selfish compacts with regard
+ to the provinces and peoples.
+
+ "Count Czernin seems to see the fundamental elements of peace
+ with clear eyes and does not seek to obscure them. He sees that
+ an independent Poland, made up of all the indisputably Polish
+ peoples who lie contiguous to one another, is a matter of
+ European concern and must of course be conceded; that Belgium
+ must be evacuated and restored, no matter what sacrifices and
+ concessions that may involve; and that national aspirations must
+ be satisfied, even within his own empire, in the common interest
+ of Europe and mankind. If he is silent about questions which
+ touch the interest and purpose of his Allies more nearly than
+ they touch those of Austria only, it must, of course, be because
+ he feels constrained, I suppose, to defer to Germany and Turkey
+ in the circumstances. Seeing and conceding, as he does, the
+ essential principles involved and the necessity of candidly
+ applying them, he naturally feels that Austria can respond to
+ the purpose of peace as expressed by the United States with less
+ embarrassment than could Germany. He would probably have gone
+ much farther had it not been for the embarrassments of Austria's
+ alliance and of her dependence upon Germany.
+
+ "After all the test of whether it is possible for either
+ Government to go any further in this comparison of views is
+ simple and obvious. The principles to be applied are:
+
+ "First, that each part of the final settlement must be based on
+ the essential justice of the particular case, and upon such
+ adjustments as are most likely to bring a peace that will be
+ permanent.
+
+ "Second, that peoples and provinces are not to be bartered about
+ from sovereignty to sovereignty as if they were mere chattels
+ and pawns in a game, even the great game, now for ever
+ discredited, of the balance of power; but that,
+
+ "Every territorial settlement involved in this war must be made
+ in the interest and for the benefit of the populations concerned
+ and not as a part of any mere adjustment of compromise of claims
+ amongst rival states; and,
+
+ "Fourth, that all well defined national aspirations shall be
+ accorded the utmost satisfaction that can be accorded them
+ without introducing new or perpetuating old elements of discord,
+ and antagonism that would be likely in time to break the peace
+ of Europe and consequently of the world.
+
+ "A general peace entered upon such foundations can be discussed.
+ Until such a peace can be secured we have no choice but to go
+ on. So far as we can judge, these principles that we regard as
+ fundamental are already everywhere accepted as imperative
+ except among the spokesmen of the military and annexationist
+ party in Germany. If they have anywhere else been rejected, the
+ objectors have not been sufficiently numerous or influential to
+ make their voices audible. The tragic circumstance is that this
+ one party in Germany is apparently willing and able to send
+ millions of men to their death to prevent what all the world now
+ sees to be just.
+
+ "I would not be a true spokesman of the people of the United
+ States if I did not say once more that we entered this war upon
+ no small occasion, and that we can never turn back from a course
+ chosen upon principle. Our resources are in part mobilized now,
+ and we shall not pause until they are mobilized in their
+ entirety. Our armies are rapidly going to the fighting front,
+ and will go more rapidly. Our whole strength will be put into
+ this state of emancipation--emancipation from the threat and
+ attempted mastery of selfish groups of autocratic
+ rulers--whatever the difficulties and present partial delays. We
+ are indomitable in our power of independent action, and can in
+ no circumstances consent to live in a world governed by intrigue
+ and force. We believe that our own desire for a new
+ international order under which reason and justice and the
+ common interests of mankind shall prevail, is the desire of
+ enlightened men everywhere. Without that new order the world
+ will be without peace, and human life will lack tolerable
+ conditions of existence and development. Having set our hand to
+ the task of achieving it, we shall not turn back.
+
+ "I hope that it is not necessary for me to add that no word of
+ what I have said is intended as a threat. That is not the
+ temper of our people. I have spoken thus only that the whole
+ world may know the true spirit of America--that men everywhere
+ may know that our passion for justice and for self-government is
+ no mere passion of words, but a passion which, once set in act,
+ must be satisfied. The power of the United States is a menace to
+ no nation or people. It will be never used in aggression or for
+ the aggrandizement of any selfish interest of our own. It
+ springs out of freedom and is for the service of freedom."
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX--B.
+
+TEXT OF UNITED STATES REPLY TO AUSTRIA.
+
+
+On the 18th of September, 1918, the Secretary of State made public the
+official text of the letter he sent, to Mr. W. A. F. Ekengren, the
+Swedish Minister, in charge of Austro-Hungarian affairs, conveying
+President Wilson's rejection of the Austrian peace proposals. It reads
+as follows:--
+
+ "Sir,--I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your note,
+ dated September 16, communicating to me a note from the Imperial
+ Government of Austria-Hungary, containing a proposal to the
+ Government of all the belligerent States to send delegates to a
+ confidential and unbinding discussion on the basic principles
+ for the conclusion of peace. Furthermore, it is proposed that
+ the delegates would be charged to make known to one another the
+ conception of their Governments regarding these principles, and
+ to receive analogous communications, as well as to request and
+ give frank and candid explanations on all those points which
+ need to be precisely defined.
+
+ "In reply, I beg to say that the substance of your communication
+ has been submitted to the President, who now directs me to
+ inform you that the Government of the United States feels that
+ there is only one reply which it can make to the suggestion of
+ the Imperial Austro-Hungarian Government. It has repeatedly, and
+ with entire candor, stated the terms upon which the United
+ States would consider peace, and can and will entertain no
+ proposal for a conference upon the matter concerning which it
+ has made its position and purpose so plain.
+
+ "Accept, sir, the renewed assurances of my highest
+ consideration.
+
+ "(Signed), ROBERT LANSING,
+ "Secretary of State."
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes
+
+Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
+
+Numerous obvious spelling errors have been corrected.
+
+Archaic or unusual words and spellings have not been changed:
+beneficient, coronated, consolated, conspiration, devotedness, divers,
+elogius, enflame, enounced, equilibrist, eulogium, fervously,
+injustifiable, irresistable, instil, Magna Charta, planturous,
+plebiscit, plebiscitary, preconized, profonated, Roumanian, Servia,
+subtilties, tragical, treasonably, troublous, tutorage, unbiassed,
+uncontrovertible, unsufficiently, woful.
+
+Both "bolshevik" and "bolchevik" appear and have not been changed.
+
+Both "standpoint(s)" and "stand-point(s)" appear and have not been
+changed.
+
+The following inconsistent usages appear and have not been changed:
+"Mother Country", "mother country", "mother-country", "Mother Land",
+"Mother land", "mother land", "Motherland".
+
+Italic font is indicated by _xxx_ and bold font by =xxx=.
+
+Page 34: Duplicate word "His" deleted (His Excellency had just).
+
+Page 96 (and elsewhere): "per cent" changed to "per cent." for
+consistency.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of England, Canada and the Great War, by
+Louis-Georges Desjardins
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of England, Canada and the Great War, by
+Louis-Georges Desjardins
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: England, Canada and the Great War
+
+Author: Louis-Georges Desjardins
+
+Release Date: October 18, 2011 [EBook #37792]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLAND, CANADA AND THE GREAT WAR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Moti Ben-Ari and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<div class="center">[Chapter numbering is as in the original publication, omitting chapter
+numbers XXV and XXVI. (note of etext transcriber.)]<br />&nbsp; <br />&nbsp; <br /></div>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<h1>ENGLAND, CANADA and the GREAT WAR</h1>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>Lieutenant-Colonel L.-G. DESJARDINS</h2>
+
+<div class="center">Ex-member of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Quebec
+and of the House of Commons of Canada.</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="center">
+QUEBEC<br />
+Chronicle Print.<br />
+<br />
+October 1st, 1918
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Even since the issue, last year, of my book:&mdash;"<i>L'Angleterre,
+Le Canada et la Grande Guerre</i>"&mdash;"<i>England,
+Canada and the Great War</i>"&mdash;a second
+edition of which I had to publish, a few weeks
+later, to meet the pressing demand of numerous
+readers&mdash;I have been repeatedly asked by influential
+citizens to publish an English edition of my
+work.</p>
+
+<p>A delegate from Quebec to the National Unity&mdash;or
+Win-the-War&mdash;Convention, in Montreal, I
+had the pleasure of meeting a great many of the
+delegates from Toronto and all over the Dominion.
+Many of them insisted upon the publication of an
+English edition.</p>
+
+<p>Having written that book for the express and
+patriotic purpose of proving the justice of the
+cause of the Allies in the Great War, and refuting
+Mr. Bourassa's false and dangerous theories, I
+realized that the citizens of Quebec, Montreal,
+Ottawa and Toronto, who strongly advised an
+English edition to be circulated in all the Provinces,
+appreciated the good it could make.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I consider it is my imperious duty to dedicate
+to my English speaking countrymen this volume
+containing all the substance matter of my French
+book, and the defense a truly loyal French
+Canadian has made of the sacred cause of Civilization
+and Liberty for the triumph of which the
+glorious Allied Nations have been so heroically
+fighting for the last four eventful years.</p>
+
+<p>As I say, in the Introduction to this work, I
+first intended to write only an English resumé of
+my French book. But once at work writing down,
+the questions to consider were so important, and
+the replies to the Nationalist leader's inconceivable
+theories so numerous, that I had to double
+and more the pages I had thought would be sufficient
+for my purpose. I realized that many points,
+to be fully explained, required more comments and
+argumentation that I had at first supposed
+necessary.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, since writing my French book, most
+important events have taken place. To have the
+present English volume up to date, I had to consider
+recent history in its very latest developments,
+and reply to the Nationalist leader's last errors,
+which by no means were not the least. When once<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span>
+a man has run off the path of reason and sound
+public sense, he is sure to rush to most dangerous
+extremes, unless he has the moral courage to
+acknowledge that he was sadly mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>I trust that the English speaking readers of
+this book, will not, for a single moment, suppose
+that I am actuated by the least ill-feeling against
+Mr. Bourassa personally, in the severe but just
+denunciation it was my plain duty to make of his
+deplorable Nationalist campaign.</p>
+
+<p>For many years past, I have ever been delighted
+in welcoming promising young men to the responsibilities
+of public life. I remember with a
+mixed feeling of pleasure and regret the occasion
+I first heard Mr. Bourassa, then a youth, addressing
+a very large public meeting held on the nomination
+day of the candidates to a pending bye-election
+for the House of Commons of Canada: Pleasure at
+the recollection of what I considered a fairly successful
+beginning of a political career; deep regret
+at the failure to justify the hopes of his compatriots
+and his friends through an uncontrollable ambition
+always sure to deter, even the best gifted,
+from the safe line of duty, well understood, and
+firmly, but modestly, performed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Passion, aspiring and unbridled, is always a
+dangerous counsellor. Mr. Bourassa could have
+had a useful political life, if he had realized that
+public good cannot be well served by constant appeals
+to race prejudices, and by persevering efforts
+to achieve success by stirring up fanaticism.</p>
+
+<p>The result of the unpatriotic course he has
+followed, against the advice of his best friends, has
+been to sow in our great and happy Dominion the
+seed of discord, of hatred, of racial conflicts.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, for the country, for his French
+Canadian compatriots, and for himself, he was deluded
+to the point of believing that the war would
+be his grand opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of using his influence to promote the
+national unity so essential under the trying circumstances
+with which Canada and the whole
+British Empire was suddenly confronted, he exerted
+himself to the utmost to prevail on his
+French Canadian countrymen to assume a decisive
+hostile stand to the noble cause which Britain had
+to fight for, in order to avenge the crime of the
+violation of Belgium's territory, to protect France
+from German cruel invasion, and to prevent Autocratic
+power from enslaving Humanity.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Such a misconception of a truly loyal man's
+part was most detrimental to the good of Canada's
+future, to the destinies of the French Canadians,
+and to the political standing of the publicist who
+was its willing victim.</p>
+
+<p>And to-day he finds himself in this position
+that he has no other choice but that of pursuing, at
+all hazards, his unwholesome campaign against
+all things British, or, boldly retracing his steps, to
+go back on all he has said and written to support
+inadmissible views, vain ideas, and passionate
+prejudices.</p>
+
+<p>The latter course would certainly be the best
+to follow in the interest of his country, of his
+French Canadian countrymen, and of his usefulness
+as a public man. But, however much to be regretted,
+he seems utterly unable to overcome the
+prejudices which have taken such deep root in his
+heart and mind.</p>
+
+<p>Prejudice, constantly cultured, soon develops
+into blind fanaticism, closing the intellect to the
+light of sound logic, to the call of duty, to the clear
+comprehension of what is best to do to promote
+the public good.</p>
+
+<p>However seriously guilty he may be, the public<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span>
+man, so swayed by a fanatical passion, is sure not
+to rally to the defense of the superior interests of
+his countrymen when they are threatened by a
+great misfortune.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot help deploring that after giving good
+hopes of a life patriotically devoted to the increasing
+welfare of Canada, by doing his share in promoting
+the best feelings among his countrymen of
+all races, classes and creeds, one of my kin, really
+gifted to play a much better part, has been so sadly
+mistaken as to exhaust his activities in forcing his
+way to the leadership of a group of malcontents
+unable to overcome their racial antipathies and
+listen to reason, even when their country and the
+Empire to which they have sworn allegiance are
+destructively menaced.</p>
+
+<p>He has nobody else to blame but himself for
+the failure of his political career, due to his misguided
+efforts in thwarting the happiness and
+prosperity which our great Dominion would certainly
+derive from the persevering union of all the
+citizens enjoying the blessings of her free British
+institutions, to work out her brilliant destinies by
+their intelligent labours, their hearted patriotism
+in peace times, and with their undaunted courage
+and their self-sacrificing devotion in war days.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>After a somewhat prolonged spectacular display
+in the House of Commons, as member for the
+electoral division of Labelle, he felt instinctively
+that he had exhausted what he considered his usefulness,
+and was doomed to a dismal failure. He
+retired from the Dominion political arena, to try
+his luck in the Legislative Assembly of the Province
+of Quebec. No wiser a man by experience, he
+challenged the Leader of the parliamentary majority
+to a truly duellist struggle on the floor of the
+House. He thrusted at his opponent with the vigour
+of a combatant certain to conquer. All those
+who witnessed this encounter, must remember how
+completely overbearing confidence, proudly asserted,
+was overcome by calm and superior argumentative
+power, sound and clear political sense. True
+parliamentary eloquence easily brought to reason
+pedantic and bombastic oratory. The first throw&mdash;<i>le
+début</i>&mdash;went decidedly against the Nationalist
+leader. A beaten fighter from this very first day,
+he met with as complete a failure in the provincial
+political arena as he had done in the federal one.
+Wisely indeed, he retired from parliamentary
+life, after realizing that debating power cannot be
+acquired by demagogic speaking.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Nationalist leader next limited his efforts
+to the tribune, to the public platform. All remember
+the time when he was periodically calling
+great popular meetings held in <i>Le Monument
+National</i>, Montreal, where he preached his Nationalist
+gospel with vehement talking. This new
+experiment could not last. It soon subsided. And
+the Nationalist leader is since addicted to pamphleteering
+of the worst kind as I will show in
+this book.</p>
+
+<p>Deeply moved by the dangers of a most mischievous
+campaign, I considered it my bounded
+duty to do my utmost efforts to prove how utterly
+wrong were the views which those pursuing it with
+passionate energy wanted to prevail, and to show
+the sad consequences it was sure to produce.</p>
+
+<p>Having first addressed myself to my French
+Canadian compatriots to persuade them how much
+detrimental to their best future the Nationalist
+campaign was sure to be, I am to-day laying the
+case before my English speaking countrymen, at
+the urgent request of many of them, in order to
+fully acquaint them with the refutation I have
+made, to the best of my ability, of Mr. Bourassa's
+erroneous theories and wild charges against England<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span>
+and all those who patriotically support our
+mother country in the great struggle she has had
+to wage after doing all she possibly could to maintain
+the peace of the world.</p>
+
+<p>I ardently desire that the reading of the following
+pages, will contribute to the restoration of
+harmony and good will, for a while endangered by
+the Nationalist campaign, in our wide Dominion,
+to whose happiness, prosperity and grandeur we,
+of both English and French origins, must devote
+our best energies and all the resources of our
+unwavering patriotism.</p>
+
+<div class="right">
+L. G. DESJARDINS.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Quebec, October 1st, 1918.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align="right">Chapter</td><td align="left"></td><td align="right">Page</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Introduction</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">I</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Who are the Guilty Parties?</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_25">25</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">II</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Persistent Efforts of England in Favour of Peace</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">III</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Call to Duty in Canada</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">IV</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Recruiting by Voluntary Service</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_46">46</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">V</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Intervention of Nationalism</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VI</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">What Do We Owe England?</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Canada is not a Sovereign State</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VIII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">German Illusions</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">IX</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Nationalist Error</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">X</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Had Canada the Right to Help England?</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XI</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Duty of Canada</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Soudanese and the South African Wars</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">British and German Aspirations Compared</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><span class="smcap">Sub-title&mdash;Construction and Supply</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">" &mdash;<span class="smcap">Transport</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">" &mdash;<span class="smcap">The Air Service</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">" &mdash;<span class="smcap">The Financial Effort of Great Britain</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">" &mdash;<span class="smcap">Achievements of Dominion, Colonial and Indian Troops</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIV<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</a></span></td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Veritable Aims of the Allies</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_104">104</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><span class="smcap">Sub-title&mdash;The Only Possible Peace Conditions</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_111">111</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XV</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Just and Unjust Wars</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><span class="smcap">Sub-title&mdash;A "Nationalist" Illogical Charge against England</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">" &mdash;<span class="smcap">Other "Nationalist" Erroneous Assertions</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_128">128</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">" &mdash;<span class="smcap">Incredible "Nationalist" Notions</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_131">131</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">" &mdash;<span class="smcap">Canadian Financial Operations in the United States</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XVI</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">"Nationalist" Views Condensed</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XVII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Loyal Principles Propounded</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_143">143</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><span class="smcap">Sub-title&mdash;Unjust "Nationalist" Grievances against England</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_150">150</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XVIII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Imperialism</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_164">164</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIX</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">American Imperialism</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XX</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">British Imperialism</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXI</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Situations of 1865 and 1900-14 Compared</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">British Imperialism Naturally Pacifist</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXIII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">British Imperialism and Political Liberty</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXIV</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Imperial Federation and "Bourassism"</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><span class="smcap">Sub-title&mdash;Constitutional Development of India</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_227">227</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXVII<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[xv]</a></span></td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Future Constitutional Relations of the Empire</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_231">231</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><span class="smcap">Sub-title&mdash;No Taxation Without Representation</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_235">235</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">" &mdash;<span class="smcap">Colonial Representation</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_236">236</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">" &mdash;<span class="smcap">The Far Off Future</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_247">247</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">" &mdash;<span class="smcap">A Machiavellian Proposition</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_251">251</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">" &mdash;<span class="smcap">A Treasonable Proposal</span></span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXVIII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Outrages are No Reasons</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_267">267</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXIX</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">How Mr. Bourassa Paid His Compliments to the Canadian Army</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_277">277</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXX</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Rash Denunciation of Public Men</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXXI</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Mr. Bourassa's Dangerous Pacifism</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_302">302</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXXII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">A Most Reprehensible Abuse of Sacred Appeals to the Belligerent Nations</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_307">307</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXXIII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">A Case For True Statesmanship</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_321">321</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXXIV</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">After-the-War Military Problem</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_324">324</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXXV</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Intervention of the United States in the War</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_334">334</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXXVI</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Allies&mdash;Russia&mdash;Japan</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_348">348</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXXVII</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Last Peace Proposals</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_357">357</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXXVIII<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[xvi]</a></span></td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Necessary Peace Conditions</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_372">372</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXXIX</td><td align="left">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Conclusion</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_383">383</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><span class="smcap">Appendix</span></td><td align="left">&mdash;A</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_411">411</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><span class="smcap">Appendix</span></td><td align="left">&mdash;B</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_421">421</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+<h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Canada, as one of the most important
+component parts of the British Empire, is going
+through the crucial ordeal of the great crisis which
+will determine her destinies jointly with those of
+the whole world. Instantly put under the strain,
+four years ago, by the outrageous challenge of
+Germany to human civilization with the criminal
+purpose of universal domination, she was fully
+equal to her unbounded duty. Conscious of her
+sacred rights, she at once realized that the constitutional
+liberties which she enjoyed in the freest
+Empire of all times, could not be more patriotically
+exercised than for the defence of the sacred
+cause which united in a gigantic effort England,
+France and Russia, soon to receive the support of
+Italy. By an almost unanimous and enthusiastic
+decision she rallied to the flag around which all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+the Dependencies of the Empire gathered from the
+five continents. Never a more inspiring array of
+loyal subjects, owing allegiance to a Sovereignty,
+was witnessed in the wide world.</p>
+
+<p>Through the trying days of four full years of
+the greatest war which ever saddened the life of
+the human race, Canada has nobly, gloriously,
+done her duty. Several hundred thousands of her
+devoted sons have rushed to the front to fight
+the battle of Liberty, of Right, of Civilization.
+Thousands of them have heroically given their
+lives for the triumph of the cause which, if finally
+triumphant, will brighten with freedom, prosperity,
+human happiness and undying glory, the
+destinies of many generations.</p>
+
+<p>The struggle is not over. The battle is not
+yet won. Victory is in sight but unfortunately
+still so far distant, that it is still calling forth the
+undaunted exertions of all those who have pledged
+their faith to rescue the world from the cruel
+thraldom of German militarism.</p>
+
+<p>Two years ago, at the critical period which
+culminated in the undecided military operations
+which, though rendered illustrious by the glorious
+defence of Verdun, made it plain to the Allies that
+success would only be the reward of a much more
+prolonged effort of untold sacrifices, I undertook<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+to write the book entitled in French: "<i>L'Angleterre,
+le Canada et la Grande Guerre</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Several of the most influential and widely circulated
+News-papers of Montreal, Toronto and
+Quebec, have kindly published highly appreciative
+Reviews of the French Edition of my book, concluding
+with the request of the publication of an
+English Edition, which, they affirmed, would be
+conducive to the public good. I have received
+many letters and verbal demands to the same
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>It is my duty to answer to a call daily becoming
+more pressing.</p>
+
+<p>I now offer to the English reading public a
+condensed edition of my work, with the title
+"<i>England, Canada and the Great War</i>." I concluded
+not to issue a complete English Edition of
+the French volume. Instead of translating my
+book, I considered it more advisable to write an
+English synopsis of its contents. Undertaking
+such a work, I realized more than ever how important
+it is for the Citizens of Canada to be able
+to speak and write the languages of the two great
+races of the Dominion. Knowing well my own deficiency
+in this regard, I hoped, however, to write
+the following pages with enough clearness to have
+my views well understood, trusting to the kindness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+of my readers to excuse the inadequacy of my
+command of English.</p>
+
+<p>A few words explaining the reasons that
+prompted me to write the French book will, I am
+confident, be kindly appreciated by my readers.
+A close observer of the daily impressions which the
+events developed by the war were creating in
+Canada, I felt more and more deeply grieved at the
+persistent and unpatriotic efforts of the leaders
+of the Nationalist school of the Province of Quebec,
+and their henchmen, to sway my French-Canadian
+countrymen from the clear path of duty.
+I undertook earnestly to do my best to stem the
+threatening wave of disloyal sentiments and racial
+conflict they were stirring up throughout the land.
+"<i>England, Canada and the Great War</i>" was the
+result of the very careful study of the numerous
+questions therein considered and of the patriotic
+impulse which led me to publish it.</p>
+
+<p>I dedicated the volume to my French-Canadian
+countrymen by a letter from which I translate
+the following:</p>
+
+<p>"It would surely be vain to conceal how serious
+was the situation imposed upon our country
+by the sudden outbreak, in August, 1914, of the
+greatest war of all times. It was dominated by
+the supreme fact that Canada was a component<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+part of one of the most powerful Empires whose
+destinies were to be determined, for good or
+ill, for many long years, by the terrible conflict
+suddenly opened, but, for a prolonged period, prepared
+by those who dreamt of conquering the
+world."</p>
+
+<p>"Great Britain, our Sovereign Metropolis, had
+done her utmost to protect Humanity against the
+misfortunes which endangered her future, for the
+maintenance of peace. She had failed in her noble
+efforts. At the very moment when, against all
+the most critical appearances, she was still hopeful,
+she had, all of a sudden, to face the terrible
+alternative, either to submit to national dishonour
+by complying with the violation of solemn treaties
+which bound her as much as Germany, or to unite
+with France and Russia to avenge Justice
+outrageously violated, sworn international Faith,
+Civilization perilously threatened."</p>
+
+<p>"Could she hesitate for one single moment?"</p>
+
+<p>"Our Mother Country has done that which
+her most imperious duty commanded her to do.
+She accepted the challenge of Germany with the
+patriotic determination inspired by the most
+sacred cause. All the loyal subjects of the British
+Crown have applauded her decision to rush to the
+defence of invaded Belgium and France, to reclaim<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+their national honour and her own, and to protect
+her Empire against the German armies."</p>
+
+<p>"With the most inspiring unanimity and
+admirable courage, all the British Colonies have
+rallied around the flag of their Sovereign Metropolis
+to share the glory of the triumph of Right and
+Justice. At the very front rank, Canada has
+nobly done her duty. Her decision was most
+spontaneous and decisive. She was not deterred by
+fallacious subtilties, deducted from pretended
+conventions, out of age and opportunity, to hinder
+her laudable and patriotic course. Throughout the
+length and breadth of her vast territory, all minds
+shared the same view, all hearts were united and
+beating with the same powerful sentiment."</p>
+
+<p>"The decision of Canada to participate in
+the present war was taken by the constitutional
+government of the country, sanctioned by
+Parliament, approved by public opinion, glorified
+by the hundreds of thousands of brave volunteers
+who courageously answered the call of duty."</p>
+
+<p>"Views with which I cannot concur have been
+expressed and given full publicity. They challenge
+discussion. It is my undoubted right to criticize
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"Since the beginning of the present war, Mr.
+Henri Bourassa, in addition to the daily publicity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+of his journal "<i>Le Devoir</i>", has developed, in two
+principal pamphlets, the theories of his "<i>Nationalism</i>".
+They are respectively entitled: "<i>Que devons-nous
+à l'Angleterre?</i>" "<i>What do we owe England?</i>"
+and: "<i>Hier, Aujourd'hui, Demain</i>" "<i>Yesterday,
+To-day, To-morrow</i>"."</p>
+
+<p>"In earnestly searching out the real causes of
+the war, the responsibilities of the belligerent
+nations, their respective aspirations, the duty
+imposed by the irresistable course of events upon
+the British Empire and consequently upon Canada,
+I was incessantly called upon to consider the
+very strange propositions contained in those
+pamphlets."</p>
+
+<p>"It was with great surprise that I read, for
+instance, as the heading of one of the chapters, the
+utterly false proposition that: "<i>The Autonomous
+Colonies are Sovereign States.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"And these most extraordinary affirmations
+that the <i>King of England has not the right to
+declare the State of war for Canada, without the
+assent of the Canadian Cabinet; that Canada could
+have participated in the present war as a Nation</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"It is my bounden duty to affirm that almost
+all the propositions contained in the two above
+mentioned pamphlets are wrong according to
+international law and to constitutional law,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+erroneous in their historical bearings, contrary to
+the true teachings of the past."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Bourassa persistingly trying to convince
+his readers that the precedents of the Soudanese
+and the South-African wars have forced the
+British Colonies to participate in the present one, I
+considered it my duty to make, in two separate
+chapters, a special study of those military campaigns
+which, in both cases, were so felicitously
+terminated for all parties concerned."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot close this letter without expressing
+my profound regret that Mr. Bourassa has thought
+proper to use most injurious language adding
+outrage to the falsity of his opinions. At page 121
+of his pamphlet: "<i>Yesterday, To-day, To-morrow</i>",
+any one can read, no doubt with astonishment,
+that Mr. Bourassa charges our countrymen of the
+British races with being <i>ignorant, assuming, arrogant,
+dominating and rotten with mercantilism</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Such ridiculous and insulting words to the
+address of our countrymen of the three British
+races are surely not calculated to increase Canadian
+harmony."</p>
+
+<p>"This book, written for the express purpose
+of assisting you to form for yourselves a sound
+opinion about the terrible events so rapidly
+developing, was inspired by my loyalty to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+Empire whose faithful subject I glory to be, by my
+devotion to Canada and to my countrymen, by the
+affectionate recollection of France I will cherish
+to my last day.</p>
+
+<p>"During the last fifty years, either as a private
+or as an officer of the Canadian Militia&mdash;my
+service as such having lasted more than forty years&mdash;as
+a member of the Legislative Assembly of the
+Province of Quebec, and as a member of the House
+of Commons of Canada, I have often taken the oath
+of allegiance to the Sovereign of Great Britain.
+From my early youth, I had learned that under
+the ægis of the British Crown, the citizen of the
+Empire could be true to his oath, and enjoy the
+precious liberty of expressing his opinion. But I
+had also soon realized that during the lifetime of
+a Sovereign State, days of peril might occur. I
+had easily come to the conclusion that in those trying
+moments the loyal duty could be very happily
+reconciled with the most sincere love of political
+liberty.</p>
+
+<p>"In defending with the most sincere conviction
+the sacred cause of the Allies, I am doing my
+duty as a free subject of the British Empire, as a
+citizen of Canada and of the Province of Quebec,
+as a son of France, as a devoted servant of Justice
+and Right. I am true to my oath."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I desire to call the special attention of my
+readers to the complete sense of the last paragraph
+just quoted. I most decidedly wish its meaning
+to be fully understood by all, as I intended to
+convey it to my French Canadian compatriots. I
+have never concurred in the subtle distinction so
+often made between the several notions entertained
+by many respecting their duty towards the Empire
+and Canada separately. Having witnessed, for
+the last fifty years, the admirable evolution and
+natural growth of the British constitutional
+system over a fourth of the globe, developing into
+the freest Empire that ever existed, my mind was
+more and more impressed with the conviction that
+loyalty to the Sovereignty presiding over such a
+magnificent national heritage could not be of two
+different kinds. A free British subject, whether
+living in the United Kingdom, or in any one of the
+Dependencies of the Crown, cannot be at once loyal
+to the Empire at large and disloyal to any of its
+component parts; or, <i>vice versa</i>, loyal to the particular
+section of the State where he is living and
+at the same disloyal to the Empire. Such a false
+conception of the duties of loyalty, if it could be
+spread successfully throughout the Empire, would
+undoubtedly lead to its rapid dissolution and complete
+destruction. Genuine loyalty cannot agree<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+with exclusive and rampant sectionalism, with
+local, racial or religious prejudices and fanaticism.</p>
+
+<p>The few lines of the preceding closing paragraph
+of my letter dedicating the French edition
+of my book as aforesaid, express my own conception
+of the true loyalty of a faithful subject of the
+British Sovereignty, who has the clear vision of the
+meaning of his oath of allegiance. In consequence,
+first, I affirm my duty as a subject of the
+British Empire; second, as a citizen of Canada;
+third, as a citizen of my own Province of Quebec.
+And then, taking a wider range of the duty of any
+man towards his ancestors' lineage, I declare that
+under the cruel circumstances of the case, I also
+consider it is my duty to defend France against
+her deadly enemy. Further enlarging the vision
+of duty to its fullest extent, I say that I am bound
+to defend the cause of the Allies by proving that I
+am a loyal servant of Justice and Right.</p>
+
+<p>Surely I could not emphasize in terms more
+pregnant my loyalty to the cause of the British
+Empire, of France, and their Allies, of Liberty and
+Civilization. I confidently hope they will persuade
+my readers that this book was written with the
+most sincere and patriotic desire to help rallying
+my French Canadian compatriots to the defence
+of the British, French and Canadian flags,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+which must together emerge triumphant from the
+gigantic fight against the most threatening wave
+of barbarism the world has ever had to contend
+with at the cost of so great and heroic sacrifices.</p>
+
+<p>When the first French edition of this book
+was issued, in January of last year, matters respecting
+the prosecution of the war had not yet
+required the serious consideration by Parliament
+and the country of the question of conscription to
+maintain to their proper efficiency the Canadian
+divisions on the firing line. Consequently, I was
+not then called upon to consider that most important
+subject. When I had to decide about publishing
+a second French edition&mdash;the first being
+entirely exhausted&mdash;I at first thought of adding
+to my work a few chapters respecting the most
+notable events developed by the gigantic struggle
+shaking the world to its very basic foundation.
+Foremost amongst them were the Russian sudden
+Revolution, the solemn entrance of the United
+States into the great fight, the imperious necessity
+of the military effort of the Allies far beyond that
+which had been foreseen, in order to achieve the
+final victory which will be the only adequate reward
+of their undaunted determination not to
+sheathe the sword before Germany will agree to
+restore peace upon the only possible conditions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+which will efficiently protect humanity from any
+other attempt at brutal universal domination. The
+question of conscription in Canada was the natural
+outcome of the progress of the deadly conflict
+between Civilization and barbarism, constitutional
+Freedom and despotism, democratic institutions
+and autocracy.</p>
+
+<p>I soon realized that I could not properly do
+justice to such grave subjects in a few pages added
+to my first book. After mature consideration, I
+considered it was my duty to undertake to write a
+second volume. I have so informed the public
+in the <i>Advertisement</i> which prefaces the second
+French edition of the first. This second volume
+I will soon issue, also intending to publish an
+English synopsis of it, if that of the first volume
+meets the kind appreciation I hope of my English
+speaking countrymen.</p>
+
+<p>However, pending the publication of the second
+volume, I think it is my duty to express now
+my views, in a summary way, on that much discussed
+question of obligatory military service.
+Let me preface by saying that they are not new,
+having originated in my mind more than thirty
+years ago. The military necessities of the present
+war have, of course, given them more precision
+and clearness.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Deeply conscious of the sacred duty of all
+truly loyal British subjects through the present
+prolonged world crisis for the life or death of
+human Liberty, I had to consider conscription
+from the double stand-point of a free citizen of
+Canada and of my military experience acquired
+in the course of a service of over forty years.</p>
+
+<p>Most strongly and convincingly opposed to
+the militarism of the atrocious German type&mdash;the
+curse of Humanity&mdash;I have always believed&mdash;and
+do still more and more believe&mdash;imbued, I hope,
+with the true sense and principles of democratic
+institutions, that the greatest boon that could be
+granted the world would be that the admirable
+Christian law of peace and good-will amongst men
+would prevail for all times, and save the nations
+from the cruel obligation of keeping themselves
+constantly fully armed at the great cost of the best
+years of manhood, and of their accumulated treasures.
+But unfortunately it has not yet been the
+good luck of man to reach the goal of this most
+noble ambition. Instead of a steady advance in
+the right direction, he has, for the last fifty years,
+experienced a most dangerous set back by the predominating
+influence of German militarism, developed
+and mastered by the most autocratic
+power to the point of threatening the liberties of
+the whole world.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Need I say that, as a purely philosophical
+question of principle, I most sincerely deplore that
+the political state of the world has been and is
+such that national safety cannot be, in too many
+cases, properly assured without the law of the
+land calling upon the manhood of a country to
+make the sacrifice of part of the best years of
+enthusiastic youth, and requiring from the nation,
+as a collective body, the expenditure, to an
+untold amount, for the purposes of defence, of the
+accumulated savings of hard work and intelligent
+thrift.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, the two continents of America,
+so abundantly blessed by Providence, had, until
+the present war, been able to pursue their prosperous
+and dignified course free from the entanglements
+of European Militarism.</p>
+
+<p>Even England, in all the majesty of her Imperial
+power, her flag gloriously waving over so
+many millions of free men, protected as she was
+by the waves which she ruled with grandeur and
+grace, had succeeded in avoiding the curse of
+continental conscriptionism.</p>
+
+<p>Between permanent conscription, despotically
+imposed upon a nation under autocratic rule, and
+temporary military compulsion freely accepted by
+a noble people for the very purpose of saving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+Humanity from military absolutism, there is,
+every one must admit, a wide difference. I have
+been, I am, and will be, to my last day, the uncompromising
+opponent of autocratic conscription,
+which I consider as a permanent crime against
+Christian Civilization, and the ready instrument
+of barbarous domination. To temporary compulsion
+I can agree, as a matter of patriotic and national
+duty, if the circumstances of the case are
+such that without its timely use, my country which
+has the first and undoubted right to my most
+patriotic devotion, at the cost of all I may own and
+even of my life, for her defence, would fall the
+prey to despotism which would bleed her to death
+to sway the world.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the ordeal through which Canada, the
+British Empire, in fact much the greater part of
+the universe, are passing with torrents of blood
+shed to rescue Mankind from the domination of
+German militarism.</p>
+
+<p>If Germany could have her course free; if she
+could reach the goal of her criminal ambition,
+nearly the whole world would be, for many long
+years, in the throes of the most abominable conscriptionism.</p>
+
+<p>If after the enthusiasm of voluntary military
+service has exhausted itself from the very successful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+result of its patriotic effort, is it not a duty for
+all loyal citizens to accept temporary compulsion,
+to save their country from the horrors of defeat at
+the hands of the most cruel enemy which has ever
+shamed the light of the sun since it shines over the
+Human race blessed with Christian principles and
+moral teachings.</p>
+
+<p>To the present generation of young men,
+strong, healthy, brave, let us say: be worthy of the
+times you live in, be equal to the great task imposed
+upon you, accepting with patriotism the
+sacrifices you are called upon to make, never forgetting
+that temporary compulsion for you means
+freedom from permanent conscription for your
+children and children's children in years to come.</p>
+
+<p>It is from the very height of such lofty considerations
+that I have made up my mind about
+this much vexed question which will, we must all
+earnestly hope, be more and more well understood
+and eventually settled to the everlasting good of
+the country once for all delivered from the exasperating
+menace of German despotism.</p>
+
+<p>I must reserve for the second volume of this
+work, the fuller expression of my views of what
+should be the military system to be maintained in
+Canada, after the very wide experience we will
+have derived from the present great war. All I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+will add now is that ever since the early eighties of
+the last century, after many years of voluntary
+service in the Canadian Militia, I had fully realized
+that it is no more possible to make a real soldier
+by a few days yearly training, for three years,
+than you can make a competent lawyer of a young
+man studying law for a fortnight in the course of
+three consecutive years.</p>
+
+<p>Since the federal Union of the Provinces we
+had spent much more than a hundred million of
+dollars for the training of our militia, with the
+appalling result that when came the day of getting
+ready for the fray, we had not two thousand men
+to send at once to the firing line. The first thirty
+thousands of the brave men who enthusiastically
+volunteered to go to the front had to be trained,
+at Valcartier and in England, several months before
+being sent to face the enemy whose waves of
+permanent divisions of armed men had overrun,
+like a torrent, Belgium and northern France. Of
+course, our boys fought and died like heroes, but
+nevertheless we at last learned, at our great cost,
+that soldiers no more than lawyers, doctors,
+merchants, transportation managers, bankers,
+business men of all callings, farmers, sailors, etc.,
+can be qualified in a day.</p>
+
+<p>When the time shall come to consider what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+will be the requirements of our military organization,
+after this terrible struggle is over, I hope
+none will forget that war is a great science, an
+awful and very difficult art, so that we shall not
+deceive ourselves any longer by the illusion that
+an army can be drawn from the earth in twenty
+four hours.</p>
+
+<p>Our most efficient military commander cannot
+entertain the foolish delusion of Pompey, so
+crushingly beaten by Cæsar, at Pharsalia, that he
+can raise legions by striking the ground with his
+foot.</p>
+
+<p>If our future national circumstances turn out
+to be such, after the restoration of peace, that we
+will not be called upon to make heavy sacrifices for
+defence&mdash;let Providence so bless our dear country&mdash;it
+will then be much more rational to save our
+money than to squander it on a military system
+which cannot produce military efficiency.</p>
+
+<p>The future can be trusted to settle favourably
+its own difficulties. For us of the present generation,
+we have to attend to the imperative and sacred
+duty of the hour. Let no one shirk his responsibilities,
+waver in the heavy task, falter before the
+sacrifices to be patriotically and heroically accepted.
+To deserve the everlasting gratitude of future
+generations, we must secure to them the blessings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+of permanent peace in a renovated world freed
+from the tyranny of autocratic despotism.</p>
+
+<p>Surely, I will be permitted to say that, undertaking
+to write <i>England, Canada and the Great
+War</i>, I fully realized my bounden duty to study all
+the questions raised by the terrible struggle, unreservedly,
+absolutely, outside of all party considerations,
+of all racial prejudices. A party man,
+in the only true and patriotic sense of the word,
+during the twenty-five years of my active political
+life, as a journalist and a member of the Quebec
+Legislature and of the Parliament of Canada, it
+became my lot in the official position which I was
+asked to accept and which I loyally filled, to
+all intents and purposes, for many years, to train
+my mind more and more to judge public questions
+solely from the point of view of the public good.
+I do not mean to say that partyism, well understood
+and patriotically practiced, is not productive
+of good to a country blessed with free institutions.
+But certainly in the course of a progressive, intelligent
+and eventful national life, ennobled by Freedom
+happily enjoyed, times occur when it behooves
+every one to rise superior to all other considerations,
+however important they may be, to serve the
+only one worthy of all sacrifices: the salvation of
+the country. Never was this principle so true, so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+imperative, than on the day when the world was so
+audaciously challenged by Germany to the deadly
+conflict still raging with undiminished fury.</p>
+
+<p>That most important question of military
+obligatory service, brought up by the pressure of
+the imperious necessities of military operations,
+lengthening and intensifying to unforeseen proportions,
+was for many weeks considered by
+Parliament. Surely, no one for a single moment
+entertained the idea that, however desirable and
+imperative it was for the representatives of the
+people to be of only one mind so far as the prosecution
+of Canada's share in the war was concerned,
+constant unanimity of opinion was possible respecting
+the various measures to be adopted to
+that end. Parliament sitting in the performance
+of its constitutional functions, with all its undoubted
+privileges, could not be expected not to
+exercise its right to debate all the matters constitutionally
+proposed for its concurrence and
+approval. I must certainly and wisely refrain from
+any comment whatsoever upon the lengthy discussion
+of the Military Service Act in both Houses in
+Ottawa. Having received the Royal Assent, the
+Bill is now the law of the land. All will patriotically
+rejoice to see that without waiving their
+right to pronounce upon the deeds and the views<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+of those who are responsible to them, the free citizens
+of Canada will cheerfully accept the new sacrifices
+imposed by the obligation of carrying the
+war to a successful issue, praying to God to bless
+their patriotic efforts, and even with the true
+Christian spirit, to forgive guilty Germany if she
+will only repent for her crimes, and agree to repair
+a reasonable part of the immense damages she has
+wrought upon trodden and martyred nations.</p>
+
+<p>I hope,&mdash;and most ardently wish&mdash;that all my
+readers will agree with me that next to the necessity
+of winning the war&mdash;and, may I say, even as of
+almost equal importance for the future grandeur
+of our beloved country&mdash;range that of promoting
+by all lawful means harmony and good will
+amongst all our countrymen, whatever may be
+their racial origin, their religious faith, their particular
+aspirations not conflicting with their devotion
+to Canada as a whole, nor with their loyalty
+to the British Empire, whose greatness and prestige
+they want to firmly help to uphold with the
+inspiring confidence that more and more they will
+be the unconquerable bulwark of Freedom, Justice,
+Civilization and Right.</p>
+
+<p>After having so fully expressed my profound
+conviction of what I consider to be my sacred duty
+as a loyal British subject, I feel sure I will be allowed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+to ask my English-speaking countrymen not
+to judge my French compatriots by the sayings
+and deeds of persons, too well gifted and too prone
+to injure their future and that of the whole country
+itself, but utterly disqualified and impotent to do
+them any good.</p>
+
+<p>Need I affirm that my French Canadian compatriots
+are loyal at heart, a liberty loving and
+peaceful people, law-abiding citizens, fairly minded,
+intelligent, hard working, industrious. They
+have done, they are doing, and will do, their fair
+share for the progress and the future greatness of
+our wide and mighty Dominion. To all those who
+desire to appreciate their course in all fairness
+and Christian Justice, I will say: do not fail to
+take into account that like all other national
+groups they are liable, in overtrying circumstances,
+to be in a certain measure wrongly influenced
+by deficiencies of leadership, but depend
+that they cannot be, for any length of time, carried
+away by unscrupulous players on their feelings.
+Some of them were deceived by persistent efforts
+to persuade them that England was, as much as
+Germany, guilty of having precipitated the great
+war which has been the curse of almost the whole
+world for the last four years. The accumulated
+remembrance of their staunch loyalty and patriotism<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+during more than a century and a half will do
+much to favour the harmonious relations of all
+Canadians of good will who, I have no doubt, comprise
+millions of well wishers of the glorious
+destiny of our country.</p>
+
+<p>May I be allowed to conclude by saying that
+my most earnest desire is to do all in my power,
+in the rank and file of the great army of free men,
+to reach the goal which ought to be the most persevering
+and patriotic ambition of loyal Canadians
+of all origins and creeds.</p>
+
+<p>And I repeat, wishing my words to be re-echoed
+throughout the length and breadth of the
+land I so heartily cherish:&mdash;I have always been,
+I am and will ever be, to my last breath, true to my
+oath of allegiance to my Sovereign and to my
+country.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Who Are The Guilty Parties?</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Any one sincerely wishing to arrive at a sound
+opinion on the great war raging for the last four
+years, must necessarily make a serious study of
+the causes which led to the terrific struggle so
+horribly straining the energies of the civilized
+world to escape tyrannical domination. The case
+having been so fully discussed, and the responsibilities
+of the assailant belligerents so completely
+proved, I surely need not show at length that the
+German Emperor, his military party, the group of
+the German population called <span class="smcap">Junkers</span>, are to the
+highest degree, the guilty parties of all the woful
+wrongs imposed upon Mankind and of the bloodshed
+unprecedented in all the ages.</p>
+
+<p>The German Empire had for many years decided
+that it would not alone attempt to dominate
+the world. It wanted a partner to share the
+responsibility of the crime it was ready to commit
+at the first favourable opportunity, but a docile
+partner which she could direct at will, command
+with imperious orders, and crush without mercy
+at the first move of resistance. That plying tool
+was found in the complicity of Austria-Hungary,
+for years under the sway of Berlin diplomacy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>No sane man, if he is sincere, if he is honest,
+can now, for a single moment, hesitate to proclaim
+that between Germany and Austria-Hungary, and
+the group of nations henceforth bearing the glorious
+name of <span class="smcap">The Allies</span>, Right and Justice are on
+the side of England, of France, of the United
+States, of Belgium, of Italy, of Canada.</p>
+
+<p>Where is the man with a sound mind, with a
+strong heart, beating with the noble impulses of
+righteousness, with a soul dignified by lofty aspirations,
+who ignores to-day that for fifty years
+previous to the declaration of war, in August 1914,
+Germany had been perfecting her military organization
+for a grand effort at universal domination?</p>
+
+<p>All my life a close student of History, I was
+much impressed by the constant Policy of England
+to maintain Peace during the last century. When
+the World emerged from the great wars of the
+Napoleonic Era, she firmly took her stand in favour
+of peaceful relations between the nations, trusting
+more and more for the future prosperity of them
+all to the advantages to be derived from the permanency
+of friendly intercourse, from the ever
+increasing development of international trade,
+prompted by the freest possible exchanges of the
+products of all the countries blessed by Providence
+with large and varied resources. Her statesmen,
+so many of them truly worthy of this name, however
+divided they may have been with regard to
+questions of domestic government and internal reforms,
+were most united about the course to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+followed respecting foreign relations. Perhaps
+more than all others having a say in the management
+of the world's affairs at large, they fully
+realized that no nation could prosper and successfully
+work out her destinies by systematically
+trying to injure her neighbours. No independent
+country can become wealthier, happier, and greater,
+by spreading ruin and devastation around her
+frontiers.</p>
+
+<p>The most convincing evidence that England
+was constantly favourable to the maintenance of
+peace amongst the great Powers of the World, for
+the last hundred years, is found in her permanent
+determination not to be drawn into the vortex of
+European continental militarism, so powerfully
+developed by Prussianism. She could have organized
+a standing army of millions of men. She
+would not. True, during the few years which preceded
+the present hurricane, some of the most eminent
+of England's military officers, notably, foremost
+amongst them, Lord Roberts, seeing, with
+their eyes wide open, the aggravated dangers accumulating
+on the darkening horizon, warned
+their countrymen about the threatening waves
+which menaced the future of the world. But
+British public opinion, as a whole, would not
+depart from her almost traditional policy of
+"<i>non-intervention</i>". For nearly a century, Great
+Britain maintained her "<i>splendid isolation</i>", trusting
+to the sound sense which should always govern
+the world to protect Mankind against the horrors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+of a general war. Never was this great national
+policy better exemplified than during the long and
+glorious reign of Her Majesty Queen Victoria.
+For more than fifty years, she graced one of the
+most illustrious Thrones that ever presided over
+the destinies of a great Empire, with sovereign
+dignity, with womanly virtues, with motherly devotion,
+with patriotic respect of the constitutional
+liberties of her free subjects. When she departed
+for a better world, she was succeeded by the great
+King and Emperor&mdash;Edward VII.&mdash;who, during
+the few years of his memorable reign, proved himself
+so much the friendly supporter of harmony
+and good will amongst the nations that he deserved
+to be called "<span class="smcap">The King of the Peace of
+the World</span>."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Persistent Efforts of England in Favour of
+Peace.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>In 1891, Lord Salisbury, then Prime Minister
+of England, witnessing the constant progress of
+Prussian militarism on land and sea, and fully
+conscious of the misfortunes it was preparing for
+Humanity, ordered an official statement to be
+made of the extravagant cost of the European
+military organization, and sent it confidentially to
+the German Kaiser, who took no notice of it.</p>
+
+<p>In 1896, Lord Salisbury lays before the Czar
+of Russia all the information he has obtained on
+the question of militarism in Europe. On the
+28th of August, 1898, the Emperor of Russia addressed
+to the world his celebrated Manifesto in
+favour of peace. It urged, first, the necessity of a
+truly permanent peace; second, the limitation of
+military preparation which, in its ever increasing
+development, was causing the economic ruin of the
+nations.</p>
+
+<p>The conferences of The Hague in favour of an
+international agreement for the maintenance of
+peace were the direct result of the initiative of the
+British Prime Minister, who foresaw the frightful
+consequences for Humanity of the enormous development
+of militarism by the German Empire.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All the great Powers of Europe and America,
+together with the secondary states, at once heartily
+concurred with the proposition of the Czar of
+Russia. Unfortunately, there were two sad exceptions
+to the consent to consider the salutary purpose
+so anxiously desired by those who valued as
+they should all the benefits the world would have
+derived from an international system assuring
+permanent peace. Germany and Austria, the latter
+already for years dominated by the former,
+opposed the patriotic move of the Emperor of
+Russia, suggested to him by Great Britain. They
+agreed to be represented at the Conferences for the
+only object of thwarting the efforts in favour of a
+satisfactory enactment of new rules of International
+Law to henceforth protect the world
+against a general conflagration, and to free the
+nations from the crushing burdens of a militarism
+daily developing more extravagant.</p>
+
+<p>Ministerial changes in Great Britain in no
+way altered this part of the foreign policy of the
+Mother Country. In 1905, Mr. Campbell-Bannerman
+became Prime Minister of England. He was
+well known to be an ardent pacifist. Deprecating
+the mad increase of unchecked militarism, he said,
+in his ministerial program:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>A policy of huge armaments keeps alive and
+stimulates and feeds the belief that force is the
+best, if not the only, solution of international
+differences.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>On the 8th of March, 1906, Lord Haldane, then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+Minister of War, declared in the British House of
+Commons:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I wish we were near the time when the
+nations would consider together the reduction of
+armaments.... Only by united action can we
+get rid of the burden which is pressing so heavily
+on all civilized nations.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The second Conference of The Hague which
+took place in July and October, 1907, was then
+being organized. Russia was again its official promoter.
+Well aware of the uncompromising stand of
+Germany on the question of reduced armaments,
+she had not included that matter in the program
+she had decided to lay before the Conference. The
+British Government did all they could to have it
+placed on the orders to be taken into consideration.
+A member of the Labor Party, Mr. Vivian, moved
+in the House of Commons, that the Conference of
+The Hague be called upon to discuss that most important
+subject. His motion was unanimously and
+enthusiastically carried.</p>
+
+<p>Informing the House that the Cabinet heartily
+approved the Resolution, Sir Edward Grey, Secretary
+for Foreign Affairs, said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I do not believe that at any time has the
+conscious public opinion in the various countries
+of Europe set more strongly in the direction of
+peace than at the present time, and yet the burden
+of military and naval expenditure goes on increasing.
+No greater service could it (the Hague Conference)
+do, than to make the conditions of peace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+less expensive than they are at the present time....
+It is said we are waiting upon foreign nations
+in order to reduce our expenditure. As a matter
+of fact, we are all waiting on each other. Some
+day or other somebody must take the first step....
+I do, on behalf of the Government, not only accept,
+but welcome such a resolution as this as a wholesome
+and beneficial expression of opinion.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>In July, 1906, a most important meeting of
+the Inter-Parliamentary Union took place in London.
+Twenty-three countries, enjoying the privileges,
+in various proportions, of free institutions,
+were represented at this memorable Congress of
+Nations. In the course of his remarkable opening
+speech of the first sitting, Mr. Campbell-Bannerman,
+Prime Minister, said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Urge your Governments, in the name of humanity,
+to go into The Hague Conference as we
+ourselves hope to go, pledged to diminished charges
+in respect of armaments.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>A motion embodying the views so earnestly
+pressed by the British Government was unanimously
+carried.</p>
+
+<p>On the fifth of March, 1907, only four months
+before the opening of the Second Hague Conference,
+Mr. Campbell-Bannerman, affirming the
+bounden duty of England to propose the restriction
+of armaments, said, in the British House of
+Commons:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Holding the opinion that there is a great
+movement of feeling among thinking people in all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+the nations of the world, in favor of some restraint
+on the enormous expenditure involved in the present system
+so long as it exists.... We have desired
+and still desire to place ourselves in the very
+front rank of those who think that the warlike
+attitude of powers, as displayed by the excessive
+growth of armaments is a curse to Europe, and the
+sooner it is checked, in however moderate a degree,
+the better.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, German hostility to reduced
+armaments prevented any good result from the
+second Hague Conference in the way of checking
+extravagant and ruinous military organization.
+There was sad disappointment in all the reasonable
+world and specially in England at this deplorable
+outcome. Mr. Campbell-Bannerman expressed
+it as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>We had hoped that some great advance might
+be made towards a common consent to arrest the
+wasteful and growing competition in naval and
+military armaments. We were disappointed.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Unshaken in her determination to do her utmost
+to protect Civilization against the threatening
+and ever increasing dangers of German militarism,
+England persisted with the most laudable
+perseverance in her noble efforts to that much desired
+end. But all her pleadings, however convincing,
+were vain. Germany was obdurate.
+Finally, on the 30th of March, 1911, speaking in
+the Reichstag, the German Imperial Chancellor
+threw off the mask, and positively declared that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+the question of reduced armaments admitted of no
+possible solution "<i>as long as men were men and
+States were States</i>."</p>
+
+<p>A more brutal declaration could hardly have
+been made. It was a cynical challenge to the
+World. Times were maturing and Germany was
+anxiously waiting for the opportunity to strike the
+blow which would stagger Humanity.</p>
+
+<p>Through all the great crisis of July and August,
+1914, directly consequent upon the odious
+crime of Sarajevo, England exhausted all her efforts
+to maintain peace, but unfortunately without
+avail.</p>
+
+<p>Knowing very well how much England sincerely
+wished the maintenance of peace, the German
+Government was to the last moment under
+the delusion that it could succeed in having Great
+Britain to remain neutral in a general European
+war. They were not ashamed to presume they
+could bribe England. Without blushing they made
+to the British Government the infamous proposition
+contained in the following despatch from Sir
+E. Goschen, the British Ambassador at Berlin,
+to Sir Edward Grey, the Secretary of State for
+Foreign Affairs:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<div class="center">Sir E. Goschen to Sir Edward Grey (Received July 29).</div>
+
+<div class="right">Berlin, July 29, 1914.</div>
+
+<p>
+(Telegraphic.)<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I was asked to call upon the Chancellor to-night. His
+Excellency had just returned from Potsdam.</p>
+
+<p>He said that should Austria be attacked by Russia a European
+conflagration might, he feared, become inevitable, owing to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+Germany's obligation as Austria's ally, in spite of his continued
+efforts to maintain peace. He then proceeded to make the following
+strong bid for British neutrality. He said that it was clear, so
+far as he was able to judge the main principle which governed
+British policy, that Great Britain would never stand by and allow
+France to be crushed in any conflict there might be. That, however,
+was not the object at which Germany aimed. Provided that neutrality
+of Great Britain was certain, every assurance would be
+given to the British Government that the Imperial Government
+aimed at no territorial acquisitions at the expense of France should
+they prove victorious in any war that might ensue.</p>
+
+<p>I questioned his Excellency about the French colonies, and
+he said he was unable to give a similar undertaking in that respect.
+As regards Holland, however, his Excellency said that, so
+long as Germany's adversaries respected the integrity and neutrality
+of the Netherlands, Germany was ready to give His
+Majesty's Government an assurance that she would do likewise.
+It depended upon the action of France what operations Germany
+might be forced to enter upon in Belgium, but when the war was
+over, Belgian integrity would be respected if she had not sided
+against Germany.</p>
+
+<p>His Excellency ended by saying that ever since he had
+been Chancellor the object of his policy had been, as you were
+aware, to bring about an understanding with England; he trusted
+that these assurances might form the basis of that understanding
+which he so much desired. He had in mind a general neutrality
+agreement between England and Germany, though it was of
+course at the present moment too early to discuss details, and an
+assurance of British neutrality in the conflict which present crisis
+might possibly produce, would enable him to look forward to
+realisation of his desire.</p>
+
+<p>In reply to his Excellency's inquiry how I thought his request
+would appeal to you, I said that I did not think it probable
+that at this stage of events you would care to bind yourself to any
+course of action and that I was of opinion that you would desire
+to retain full liberty.</p>
+
+<p>Our conversation upon this subject having come to an end,
+I communicated the contents of your telegram of to-day to his
+Excellency, who expressed his best thanks to you.</p></div>
+
+<p>To the foregoing outrageous proposition, the
+Government of Great Britain gave the proud and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+noble reply which follows, for all times to be recorded
+in diplomatic annals to the eternal honour
+and glory of the Ministers who incurred the responsibility
+of, and of the distinguished diplomat
+who drafted, that memorable document:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<div class="center">Sir Edward Grey to Sir E. Goschen.</div>
+
+<p>(Telegraphic.)</p>
+
+<div class="right">Foreign Office, July 30, 1914.</div>
+
+<p>Your telegram of 29th July.</p>
+
+<p>His Majesty's Government cannot for a moment entertain
+the Chancellor's proposal that they should bind themselves to
+neutrality on such terms.</p>
+
+<p>What he asks us in effect is to engage to stand by while
+French colonies are taken and France is beaten so long as Germany
+does not take French territory as distinct from the colonies.</p>
+
+<p>From the material point of view such a proposal is unacceptable,
+for France, without further territory in Europe being
+taken from her, could be so crushed as to lose her position as a
+Great Power, and become subordinate to German policy.</p>
+
+<p>Altogether, apart from that, it would be a disgrace for us
+to make this bargain with Germany at the expense of France, a
+disgrace from which the good name of this country would never
+recover.</p>
+
+<p>The Chancellor also in effect asks us to bargain away whatever
+obligation or interest we have as regards the neutrality of
+Belgium. We could not entertain that bargain either.</p>
+
+<p>Having said so much, it is unnecessary to examine whether
+the prospect of a future general neutrality agreement between
+England and Germany offered positive advantages sufficient to
+compensate us for tying our hands now. We must preserve our
+full freedom to act as circumstances may seem to us to require in
+any such unfavourable and regrettable development of the present
+crisis as the Chancellor contemplates.</p>
+
+<p>You should speak to the Chancellor in the above sense, and
+add most earnestly that the only way of maintaining the good relations
+between England and Germany is that they should continue
+to work together to preserve the peace of Europe; if we succeed in
+this object, the mutual relations of Germany and England will, I
+believe, be <b>ipso facto</b> improved and strengthened. For that object
+His Majesty's Government will work in that way with all sincerity
+and good-will.</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>And I will say this: if the peace of Europe can be preserved,
+and the present crisis safely passed, my own endeavour will be to
+promote some arrangement to which Germany will be a party,
+by which she could be assured that no aggressive or hostile policy
+would be pursued against her or her allies by France, Russia, and
+ourselves, jointly or separately. I have desired this and worked
+for it, as far as I could, through the last Balkan crisis, and, Germany
+having a corresponding object, our relations sensibly improved.
+The idea has hitherto been too Utopian to form the subject
+of definite proposals, but if this present crisis, so much more
+acute than any that Europe has gone through for generations, be
+safely passed, I am hopeful that the relief and reaction which will
+follow may make possible some more definite rapprochement between
+the Powers than has been possible hitherto.</p></div>
+
+<p>The British Government could not take a more
+dignified stand and express their indignation at the
+infamous proposal in stronger and more noble
+terms.</p>
+
+<p>Let us now read the indignant protest of Mr.
+Asquith, the British Prime Minister, against the
+outrageous German proposition, addressed to the
+House of Commons, where it raised a storm of applause,
+proclaiming to the World the dogged determination
+of England to wage war rather than
+agree to the dishonourable German proposal:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>What does that amount to? Let me just ask the House.
+I do so, not with the object of inflaming passion, certainly not
+with the object of exciting feeling against Germany, but I do so to
+vindicate and make clear the position of the British Government
+in this matter. What did that proposal amount to? In the first
+place, it meant this: That behind the back of France&mdash;they were
+not made a party to these communications&mdash;we should have given,
+if we had assented to that, a free license to Germany to annex, in
+the event of a successful war, the whole of the extra European
+dominions and possessions of France. What did it mean as regards
+Belgium? When she addressed, as she has addressed in
+the last few days, her moving appeal to us to fulfil our solemn
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>guarantee of her neutrality, what reply should we have given?
+What reply should we have given to that Belgian appeal? We
+should have been obliged to say that without her knowledge we
+had bartered away to the Power threatening her our obligation
+to keep our plighted word. The House has read, and the country
+has read, of course, in the last few hours, the most pathetic appeal
+addressed by the King of Belgium, and I do not envy the man
+who can read that appeal with an unmoved heart. Belgians are
+fighting and losing their lives. What would have been the position
+of Great Britain to-day in the face of that spectacle if we had
+assented to this infamous proposal? Yes, and what are we to get
+in return for the betrayal of our friends and the dishonour of our
+obligations? What are we to get in return? A promise&mdash;nothing
+more; a promise as to what Germany would do in certain eventualities;
+a promise, be it observed&mdash;I am sorry to say it, but it must
+be put upon record&mdash;given by a Power which was at that very
+moment announcing its intention to violate its own treaty, and
+inviting us to do the same. I can only say, if we had dallied or
+temporized, we, as a Government, should have covered ourselves
+with dishonour, and we should have betrayed the interests of this
+country, of which we are trustees.</p></div>
+
+<p>After quoting and eulogizing the telegraphic
+despatch of Sir Edward Grey to Sir E. Goschen,
+dated July 30, 1914, Mr. Asquith proceeded as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>That document, in my opinion, states clearly, in temperate
+and convincing language, the attitude of this Government. Can
+any one who reads it fail to appreciate the tone of obvious sincerity
+and earnestness which underlies it; can any one honestly doubt
+that the Government of this country in spite of great provocation&mdash;and
+I regard the proposals made to us as proposals which we
+might have thrown aside without consideration and almost without
+answer&mdash;can any one doubt that in spite of great provocation the
+right hon. gentleman, who had already earned the title&mdash;and no
+one ever more deserved it&mdash;of Peace Maker of Europe, persisted
+to the very last moment of the last hour in that beneficent but
+unhappily frustrated purpose. I am entitled to say, and I do so
+on behalf of this country&mdash;I speak not for a party, I speak for the
+country as a whole&mdash;that we made every effort any Government
+could possibly make for peace. But this war has been forced upon
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>us. What is it we are fighting for? Every one knows, and no one
+knows better than the Government the terrible incalculable suffering,
+economic, social, personal and political, which war, and especially
+a war between the Great Powers of the world must entail.
+There is no man amongst us sitting upon this bench in these trying
+days&mdash;more trying perhaps than any body of statesmen for a
+hundred years have had to pass through, there is not a man
+amongst us who has not, during the whole of that time, had clearly
+before his vision the almost unequalled suffering which war, even
+in just cause, must bring about, not only to the peoples who are
+for the moment living in this country and in the other countries
+of the world, but to posterity and to the whole prospects of
+European civilization. Every step we took with that vision before
+our eyes, and with a sense of responsibility which it is impossible
+to describe. Unhappily, if in spite of all our efforts to keep the
+peace, and with that full and overpowering consciousness of the
+result, if the issue be decided in favour of war, we have, nevertheless,
+thought it to be the duty as well as the interest of this country
+to go to war, the House may be well assured it was because we
+believe, and I am certain the Country will believe, we are unsheathing
+our sword in a just cause.</p>
+
+<p>If I am asked what we are fighting for I reply in two
+sentences. In the first place to fulfil a solemn international obligation,
+an obligation which, if it had been entered into between
+private persons in the ordinary concerns of life, would have been
+regarded as an obligation not only of law but of honour, which no
+self-respecting man could possibly have repudiated. I say, secondly,
+we are fighting to vindicate the principle which, in these days
+when force, material force, sometimes seems to be the dominant
+influence and factor in the development of mankind, we are fighting
+to vindicate the principle that small nationalities are not to be
+crushed, in defiance of international good faith, by the military
+will of a strong and overmastering Power. I do not believe any
+nation ever entered into a great controversy&mdash;and this is one of the
+greatest history will ever know&mdash;with a clearer conscience and
+stronger conviction that it is fighting, not for aggression, not for
+the maintenance even of its own selfish interest, but that it is fighting
+in defence of principles, the maintenance of which is vital to
+the civilisation of the world. With a full conviction, not only of
+the wisdom and justice, but of the obligations which lay upon us
+to challenge this great issue, we are entering into the struggle.</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The German Government refusing to order
+their army to retire from the Belgian territory it
+had violated, at midnight, 4th to 5th August, 1914,
+the whole British Empire was at war with the
+whole German Empire.</p>
+
+<p>Surely, there is not the slightest necessity to
+argue any more that in the terrific war raging for
+the last four years, Justice and Right are on the
+side of England and her Allies. No war was
+ever more just, waged with equal honour for the
+triumph of Liberty and Civilization, for the protection
+of Humanity against the onslaught of
+barbarism developed to the cruelty of the darkest
+ages of History.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Call To Duty In Canada.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Every one knows how the news of the State of
+War between the British and German Empires
+were received in our great Canadian Dominion,
+after the days of anxious waiting which culminated
+in the rallying of England to the defence of the
+cause of Freedom and Civilization. When the
+call for duty was sounded in the Capital of the
+British Empire, it rolled over the mighty Atlantic,
+spreading over the length and breadth of Canada,
+being re-echoed with force in our Province of
+Quebec.</p>
+
+<p>At once called to prepare for the emergency,
+the Canadian Parliament met and unanimously
+decided that the Dominion would, of her own free
+will and patriotic decision, participate in the
+Great War. The course of events in Canada, for
+the last four years, is well known by all. It is
+recent history.</p>
+
+<p>My special object in condensing in this book
+the defence which I considered it my duty to make
+of the just and sacred cause of the British Empire,
+and her Allies, in the great war still raging with
+undiminished fury, being to show how I did, to the
+best of my ability, try to persuade my French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+Canadian Countrymen where was the true path of
+duty, and how false and disloyal were the unscrupulous
+theories of "Nationalism", I must first review
+the successive movements of public opinion
+in the Province of Quebec.</p>
+
+<p>In the preceding sentence, I have intently affirmed
+that the cause of the Allies was that of the
+whole British Empire. Surely, it should not be
+necessary to say so, as no truly loyal British subject
+would for a moment hesitate to come to that
+patriotic conclusion. Still, however incredible it
+is, the duty of the British colonies to rally to the
+flag to defend the Empire and participate in the
+deadly struggle between Civilization and barbarism,
+was challenged by the leaders of the "Nationalist
+school" in the Province of Quebec. Of course,
+that school never represented more than a small
+minority of thought and numbers. But, sad to admit,
+a fanatical minority, in days of trying sacrifices,
+can do a great deal of injury to a people by
+inflaming national and religious prejudices. We,
+French Canadians, have had much to suffer from
+the unpatriotic efforts of a few to bring our countrymen
+to take an erroneous view of the situation.</p>
+
+<p>At the opening of the war, the general
+opinion in the Province of Quebec was without
+doubt strongly in favor of Canada's participation
+in the struggle. Any student of the working of our
+constitutional system knows how the strength of
+public opinion is ascertained, outside of a general
+election, in all cases, and more specially with regard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+to measures of paramount importance when
+the country has to deal with a national emergency.</p>
+
+<p>The Parliament of Canada is the authorized
+representative of the Country. Called in a special
+session, at the very outbreak of the hostilities, they
+voted unanimously that it was our duty to participate
+in the war. All the representatives of the
+Province of Quebec heartily joined with those of
+all the other Provinces to vote this unanimous
+decision.</p>
+
+<p>In the light of events ever since, who can
+now reasonably pretend that the patriotic decision
+of the Parliament of Canada was not entirely,
+even enthusiastically, approved by the Canadian
+people? The press, even in the Province of Quebec,
+with only one exception of any consequence, was
+unanimous in its approval of the action of
+Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>The heads of our Church, the Archbishops and
+Bishops of the Ecclesiastical Provinces of Quebec,
+Montreal and Ottawa, in their very important
+Pastoral Letter on the duties of the Catholics in
+the present war, positively said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>We must acknowledge it&mdash;(nous ne saurions
+nous le dissimuler&mdash;): that conflict, one of the
+most terrific the world has yet seen, cannot but
+have its repercussion in our country. England is
+engaged into it, and who does not see that the fate
+of all the component parts of the Empire is bound
+with the fate of her arms. She relies upon our support,
+and that support, we are happy to say, has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+been generously offered to her both in men and
+money.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>No representative of public opinion, of any
+weight, outside of Parliament, professional men,
+leaders of finance, commerce and industry, in the
+Province of Quebec, raised a word of disapproval
+at the Parliamentary call to arms.</p>
+
+<p>Not one meeting was called, not one resolution
+was moved, to oppose the decision of the
+Canadian Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>Not one petition was addressed to the two
+Houses in Ottawa against Canada's participation
+in the war.</p>
+
+<p>Every one in the Province of Quebec knew
+that participating in the war would entail heavy
+financial sacrifices, and that the taxation of the
+country would have to be largely increased to
+meet the new obligations we had freely decided to
+incur for the salvation of the Empire and of
+Civilization.</p>
+
+<p>The Government of the day proposed the
+financial measures they considered necessary to
+raise the public revenue which the circumstances
+required. Those measures were unanimously
+approved by Parliament. The taxpayers of the
+country, those of the Province of Quebec like all
+the others, willingly and patriotically accepted
+and paid without complaint the new taxes into the
+public treasury. During more than the three first
+years of the war, I visited a good part of the Province
+of Quebec, and addressed several large public<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+meetings. Everywhere my attention was forcibly
+struck by the prompt willingness of my French
+Canadian countrymen to bear their share of the
+financial sacrifices Canada was called upon to
+make for the triumph of the cause of the Allies.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Recruiting By Voluntary Service.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>No stronger evidence could be given of the determination
+of the country as a whole, and over
+all its component parts, to support Great Britain
+and her Allies to final success, than the truly wonderful
+record of the voluntary enlistment of more
+than four hundred thousand men, of all walks in
+life, to rush to the front.</p>
+
+<p>Recruiting in the Province of Quebec indeed
+started very well. Several thousands of French
+Canadian youth rallied to the colors. I hope and
+trust that, sooner or later, it will be possible to
+make a more satisfactory statistical record of the
+number of French Canadians who enlisted. I am
+fully convinced that the total is somewhat much
+larger than the figures usually quoted. It would
+surely be conducive to a better understanding of
+the case, if such statistical information was carefully
+prepared and made public. It is easily conceivable
+that the pressure of the work of maintaining
+the splendid Canadian army renders it perhaps
+difficult to attend actually to the details of
+that compilation. So we can afford to wait for the
+redress of figures which may constitute a wrong to
+the race second in numbers but equal to any in
+patriotism in Canada.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Pending my remarks upon certain causes
+which have contributed to check recruiting
+amongst the French element in the Province of
+Quebec, I consider it important to mention those
+which were easy to ascertain and comprehend.</p>
+
+<p>It is a well known fact that early marriages
+are a rule in the Province of Quebec much more
+than in the other Provinces of the Dominion. As
+a natural consequence, the available number of
+young unmarried men for recruiting purposes was
+proportionately less. I myself have known parishes
+in our Province where half a dozen of unmarried
+young men from twenty years of age and
+upwards could not be found.</p>
+
+<p>It was easily to foresee that a comparison
+would be made between the number of Canadian-born
+volunteers in the English-speaking Provinces
+and that from the Province of Quebec. The degree
+of enthusiasm for enlistment in the other
+Provinces between the foreign born and the Canadian
+born has also been noticed. It has generally
+been admitted that most naturally the young men
+recently arrived in Canada were more strongly appealed
+to by all the sacred ties still binding them
+to their mother land. When generations have, for
+more than a century, enjoyed all the blessings of
+peace and lived far away from the turmoil of warlike
+preparations and military conflicts, is it to be
+much wondered at that the entire population is not
+at once permeated with the feeling of the dangers
+ahead, and do not rise rapidly to the full sense of
+the duty she is suddenly called upon to perform.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>My daily personal intercourse with hundreds
+of my French Canadian compatriots allowed me to
+realize that many of them, even amongst the leading
+classes, were over-confident that the Allies representing
+at the beginning the united effort of
+England, France and Russia, soon to be reinforced
+by Italy, breaking away from the Central Powers,
+would certainly be equal to the task of being victorious
+over German militarism. Repeatedly, before
+public meetings and in very numerous private
+conversations, I urgently implored my hearers not
+to be so deluded, doing my best to convince them
+that it would be a fatal error to shut our eyes from
+the truth, that the military power of Central
+Europe, comprising the two great Empires of
+Germany and Austria, Bulgaria, with the help of
+Asiatic Turkey, and the undisguised support of
+baneful teutonic influences and intrigues at the
+courts of Petrograd and Athens, was gigantic, and
+that the terrible conflict would surely develop into
+a struggle for life and death between human freedom
+and barbarism.</p>
+
+<p>This feeling of over-confidence was passing
+away, when it became evident that to triumph over
+the modern huns and their associates was no easy
+task; that the goal of freeing humanity from the
+threatening universal domination would require
+the most determined effort of the nations who had
+heroically undertaken to reach it.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Intervention of Nationalism.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>The great struggle being waged with increased
+intensity, it was daily becoming more and more
+evident that the Allied nations were bound to
+muster all their courage, perseverance and resources
+to successfully fight their determined foe.
+It was just at the thick of this critical situation,
+calling forth the devotion and patriotism of all,
+that the "Nationalist" campaign of false theories
+and principles was launched with renewed activity
+in the Province of Quebec.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Henri Bourassa, ex-member of Labelle in
+the House of Commons, was, and still is, the recognized
+leader of the "Nationalist School" in our
+Province, and wherever it finds adherents. His
+personal organ, "<i>Le Devoir</i>," is daily expounding
+the doctrines of that School.</p>
+
+<p>In October, 1915, Mr. Bourassa issued a pamphlet
+of over four hundred pages entitled:&mdash;"<i>What
+do we owe England?</i>"&mdash;in French:&mdash;"<i>Que
+devons-nous à l'Angleterre?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>In the long overdrawn and farfetched argumentation
+of this volume, the author's effort is to
+try and prove that Canada owes nothing to England,
+that all those who favour the Canadian participation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
+in the war are "revolutionists," that we
+are unduly paying a large tribute to the Empire.</p>
+
+<p>In 1916, Mr. Bourassa supplemented his first
+book with a second pamphlet, entitled:&mdash;"<i>Yesterday,
+To-day, To-morrow</i>," in French:&mdash;"<i>Hier, Aujourd'hui,
+Demain</i>," in which he amplified the
+views expressed in the preceding volume.</p>
+
+<p>I undertook to read Mr. Bourassa's works,
+and I must say that I was astonished at what I
+found therein. I felt very strongly that his erroneous
+views&mdash;without questioning their sincerity&mdash;were
+bound to pervert the opinion of my
+French compatriots, to enflame their prejudices,
+and to do a great deal of harm in promoting the
+ever dangerous conflict of race fanaticism. Over
+forty years of experience of public life had taught
+me how easy it is to introduce a prejudice in a
+man's mind, but how difficult it is to destroy it
+when once it has taken root.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">What Do We Owe England?</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>To this question raised by Mr. Bourassa, and
+argued at length by himself in the negative, I
+answered by a chapter of my book:&mdash;"<i>L'Angleterre,
+le Canada et la Grand Guerre</i>"&mdash;"<i>England,
+Canada and the Great War</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Great Britain, ever since she came to the conclusion
+that the days of the old colonial policy
+were passed, and agreed that we should freely
+govern ourselves, with ministerial responsibility,
+within the powers set forth in our constitutional
+charter, has scrupulously respected our political
+liberty. We have administered our own affairs at
+our own free will. The Imperial Government
+never attempted to interfere with the development
+of our federal politics. They would surely have declined
+such interference, if it had been asked for.</p>
+
+<p>As long as we form part of the British Empire,
+it is evident that we owe to England that
+loyalty which every colony owes to her mother-country.
+Granted by the Sovereign Power ruling
+Canada the freest institutions, having the best of
+reasons to be fully satisfied with our relations
+with Great Britain, we are in duty bound to be
+loyal to her flag. We must be true to our allegiance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>We have freely decided to incur the sacrifices
+we are making for the war. We have so decided
+because we considered it of the greatest importance,
+for the future of Humanity, that the German
+ambition for universal domination be foiled; that
+the British Empire be maintained; that France
+should continue a first class Power, as expressed
+by Mr. Asquith; that before all, and above all, the
+eternal principles of Right, Justice and Civilization,
+shall not be trampled upon by the terrific assault
+of teutonic barbarism. Moreover, we are
+also in duty bound to judge with fairness England's
+part in the great society of nations, and,
+especially, that she plays in the great events of the
+present crisis. Beyond doubt, a truly loyal Canadian
+must refrain from poisoning foreign opinion
+and that of his fellow British subjects against
+Great Britain in attributing her course to selfish
+interests, wilfully taking no account of her broad
+and admirable foreign policy, ever inspired by the
+steady desire to maintain peace.</p>
+
+<p>In the first mentioned work, Mr. Bourassa
+lays great stress on the fact that for nearly a century
+and a half, previous to the South African
+War, Canada did not participate in the wars of
+the Empire. He extensively quotes from the documents
+and the discussions between Canada's representatives
+and the Imperial Government, respecting
+the defence of our country, and that of
+the Empire herself. He concludes by pretending
+that the result of all these negotiations and conventions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+was the agreement that Canada would
+have only to attend to her own defence, and that
+Great Britain was always obliged to protect us
+against all outside attacks. From these pretensions
+he draws the startling conclusion that all
+those who do not stand by the conventions he did
+his best to emphasize are doing revolutionary
+work.</p>
+
+<p>The answer to such extravagant notions is
+rather plain and easy. There was not the slightest
+necessity for the Nationalist leader to multiply
+lengthy quotations to prove what mere common
+sense settles at first thought:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>First:&mdash;That any country, whether it be independent
+or a colony, must defend itself when attacked
+by an enemy.</p>
+
+<p>Second:&mdash;That a Sovereign State is bound to
+defend all the territory under its authority and
+covered by its flag.</p>
+
+<p>But all this has nothing whatever to do with
+the very different question of Canada's participation,
+outside her own territory, in a war in which
+Great Britain is engaged, which participation
+Canada has freely, deliberately approved and ordered.
+Such was the case in 1914. The Parliament
+and the people of Canada at once realized that
+in the gigantic conflict into which Germany had
+drawn all the Great Powers of Europe, our future
+destiny as much as that of England herself was at
+stake. Without the slightest hesitation, unasked
+and unsolicited by the Mother Country, we decided<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+that we were in duty bound to do our share
+to defend the great Empire of which we are a very
+important component part, and to help saving the
+world from tyrannical domination.</p>
+
+<p>Much too often giving to words a meaning
+which they positively cannot convey, Mr. Bourassa
+argued at length to prove that the agreements,
+conventions, and understandings arrived at between
+the Imperial and Canadian Governments, at
+different dates, were a <i>solemn treaty</i>.</p>
+
+<p>How false and untenable such a pretention is,
+surely needs no lengthy argument. International
+Law knows no treaties but those made between
+Sovereign States. It is most absurd to pretend
+that a Sovereign State can make a treaty between
+herself and its own colony. Where is the man with
+the slightest notion of Constitutional Government
+who would pretend, for instance, that the British
+North American Act is a treaty between Great
+Britain and Canada. It is an Act passed by the
+Legislative authority of the Sovereign State to
+which we belong, enacting the conditions under
+which Canada would enjoy the rights and privileges
+of constitutional self-government, participating
+in the exercise of Sovereignty within the limits
+of the powers enumerated in the Act creating the
+Dominion. It was precisely because we knew we
+were acting within the limits of those powers, that
+we decided to join with England and her Allies in
+the great war.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Canada Is Not A Sovereign State.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>As long as Canada will remain under the flag
+of Great Britain&mdash;and for one I hope it will yet be
+for many long years,&mdash;it is evident that it will not
+be a "<i>Sovereign State</i>" in the full sense of the
+word.</p>
+
+<p>One can hardly believe that the Nationalist
+leader, at page 17 of his pamphlet&mdash;"<i>Hier, Aujourd'hui,
+Demain</i>"&mdash;"<i>Yesterday, To-day, To-morrow</i>,"
+opens a chapter with the title: "<i>Les Colonies
+autonomes sont des Etats Souverains.</i>"&mdash;"<i>The autonomous
+colonies are Sovereign States.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa was evidently led to the grievous
+error contained in the preceding title by a complete
+misapprehension of the true meaning of the
+word "<i>autonomous</i>." He took "<i>autonomy</i>" for
+"<i>Sovereignty</i>," being under the delusion that the
+two are synonymous.</p>
+
+<p>Any student of History knows, or ought to
+know, that after the war which culminated in the
+independence of the United States, England adopted
+an entirely new colonial policy. She was the
+first Sovereign Power, and has ever since remained
+the only one, to realize that the old system was
+doomed to failure, that it was worn out. Her leading<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+statesmen, who always ranked amongst the
+most eminent the world over, were more and more
+convinced that the only safe colonial policy was
+that which would grant "<i>self-government</i>" to the
+colonies, trained to its harmonious working, for
+their interior management. The true meaning of
+this new policy was that several of the colonies
+were, by acts of the Imperial Parliament, called to
+the exercise of a share of the Sovereignty, well defined
+in their respective constitutional charters.
+Canada was one of the first British colonies to enjoy
+the advantages of such a large part of the
+Sovereign rights.</p>
+
+<p>Such "<i>autonomous colonies</i>" as Canada, Australia,
+New Zealand, South Africa, Newfoundland,
+have been, and are to the present day, do not transform
+them into "<i>Sovereign States</i>," enjoying full
+"Sovereign powers." They are not "<i>Independent
+States</i>" in the full sense of the word.</p>
+
+<p>That Canada is not a Sovereign State is proved
+beyond doubt by the very fact that she could not
+amend or change her constitutional charter by her
+own power and without a new Imperial law. If
+the Nationalist leader's pretention was sound, any
+member of the House of Commons, or of the Senate,
+in Ottawa, could propose a bill to repeal the
+British North America Act, 1867, and to replace it
+by another constitutional charter. The very supposition
+is absurd. Can it be imagined that His
+Excellency the Governor-General could be advised
+by his responsible Ministers to sanction, in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+name of His Majesty the Sovereign of Great
+Britain, a bill repealing an Act of the Imperial
+Parliament? Still it is exactly what Mr. Bourassa's
+theory amounts to.</p>
+
+<p>Our constitutional charter does not only provide
+what is called our Federal,&mdash;or National&mdash;autonomy,
+but also the Provincial autonomy. The
+powers of both are well defined in the Imperial
+Act. The Provinces of the Dominion also exercise
+that share of the Sovereign rights delegated to
+them by the Imperial Parliament. Would the Nationalist
+leader draw the extravagant conclusion
+that the territory of any one of the Provinces cannot
+be declared in the "State of War" with a Foreign
+Power, by His Majesty the King, without the
+assent of the Ministers of that Province? Still
+that absurd proposition would not be more so than
+that affirming the necessity of the assent of the
+Canadian Cabinet, to a declaration of War involving
+Canada in an Imperial struggle.</p>
+
+<p>The Sovereign right of declaring war to, and
+of making peace with, another independent State,
+is vested in the King of Great Britain, acting upon
+the advice of his responsible Ministers in the
+United Kingdom. To the Imperial Parliament
+belongs the constitutional authority to deal with
+the Imperial Foreign Affairs.</p>
+
+<p>It is plain that when Great Britain is at War
+with another Sovereign State the whole territory
+of the British Empire is in the "State of War"
+with that Nation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is inconceivable that Mr. Bourassa has
+seriously pretended that Canada was not at war
+with the German Empire the very moment the
+British Empire was so in consequence of the
+violation by Germany of Belgian neutrality. One
+can hardly believe that he has propounded the
+fallacious constitutional doctrine that His Majesty
+"<i>the King of England hath not the right to declare
+Canada in the State of War without the assent of
+the Canadian Cabinet</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Where and when has the Nationalist leader
+discovered that the Canadian Ministers have the
+right to advise His Majesty upon all the questions
+pertaining to the Imperial Foreign Affairs? Any
+one conversant with the constitutional status of
+Canada knows that the Canadian Ministers have
+the right to advise the representative of the Sovereign
+only upon matters as defined by the British
+North America Act, 1867, and its amendments.</p>
+
+<p>I was indeed very much surprised at the attempt
+of Mr. Bourassa to use the authority of Sir
+Erskine May in support of his erroneous pretension
+that the autonomous colonies of Great Britain
+were Sovereign States.</p>
+
+<p>To all the students of the Constitutional History
+of England, Sir Erskine May is a very well
+known and appreciated writer. I have read his
+works several times over for many years. I was
+certain that he had never written anything to justify
+the Nationalist leader in quoting him as he
+did.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Here follows the paragraph of May's Constitutional
+History quoted by Mr. Bourassa in support
+of his own views:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Parliament has recently pronounced it to be just that the
+Colonies which enjoy self-government, should undertake the responsibility
+and cost of their own military defence. To carry this
+policy into effect must be the work of time. But whenever it
+may be effected, the last material bond of connection with the
+Colonies will have been severed, and colonial states, acknowledging
+the honorary sovereignty of England, and fully armed for self-defence,
+as well against herself as others, will have grown out of
+the dependencies of the British Empire.</p></div>
+
+<p>I must say that I am absolutely unable to detect
+one single word in the above quotation to authorize
+Mr. Bourassa to affirm that Sir Erskine
+May was of opinion that "<i>the autonomous colonies
+were Sovereign States</i>." The true meaning of the
+above extract is surely very plain. What does it
+say? It declares, what was a fact, that the British
+<i>Parliament has recently pronounced it to be
+just that the Colonies which enjoy self-government
+should undertake the responsibility and cost of
+their own military defence</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Would the British Parliament have deemed
+it necessary to express such an opinion, if the Colonies
+had, then, been Sovereign States, consequently
+obliged, in duty bound, to defend themselves
+<i>alone</i> against any possible enemy. Surely
+not, for the obvious reason that Great Britain
+would have had no more responsibility for the
+defence of territories no longer covered by her flag
+and under her Sovereignty.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The very fact that the British Parliament
+thought proper, <i>under the then circumstances</i>, to
+say that the Colonies enjoying self-government
+should undertake to defend themselves, is the convincing
+proof that they were not Sovereign States.</p>
+
+<p>The following sentence of May's quotation
+says:&mdash;<i>To carry this policy into effect must be the
+work of time</i>.</p>
+
+<p>It is clear that the <i>policy</i> requiring the work
+of time to be carried into effect was not actually
+existent at the time Sir Erskine May was writing.</p>
+
+<p>The extract quoted by Mr. Bourassa concludes
+by declaring that when such a policy <i>has</i>
+been finally adopted, the Colonies will have developed
+into Colonial States having <i>grown out of
+the dependencies of the British Empire</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently, when the Dominions of Canada,
+Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, will have
+grown out of the dependencies of the British Empire,
+they will no longer be Colonies of Great
+Britain. But when will that very important event
+take place? Surely, Sir Erskine May could not
+foresee. Even to-day Mr. Bourassa cannot say
+more than any one else. Pending that unforeseen
+outcome, the Dominions will remain parts of the
+British Empire under her Sovereignty.</p>
+
+<p>The above quotation was taken by Mr. Bourassa
+from the edition of Sir Erskine May's "Constitutional
+History" published in 1912. But they
+were first edited by the author in 1863. When has
+the Imperial Parliament adopted the above mentioned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+"<i>Resolution</i>"? It was voted in 1862&mdash;the
+4th of March&mdash;more than fifty-six years ago.
+Quoted as it has been by Mr. Bourassa, it appears
+to have been only very recently adopted. The fact
+that it is more than half a century old, and was
+carried before the Federal Union of the Provinces,
+is a convincing proof that it has no bearing whatever
+upon the conditions of Canada's present
+colonial status. By the aforesaid "<i>Resolution</i>," the
+British House of Commons was only expressing the
+opinion that the time had come for the Colonies to
+undertake the responsibility and the cost of their
+defence. The "Resolution" does not say that Great
+Britain would no longer be called, in the exercise
+of the rights and duties of her Sovereignty, to defend
+her Colonial Empire.</p>
+
+<p>By what reasoning can a mere expression of
+opinion by the English House of Commons be interpreted
+as at once transforming the Colonies
+into independent Sovereign States?</p>
+
+<p>Any one somewhat conversant with the political
+events that led to the Federal Union of the
+Provinces knows that in applying to the British
+Parliament for the new Constitutional Charter,
+the Legislature of United Canada had a twofold
+object:&mdash;first, the settlement of the constitutional
+difficulties then pending between Upper and
+Lower Canada; secondly, a broader development
+of Canada and also of the British Empire. Such
+was the purpose of the coalition government formed
+in 1864. All the members of that Cabinet were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+strongly in favour of the maintenance of Canada's
+union with Great Britain. I have heard them expounding
+their views on what the future of Canada
+ought to be. I am positive that neither Sir John
+A. Macdonald, Sir Georges Cartier, the honorable
+Georges Brown, nor any of their colleagues, of
+both political parties, ever said a word which
+could be construed as expressing the opinion that
+the proposed Federal Union would make of
+Canada an independent Sovereign State. It is
+incredible that Mr. Bourassa should have so
+erroneously understood their real views so as
+to pretend that they favoured Confederation for
+that very purpose.</p>
+
+<p>As a proof of his pretension, he quoted the
+following words of Sir John A. Macdonald, in the
+Legislative Assembly of old United Canada:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>With us the Sovereign, or, in this country
+the representative of the Sovereign, can act only
+on the advice of His Ministers, those Ministers
+being responsible to the people through Parliament.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa used the foregoing sentence in
+support of his contention that the King of England
+could not declare war without the assent of the
+Canadian Cabinet. It is impossible to understand
+how such a notion can be seriously held and expressed.
+His Majesty cannot ask nor accept such
+an advice, if it was tendered, for the very reason
+that the Canadian Cabinet has not the constitutional
+right to advise the King respecting the international
+relations of the Empire. And why?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+Precisely because the Canadian Ministers would
+not be responsible for their advice to the Imperial
+Parliament and to the electorate of the United
+Kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>The true meaning of the above quoted sentence
+of Sir John A. Macdonald is very plain.
+Ministerial responsibility was the fundamental
+principle of the old Constitution, as it is of the
+Federal Charter. Sir John A. Macdonald was perfectly
+right in affirming that "<i>in Canada, as in
+England, the Sovereign could act only on the advice
+of His Ministers," that is to say on the advice
+of His responsible Ministers within the constitutional
+powers of our Parliament on all matters
+respecting which they had the constitutional right
+to advise His Majesty</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Sir John A. Macdonald never said&mdash;he could
+not possibly say&mdash;that as Prime Minister of
+Canada, under the new Constitution, he would have
+the right to advise the Sovereign on all matters
+within the exclusive constitutional jurisdiction of
+the Imperial Parliament, for instance respecting
+the exercise of the Royal prerogative of declaring
+war against, or of making peace with, a foreign
+independent State. He has never propounded
+such an utterly false constitutional doctrine.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa went still further. He quoted
+the following sentence from Sir John A. Macdonald:&mdash;"<i>We
+stand with regard to the people of
+Canada precisely in the same position as the
+House of Commons in England stands with regard
+to the people of England</i>."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I was indeed most astonished to read Mr.
+Bourassa's inference from those words that Sir
+John A. Macdonald <i>had affirmed the absolute
+equality of powers of the Imperial and the Canadian
+Parliaments</i>.</p>
+
+<p>If the opinion expressed by Sir John A. Macdonald
+could be so interpreted, he would have affirmed&mdash;what
+was radically wrong&mdash;that under
+the new Constitution, the Canadian Parliament
+would have, <i>concurrently with the Imperial Parliament</i>,
+absolutely the same powers. What did
+that mean? It meant that the Canadian Parliament,
+just as the Imperial Parliament, would have
+the right to edict laws establishing Home Rule in
+Ireland, regulating the government of India and
+the Crown Colonies, granting constitutional charters
+for the good government of the Australian and
+South African Dominions, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>Surely it is not necessary to argue at any
+length to prove that Sir John A. Macdonald never
+for a moment entertained such an opinion. What
+he really said, in the above quoted words, was that
+within their constitutional jurisdiction, within the
+limits of their respective powers, the two Parliaments
+stood in the same position, <i>respectively</i>,
+with regard to the people of England and to the
+people of Canada. It was equivalent to saying&mdash;what
+was positively true&mdash;that the British
+Ministers and the British Parliament were responsible
+to the people of England, and that the
+Canadian Ministers and the Canadian Parliament<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+were responsible to the people of Canada,&mdash;both
+of them within the limits of their respective
+constitutional powers.</p>
+
+<p>If the Canadian Legislature had enjoyed all
+the constitutional powers of the British Parliament,
+she would not have been obliged to pass addresses
+asking the latter to enact a new charter
+creating the Federal Union of the Provinces. She
+could have repealed her then existing constitution
+and enacted the new one by her own authority.
+But that she could not do. She could not repeal the
+old, nor enact the new charter.</p>
+
+<p>But the most extraordinary is that Mr.
+Bourassa went so far as to declare that Canada
+should have participated in the present war only
+as a "<i>Nation</i>," meaning, of course, as an independent
+Sovereign State.</p>
+
+<p>On reading such a preposterous proposition,
+at once it strikes one's mind most forcibly that
+if Canada had really had the power to intervene
+in the world's struggle as a "Nation," she would
+have had the equal right to the choice of three
+alternatives.</p>
+
+<p>First:&mdash;Declare war against Germany and in
+favor of the Allies.</p>
+
+<p>Second:&mdash;Remain neutral.</p>
+
+<p>Third:&mdash;Declare war against Great Britain
+and fight for Germany.</p>
+
+<p>For it is obvious that all
+the Sovereign States&mdash;and Canada like them all if
+she had been one of them&mdash;had the Sovereign Right
+to fight for or against Great Britain, or to remain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+neutral. Of course, I am merely explaining in its
+entirety the Right of a Sovereign State. I surely do
+not mean to say that Canada, had she really been
+such a State, would in any way have been justifiable
+in joining with Germany in her dastardly
+attempt to crush Civilization in the barbarous
+throes of her domination.</p>
+
+<p>What would His Excellency the Governor-General
+have answered his Prime Minister advising
+him to declare war against England, he who
+represents His Majesty at Ottawa? Would he not
+have told him at once that the Canadian Prime
+Minister had no right whatever to give him such
+an advice; that Canada, being a British Colony,
+could not declare war against her Sovereign State;
+that for the Canadian people to take up arms
+against England would be treasonable revolt?</p>
+
+<p>It is absolutely incredible that a public man,
+aspiring to the leadership of his countrymen, can
+have been so completely lost to the sense of the
+Canadian constitutional situation as to boldly attempt
+to pervert their mind with such fallacious
+notions. He might as well pretend that the State
+of New York, for instance, has the Sovereign Right
+to declare war against the Government of the
+United States.</p>
+
+<p>I, for one, cannot help wondering that any one
+can seriously think that a colony, always pretending
+to remain loyally so, can wage war against her
+Sovereign State. I feel sure that all sensible men
+do share my views on that point.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">German Illusions.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>When Germany threw the gauntlet to the
+Powers of the "Entente," she labored under the
+delusion that the war would most surely break
+down the British Empire. She was determined to
+do her utmost to that end. But she utterly failed
+in her criminal efforts.</p>
+
+<p>Strongly bound by ties of affection and constitutional
+freedom, the great autonomous Dominions
+and Colonies at once rallied with courage
+and patriotism to the defence of the Empire, of
+Justice, of Right and Civilization. India,&mdash;that
+great Indian Empire&mdash;to the utter disappointment
+of Germany, has stood admirably by Great
+Britain ever since the outbreak of the War, by her
+noble contributions of man-power and her munificent
+generosity of very large sums of money, in
+one instance amounting to $500,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>The Crown Colonies have also done their
+share of duty with great devotion.</p>
+
+<p>The admirable result which for the last four
+years has been shining bright and glorious all over
+the world, is that, contrary to teutonic expectations,
+the war, far from breaking asunder the
+British Empire, has wonderfully solidified her
+mighty edifice, by an intensity of loyalty to her
+free institutions, to her glorious flag, which the
+enjoyment of the blessings of peace would not have
+proved so easily possible.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Nationalist Error.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>The leaders of our Nationalist School have
+for years strenuously laboured to pervert the mind
+of our French-Canadian compatriots by the false
+pretensions that we were, in some mysterious way,
+coerced to participate in the European War. Even
+previous to the days of the South African conflict,
+they boldly took the stand that Canada should, on
+no account, and under no circumstances whatever,
+participate in what they called the Wars of the
+Empire&mdash;<i>les guerres de l'Empire</i>. Canada, they
+affirmed, had only to defend her own territory if
+attacked.</p>
+
+<p>Fully appreciating how insidious and dangerous
+such theories were, I endeavoured to show, as
+forcibly as I could, that there had been no attempt
+by England at coercion of this Dominion to help
+her in the struggle against Germany. Of course,
+as previously explained, Great Britain being at
+war with the German Empire, the whole British
+Empire was at war. But no one in England ever
+intended to propose to force the colonies to engage
+actively into the fight. The Imperial Parliament
+would certainly not have taken into consideration
+any such proposition.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But is it not plain and beyond discussion that
+we, <i>ourselves</i>, had the undoubted right to intervene
+in the war to the extent that we would consider
+it our bounden duty to do so?</p>
+
+<p>Evidently we could not remain neutral in the
+great conflict. At the very moment that Great
+Britain was at war with Germany, Canada, a
+British Colony, was part and parcel of the belligerent
+Sovereign State, the British Empire. By an
+incredible misconception, the Nationalist leaders
+confounded <i>neutrality</i> with <i>non-participation</i> in
+the war, if we had so decided.</p>
+
+<p>To be, or not to be, neutral, was not within our
+constitutional rights. If Germany, either by land
+or by sea, had attacked our territory, as she had
+the undoubted belligerent right to do, would it
+have availed us an iota to implore her mercy
+by affirming that we were neutral? Could we
+have pretended that she was violating neutral
+territory?</p>
+
+<p>No one with the least notion of International
+Law would for a moment hesitate to give the true
+answers to those questions.</p>
+
+<p>But the very different question to participate,
+or not, in the war, was for us alone to decide according
+to our constitutional charter. We have
+freely, deliberately, decided to do our share in the
+great war. We continue and persevere in our noble
+task, freely and deliberately.</p>
+
+<p>It is admitted by all that under the actual
+constitutional organization of the Empire, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+Imperial Parliament could not require the autonomous
+colonies to participate in the war. But no
+one can assuredly deny to that Parliament the
+right, in the case of an imminent peril, to formulate
+the desire that the autonomous colonies would help
+Great Britain to conjure the threatened calamity.</p>
+
+<p>But, in the present case, the Imperial Parliament
+has not even been under the necessity of expressing
+such a legitimate wish, for the obvious
+reason that the colonies at once took their patriotic
+stand in favor of the cause of England and her
+Allies. If the colonies had not so decided, of their
+own free will, it is most likely that the Imperial
+Parliament would not have expressed the wish for
+the assistance of the Dominions overseas.</p>
+
+<p>The hearty support granted by the colonies to
+Great Britain, to develop its full value, had to be
+spontaneous, enthusiastic. Such it was, such it is,
+and such it will be to the last day of the conflict
+which victorious conclusion we are so strongly
+determined to achieve.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Had Canada The Right To Help England?</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Not satisfied to do the best it could to persuade
+our French-Canadian countrymen that they
+had been coerced into the war by England, our
+"Nationalist School" extensively used the argument
+that Canada had not the right to intervene
+into the European struggle. I refuted this erroneous
+pretension by the following propositions, the
+very essence of our constitutional rights and liberties:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1.&mdash;The Canadian Cabinet had the undoubted
+constitutional right to advise His Excellency the
+Governor-General to approve the measures to be
+taken to give effect to their decision to participate
+in the war, decision and measures for which they
+were responsible to the Canadian Parliament and
+to the Canadian Electorate.</p>
+
+<p>2.&mdash;The Canadian Parliament had the undoubted
+constitutional right to approve or disapprove
+the decision and the measures of the
+Cabinet. Parliament approved that decision and
+those measures, acting within their constitutional
+right.</p>
+
+<p>3.&mdash;Even at the time I was writing, it could
+evidently be affirmed that the Canadian Electorate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+had approved the stand taken by both the Canadian
+Cabinet and the Canadian Parliament according
+to well known and defined constitutional
+usages.</p>
+
+<p>Was it not proved beyond reasonable controversy,
+that the Canadian people heartily approved
+the decision of their Parliament to help in the
+great war?</p>
+
+<p>Let me summarize the evidence as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1.&mdash;The war policy of the Cabinet, at the
+special session called in August, 1914, for that
+very purpose, was unanimously approved by
+Parliament, no Senator and no Member of the
+House of Commons moving to censure the responsible
+ministers for their decision to have Canada
+to participate in the war. The two great political
+parties have solemnly sanctioned that decision.</p>
+
+<p>2.&mdash;Public opinion was also very strongly
+proved by the almost unanimity of the public press
+patriotically supporting the stand taken by Parliament.
+The exceptions were so few, that, as
+usual, they contributed to emphasize the soundness
+of the general rule.</p>
+
+<p>3.&mdash;During the three years following the decision
+of the Canadian Parliament, a great number
+of large public meetings were held throughout
+Canada, and addressed by many leading and influential
+citizens all approving the action of Parliament.
+The meetings enthusiastically concurred
+in the powerful indorsation of the war policy of
+the speakers.</p>
+
+<p>In a few public gatherings some disapproval<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
+was expressed, but not one meeting would go to
+the length of passing "Resolutions" censuring the
+Cabinet and the Parliament of Canada, or declaring
+that our Dominion should not have interfered
+into the war.</p>
+
+<p>4.&mdash;Not one petition against the Canadian
+intervention into the war was addressed to Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>5.&mdash;Leading Clergymen, of all denominations;
+leaders of political associations almost of all
+shades of opinion; financial, industrial, commercial
+leaders, all of them approved the patriotic
+interference of Canada into the war.</p>
+
+<p>6.&mdash;The evident general approval of the unanimous
+decision, taken in 1916, to extend the
+Parliamentary term.</p>
+
+<p>7.&mdash;The wonderful success of the public loans
+raised for war purposes.</p>
+
+<p>8.&mdash;The enlightened and generous patriotism
+with which the country has accepted and paid war
+taxation.</p>
+
+<p>9.&mdash;But, above all, the voluntary recruiting of
+four hundred thousand men of all social conditions
+who have rallied to the flag of the Empire for the
+defence of her existence and for the triumph of
+Civilization and Justice.</p>
+
+<p>I, therefore, drew the undeniable conclusion
+that, contrary to the "Nationalist" pretension,
+Canada was participating in the war in the most
+regular constitutional way, without even the shadow
+of a breach of our Canadian autonomy, of our
+constitutional rights and liberties.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Duty of Canada.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Having affirmed that Canada had no right to
+interfere in the war, the "Nationalist" leaders at
+once concluded that she was not in duty bound to do
+so. That most discreditable inference was, of
+course, the natural sequence of the wrong principle
+aforesaid. They further drew the conclusion
+that it was no part of the duty of Canadians
+to join the Colors to help winning the war.</p>
+
+<p>It was in flat contradiction of those erroneous
+notions that I positively declared, in my letter dedicating
+my book to my French Canadian compatriots,
+that "<i>in defending with the most sincere
+conviction the sacred cause of the Allies, I am
+doing my duty as a free subject of the British
+Empire, as a citizen of Canada and of the Province
+of Quebec, as a son of France, as a devoted
+servant of Justice and Right</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Very narrow minded indeed is the man who
+has no higher conception of his duty than the one
+limiting him to the observance of positive and negative
+laws enacted by the legitimate authority to
+protect society and every one of its members.</p>
+
+<p>When England, together with the other leading
+nations, was brutally challenged by Germany,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
+and threatened in her very national existence, it is
+beyond comprehension that Canada, and all the
+British colonial possessions overseas, could so mistake
+their bounden duty as to refuse rushing to
+help the Mother Country in such a trying occurrence.
+Moreover, have we not, merely as men, duties
+to perform to protect Civilization against the deadly
+attack of barbarism, to have Justice and Right
+triumphant in international relations?</p>
+
+<p>It is a matter of deep wonder to me that any
+one could have been so blind as not to perceive that
+in joining with Great Britain to defend the cause
+of the Allies, we were surely defending our own
+territory, our own soil, our own homes. How incredible
+was the "Nationalist" contention that we
+should have waited for the actual German attack
+of our land before mustering our resources of resistance.
+Who could not see, at a glance, that if
+Germany had, as it fully expected, easily triumphed
+over the combined forces of France, England
+and Russia, it would have been sheer madness
+to attempt resisting the victorious onslaught of a
+few hundred thousands of her veteran soldiers,
+whose valour would have been doubled by the enthusiasm
+of their European conquest.</p>
+
+<p>After mature consideration of the possible results
+of the disastrous defeat of the combined
+efforts of the Allies, both on land and sea, the conclusion
+was forced upon my mind that Germany,
+ferociously elated by such a wonderful success,
+would no doubt have exacted from England the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+cession of Canada to her Empire. So that without
+even firing a gun against our territory, our
+wide Dominion would have been instantly transferred
+from the British to the German Sovereignty.
+I shuddered at such a vision, and still more deeply
+realized how much we, Canadians, were all in duty
+bound to help the Allies in crushing Prussian
+militarism.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Soudanese and South African Wars.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>In the two previously mentioned pamphlets,
+Mr. Bourassa argued at length to prove that Canada
+had been led to intervene in the great European
+war as a consequence of her intervention in
+the South African War. It is well known throughout
+the Dominion that the South African conflict
+was the occasion chosen by the "Nationalist"
+leader to proclaim his doctrine that the autonomous
+colonies should have nothing to do with the
+wars of the Empire&mdash;<span class="smcap">les guerres de l'empire</span>. He
+then strongly opposed Canadian support of Great
+Britain in her struggle in South Africa.</p>
+
+<p>In one of his pamphlets, Mr. Bourassa affirmed
+that the Government of Sir John A. Macdonald
+had, in 1884, refused the request of the Imperial
+Government to interfere in its favour in the Soudanese
+war. Well aware of the events of this
+struggle, I positively knew that the "Nationalist"
+leader's assertion was not borne out by the facts,
+and was historically false. I considered it my
+duty, in a special chapter, to explain fully the circumstances
+of the case to my French Canadian
+countrymen.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It should be well remembered that England
+was brought into the Soudanese conflict on account
+of her relations with Egypt, which she had
+delivered from the Turkish yoke.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa prefaced his above mentioned
+affirmation by recalling the fact that it was in consideration
+of the Soudanese difficulties that "<i>for
+the first time in the history of the Colonial
+Empire of Great Britain, offers of armed support
+were made by the autonomous colonies</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Is it not evident that if&mdash;as was true&mdash;such
+offers were made spontaneously by the Colonies, it
+cannot be pretended that the proffered armed support
+was asked by England. If England did not
+solicit such support, it is plain that Sir John A.
+Macdonald and his Cabinet could not refuse what
+was never applied for.</p>
+
+<p>What are the true historical facts?</p>
+
+<p>In November 1884, General Laurie, who has
+represented one of the electoral divisions of Nova
+Scotia at Ottawa, who has also held a seat in the
+British House of Commons, took the initiative to
+propose to raise a Canadian regiment for the campaign
+in the Soudan. In the regular official way,
+General Laurie's offer was addressed to the Secretary
+of State for the Colonies, Lord Derby. The
+Imperial Government declined the offer.</p>
+
+<p>On the 7th of February, 1885, on hearing the
+news of the disaster of Khartoum, which caused
+great excitement in England, and naturally created
+a strong public feeling to avenge the outrage,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+General Laurie, always enthusiastic, tendered
+anew his services. He was not the only Canadian
+officer wishing to go and fight the cruel Soudaneses.
+A member of the Canadian Parliament,
+Colonel Williams, commanding the 46th volunteer
+battalion of Durham-East, also desired to take part
+in the African campaign with his regiment. On
+the 9th of February, 1885, he tendered his proposition
+to Sir Charles Tupper, then High Commissioner
+in London, who sent it to the Colonial Office.</p>
+
+<p>On the 10th of February, His Excellency the
+Governor General, Lord Lansdowne, cabled to the
+Colonial Secretary that the offers of military
+service were very numerous. This spontaneous
+movement, so rapidly spreading, was the forerunner
+of those of 1899 and 1914. Thirty years
+ago, and long before, there were brave men in
+Canada. There always have been and ever will
+be.</p>
+
+<p>These news were no doubt very encouraging
+for the Imperial authorities.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Derby, thanking Lord Lansdowne, begged
+him to say "<i>Whether they</i> (the offers of service)
+<i>are sanctioned and recommended by the
+Dominion Government</i>."</p>
+
+<p>On the 12th of February, Lord Lansdowne
+answered Lord Derby that the Dominion Government
+was ready to approve recruiting in Canada
+for service in Egypt or elsewhere, provided that
+the men would be enlisted under the authority of
+the Imperial Army Discipline Act, and the expense
+paid by the Imperial Treasury.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It consequently follows from the above despatches
+that the Soudanese campaign offered to
+many officers of our volunteer Militia the long
+wished for opportunity to freely tender their services
+to the Imperial Government; that the British
+authorities never applied to the Canadian Government,
+then presided by Sir John A. Macdonald,
+for armed support in Soudanese Africa; that, on
+being officially informed of the offers of service
+received by His Excellency the Governor General,
+the Colonial Secretary, before accepting or declining
+them, enquired if the Canadian Government
+sanctioned and recommended them; that the Governor
+General answered him in the affirmative,
+the recruiting to be made according to the Imperial
+Military Act at the expense of the Imperial
+exchequer.</p>
+
+<p>On the 16th of February, the War Minister,
+then the Marquis of Hartington, informed the
+Colonial Secretary that he had come to the conclusion
+to decline with thanks the offers of service
+from Canada, for the reason that it would have
+taken too long a time to recruit and organize the
+regiments offered by General Laurie and Colonel
+Williams.</p>
+
+<p>Was I not right, when I refuted Mr. Bourassa's
+assertion, in saying that if a <i>refusal</i> was <i>then</i>
+given, it was by the British Government who had
+received the freely tendered services, and not by
+the Canadian Government, to whom no demand of
+armed support had been made by Great Britain?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>If it is indeed very astonishing that Mr.
+Bourassa should have taken the responsibility to
+affirm that the Government of Sir John A. Macdonald
+had refused to help Great Britain in the
+Soudanese campaign, it is easy to understand his
+object in so doing. His purpose was to convince
+his French Canadian readers that the political
+leaders at the head of the Government, in 1899 and
+1914, together with the Canadian Parliament, had,
+in a revolutionary way, reversed the traditional
+policy of Canada of non-intervention in the "wars
+of the Empire"&mdash;<i>les guerres de l'empire</i>. And to
+achieve his end, so detrimental to the best interests
+of the Dominion, he did not hesitate to draw an
+absolutely erroneous conclusion from undeniable
+historical facts.</p>
+
+<p>The "Nationalist" leader was very anxious to
+charge the chieftains of the two great political
+parties with an equal responsibility for what he
+terms a "Revolution" in our relations with the
+Mother Country. With this object constantly in
+view, he pretended that the intervention of Canada
+in the South African War created the precedent
+which brought about the Dominion participation
+in the European war, in 1914. In order to stir
+up to the utmost the prejudices of the French
+Canadians, he boldly qualified the South African
+conflict as an <i>infamous crime</i> on the part of
+England.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, the true history of the difficulties
+which culminated in the Boer War of 1899,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+was at the time little known throughout Canada,
+and even less particularly in the Province of Quebec.
+At the outbreak of the struggle, wishing to
+form a sound opinion of the causes of which it was
+the direct outcome, I made an exhaustive study of
+the South African question, beginning at the very
+inception of the Dutch settlement dating as far
+back as 1652, the year during which the Dutch
+East India Company occupied Table Bay. Six
+years later, in 1658, French Huguenots reached
+South Africa, joining with the Dutch Reformists,
+who rather energetically did all they could to assimilate
+them. Still later on, besides some few
+German immigrants, a third group of Europeans
+settled on the African coast. They were Englishmen.</p>
+
+<p>All the Europeans, on landing in South Africa,
+few in numbers, had at once to contend with
+the black race numbering many millions. The
+history of the long struggle between European
+civilization, represented by the English and Dutch
+immigrants, and African barbarity, is indeed very
+interesting. Carefully read and studied in all its
+bearings, it strongly impressed upon my mind the
+conviction that had it not been for the timely
+armed protection they often solicited and received
+from England, the Dutch Boers would certainly
+have been annihilated by the tribes of the black
+race. They could not hope to successfully resist
+the onslaughts to which they were repeatedly submitted.
+They were saved from utter destruction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+by the strong arm of Great Britain, occupying an
+important strategical position by her Cape Colony.
+The British Government had favoured the
+settlement of the sons of England in South Africa,
+for the purpose of assuring, by a powerful naval
+station, the freedom of communication with the
+great regions soon to develop into her vast Indian
+Empire.</p>
+
+<p>How, and under what circumstances, was
+British Sovereignty established in South Africa?
+I considered this question the most important to
+ascertain, in order to judge fairly the history of
+the last century in those regions. It was settled
+by the Peace Congress of Vienna, in 1815. All the
+European nations represented at that congress,
+have sanctioned British Sovereignty in South
+Africa upon the condition of the payment by England
+to the Kingdom of the Netherlands, of which
+Holland was then a part, of the sum of $30,000,000.
+Consequently the Sovereign Rights of Great Britain
+in South Africa were henceforth undeniable.</p>
+
+<p>In my French book, I somewhat extensively
+summarized the development of the British and
+Dutch groups of settlers in South Africa. It is
+well known that the Boers are of Dutch origin.
+That a rivalry did develop between the two national
+elements, is not to be wondered at by any one
+having some knowledge of the history of the world.</p>
+
+<p>I do not consider it necessary to go at any
+length in relating the vicissitudes of the conflict
+between the aspirations of the Boer element and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+the undoubted rights of British suzerainty. As a
+rule they are sufficiently well known by my
+English readers.</p>
+
+<p>But I wish to emphasize the two undeniable
+facts: first, that throughout this protracted contest,
+England did perseveringly try to favour South
+Africa with the largest possible measure of political
+liberty. Second, that the crisis was finally
+brought about by the persistent determination of
+the Government of Pretoria to refuse justice to
+the Uitlanders and to the British capitalists who,
+at the urgent request of President Kruger, had
+invested many millions in the development of the
+very valuable mines recently discovered in the
+Transvaal territory.</p>
+
+<p>Though England had agreed to the establishment
+of the two Republics of the Transvaal and
+Orange, she had maintained her suzerainty on
+those territories, which suzerainty the Government
+of Pretoria had again recognized by the
+Convention of 1884.</p>
+
+<p>The most convincing proof that England did
+not intend any unfair design against the South
+African Republics, is the fact that she did not prepare
+to resist the armed attack of the Government
+of Pretoria which could be easily foreseen by the
+intense organization they were evidently making
+to impose Boer supremacy in South Africa.</p>
+
+<p>In his very unjust appreciation of the policy
+of Great Britain in South Africa, Mr. Bourassa
+kept no account whatever of the very important<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+fact that war was declared against England by
+the South African Republic. How could Great
+Britain have been guilty of a hideous crime in not
+bowing to the dictate of President Kruger and his
+Government, as the "Nationalist" leader said, is
+beyond comprehension.</p>
+
+<p>England was absolutely within her right in
+accepting the challenge of the Government of Pretoria,
+and fighting to maintain her flag and her
+Sovereignty in South Africa.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, the South African War, characterized
+by deeds of heroism on both sides, has
+had the most satisfactory conclusion. It is to be
+hoped that for many long years the future of that
+great country is settled with all the blessings that
+political liberty and free institutions will surely
+confer on that important part of the British Empire.
+The Boers themselves have fully recognized
+that their own national development cannot be
+better guaranteed and safeguarded than by the
+powerful Sovereignty pledged to their protection,
+on the only condition of their loyal allegiance to
+the flag waving on the fair land where they can
+multiply in peace, prosperity and happiness. The
+enthusiasm and the admirable courage with which
+they have rallied to the support of Great Britain
+and her Allies in the present war, is the best evidence
+how much they appreciate the advantages
+of their new conditions in the great South African
+Dominion destined to such a grand future.</p>
+
+<p>I most sincerely deplore the persistent efforts
+of the "Nationalist" leader to pervert more and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+more the mind of my French Canadian countrymen
+by his so very unfair appreciation of the
+nature of the South African conflict. It was with
+the hope of counteracting them that I introduced a
+special chapter in my French edition explaining,
+as fully as I could, though in a condensed form,
+the South African question.</p>
+
+<p>The assertion that the participation of Canada
+in the present European war was the sequence
+of the precedent of our intervention in the South
+African struggle, is also most injustifiable and untenable.
+Had Canada taken no part whatever in
+the South African War, it would not have made
+the least difference with regard to the decision of
+the Canadian people to support Great Britain and
+the Allies in their gigantic effort to put an end to
+Prussian terrorism. The assertion which I most
+emphatically contradict could have no other object
+but to prejudice the public mind against Canadian
+intervention in any of the wars of the Empire&mdash;<i>les
+guerres de l'empire</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">British and German Aspirations Compared.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>In the attempt to justify his opposition to the
+Canadian armed support of the Allies' cause, Mr.
+Bourassa repeatedly asserted that Great Britain
+was as much as Germany aspiring to rule the
+whole world. He pretends that there is no difference
+between Anglo-Saxonism and Germanism.</p>
+
+<p>How unjust and dangerous is such a doctrine
+is evident to any fair minded man. It was no
+doubt calculated to prejudice the French Canadians
+against Great Britain, by telling them that
+the sacrifices they were called upon to make were
+imposed upon them only to favour the British determination
+to reach the goal of her ambition:&mdash;universal
+domination.</p>
+
+<p>I strongly repudiated such assertions and
+vindicated England's course and policy.</p>
+
+<p>To accuse Great Britain to aspire to universal
+domination is a most unwarranted charge, contradicted
+by the whole history of the last century during
+which she was the most determined supporter
+of peace.</p>
+
+<p>Though one of the great Powers of the world,
+England never undertook to organize a large
+standing army. How could she aspire to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+world's domination without a complete military
+organization comprising many millions of men, is
+what I am unable to understand.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa's argument to prove his assertion
+is based on the efforts of England to maintain
+and develop her naval forces so as to guarantee
+her supremacy on the high seas of the world. How
+he failed to realize that Great Britain, on account
+of her insular position, close to the European continent,
+is by nature itself bound, of sheer necessity,
+to protect herself by the strength of her military
+naval power, is beyond comprehension. Supremacy
+on the seas is for the Mother Country a mere
+question of national existence,&mdash;to be or not to be.
+But supremacy on the seas cannot, and will never,
+permit England to attain anything like universal
+domination. And why? For the obvious reason
+that Great Britain is not, and never can become, a
+continental Power, in the exact sense of the word.</p>
+
+<p>I explained, conclusively, I believe, that the
+case would be very different if Germany succeeded
+in her efforts to supplant England's supremacy
+on the seas. When the Berlin Government undertook
+to build a huge military fleet, Germany was
+the greatest continental military Power. What
+were her expectations when she adopted that
+threatening naval policy? The Berlin authorities
+were very confident that when they would decide
+to bring on the great war for which they had been
+strenuously preparing for half a century, they
+would in a few months have continental Europe at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+their feet and under their sway. Triumphant over
+Europe they would have at once dominated Asia
+and a great part of Africa. The next surest way
+for the German Empire to reach universal domination
+was to break England's power on the seas.
+What is impossible for England to accomplish, on
+account of her insular position, Germany, being a
+continental Empire, could achieve if she became
+mistress of the seas.</p>
+
+<p>The present war is the proof evident that the
+mighty power of England on the seas has been the
+salvation of her national existence and, almost
+equally, that of France and Italy. It kept the
+oceans open for the trade of all the Allied and neutral
+nations. He is willingly blind, intellectually,
+the man who does not see that deprived of the
+matchless protection of her naval forces, Great
+Britain could be starved and subdued in a few
+months by an enemy ruling the waves against her.</p>
+
+<p>Is it possible to suppose that any man aspiring
+to help moulding the public opinion of his
+countrymen, ignores that with the relatively small
+extent of the territory it can devote to agricultural
+production, Great Britain can never feed her
+actual population of over forty-five millions, most
+likely to reach sixty millions in the not very distant
+future. Consequently how unjust, how extravagant,
+is it to accuse England of any aspiration
+to dominate the world by means of the sacrifices
+she is absolutely bound to make for the only sake
+of her self-defence, her self-protection.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>If he does not know, I will no doubt cordially
+oblige the "Nationalist" leader by informing him
+that Great Britain, usually importing food products
+to the amount of seven to eight hundred
+millions of dollars, for many years past, required
+as much as a billion dollars worth of them in the
+war year of 1915. It is so easy to foresee that the
+continual increase of the population of the United
+Kingdom, by the new large developments which
+will surely follow the war in all industrial, commercial
+and financial pursuits, will cause a relative
+increase in the importations of food products
+likely to reach, and even exceed before long, an average
+total annual value of a billion and a quarter
+dollars.</p>
+
+<p>None of the European continental Powers has
+the same imperious reasons as England to take the
+proper means to guarantee her control of the seas.
+How is it then that Germany is the only Power to
+object to England's policy, if it is not for the ultimate
+object to attain universal domination by the
+overthrow of Great Britain's ascendency on the
+wide oceans, which would permit her to realize
+her long cherished aim by the combined powerful
+effort of her gigantic military forces both on land
+and sea.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to England's naval supremacy,
+the "Nationalist" leader is also committed to other
+opinions which I strongly contradicted. He entirely
+forgets that beyond the sea coast limits, well
+defined by International Law, no Sovereign rights<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
+can be claimed on the high seas. The navigation
+of the ocean is free to all nations by nature itself.
+Has any Government ever entertained the foolish
+idea that the broad Atlantic could, for instance,
+be divided into so many parts as the European,
+Asiatic, or American continents, over which several
+States could exercise Sovereign powers? No
+Chinese Wall can be built on the seas.</p>
+
+<p>My own view of the case, which I believe to be
+the correct one, is that England's naval supremacy
+means nothing more nor less than the police of the
+seas, and the protection of the flags of all the Nations
+navigating them, besides being, of course and
+necessarily, the guarantee of her National existence.</p>
+
+<p>Blind also, intellectually, is the British subject
+not sufficiently inspired by the true sense of
+the duties of Loyalty, who does not understand
+that once Great Britain's maritime power would
+be crushed and the United Kingdom either conquered
+or obliged to an humiliating peace which
+would ruin all her future prospects, the Colonial
+Empire would equally be at the mercy of the victorious
+enemy of the Mother Country.</p>
+
+<p>With the most earnest conviction, I have tried,
+to the best of my ability, to persuade my French-Canadian
+compatriots of the inevitable dangers
+ahead if the false views which were so persistingly
+impressed upon their minds were ever to prevail,
+and the aim they undoubtedly favour to be realized.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Another argument widely used by our "Nationalist"
+School to influence the opinion of the
+French Canadians against Canada's participation
+in the war, was that Great Britain herself was not
+doing what she ought to win the victory. I have
+personally heard this false objection repeated by
+many&mdash;unconsciously of course&mdash;who were influenced
+in so saying by the "Nationalist" press.</p>
+
+<p>No more unfair charge could have been made
+against England. I could not help being indignant
+at reading it, knowing as I did, by daily acquired
+information what an immense effort the United
+Kingdom had been making, from the very beginning
+of the hostilities, to play its powerful part in
+the great war into which it had nobly decided to
+enter to avenge its honour, to defend the Empire
+and the whole world against German barbarous
+militarism.</p>
+
+<p>I have already commented on the immense
+service guaranteed to the Allied nations by the
+British fleet. To illustrate the wonderful and admirable
+military effort of Great Britain, I will
+quote some very important figures from the most
+interesting Report of the British War Cabinet, for
+the year 1917, presented to Parliament by Command
+of His Majesty.</p>
+
+<p>Under the title "<i>Construction and Supply</i>"
+the Report says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>During the past year the Naval Service has undergone continual
+expansion in order to enable it to meet every demand made
+upon it, not only in the seas surrounding these islands, but in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>Mediterranean, the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, the Arctic Ocean,
+the Pacific, and the Atlantic, where it has co-operated with the
+Naval forces of the Allies. The displacement tonnage of the
+Royal Navy in 1914 was 2,400,000 tons. To-day it has increased
+by 75 per cent. <b>(&mdash;making a total of 4,200,000 tons&mdash;)</b>. The ships and
+vessels of all kinds employed in the Naval Service in September,
+1914, after the whole of the mobilisation had been completed, had
+a tonnage of just over 4 million; now the figure is well over 6
+million. Transports, fleet attendants and overseas oilers and
+similar auxiliary vessels at the outbreak of war numbered 23; the
+Admiralty to-day control nearly 700 such craft. The strength of
+the personnel, which was 145,000, has been increased to 420,000.</p>
+
+<p>From these brief particulars regarding the ships and their
+manning, an estimate can be formed of the expansions that have
+been made in the auxiliary services, such as guns, torpedoes, munitions,
+and stores of all kinds, anti-submarine apparatus, mines, &amp;c.,
+and some idea is gained of the demands that have been made upon
+the great army of workers on shore, the men in the Royal dockyards
+and arsenals, in the shipyards, the engine shops, and the
+factories, without whose help the Fleet could not be maintained as
+a fighting force.</p>
+
+<p>As regards warship and auxiliary ship construction, the output
+during the last 12 months has been between three and four
+times the average annual output for the few years preceding the
+war.</p>
+
+<p>The Admiralty now control all the dry docks in the country,...&mdash;250
+merchant ships are being repaired each week, either
+in dry dock or afloat.</p>
+
+<p>Since the beginning of the war, 31,470 British war vessels
+have been placed in dock or on the slips <b>(&mdash;as many as 225 being
+repaired in one week&mdash;)</b>.... These figures do not include
+repair work carried out to the vessels of our Allies....</p></div>
+
+<p>The Transport Service is of the highest importance
+in carrying on the war. What has been
+the achievement of England on that score? Under
+the title:&mdash;"<i>Transportation</i>" the War Cabinet
+Report proves its immensity as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The record of what has been done by the transport services
+for the Armies of the Allies shows a stupendous amount of work
+accomplished, which constitutes one of the brilliant achievements
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>of the war. There had been transported overseas up till the end
+of August, 1917, the last date for which complete statistics are
+available&mdash;some:&mdash;13 million human beings&mdash;combatants, wounded,
+medical personnel, refugees, prisoners, &amp;c.; 2 million horses and
+mules; 1/2 million vehicles; 25 million tons of explosive and supplies
+for the armies; ... 51 million tons of coal and oil fuel for
+the use of our Fleets, our Armies, and to meet the needs of our
+Allies.</p>
+
+<p>The operations of the seas are on such a large scale that
+it is difficult to realize all that is involved in sea transportation; for
+example, over 7,000 personnel are transported, and more than
+30,000 tons of stores and supplies have to be imported daily into
+France for the maintenance of our own army. About 567 steamers,
+of approximately 1 3/4 million tons, are continually employed in the
+service of carrying troops and stores to the Armies in France and
+to the forces in various theatres of war in the East.</p></div>
+
+<p>We all know that the Berlin Government expected
+that the submarine campaign would result
+in an early final victory for the Central Empires.
+Herr von Bethmann Hollweg, then the Imperial
+Chancellor, said:&mdash;"<i>The Blockade must succeed
+within a limited number of weeks, within which
+America cannot effectively participate in the
+operations</i>."</p>
+
+<p>How he was mistaken, and extravagant were
+his expectations, events have proved. This sentence
+is also proof evident that he realized how
+effective the United States effort would become, if
+the submarine campaign did not succeed within a
+few weeks.</p>
+
+<p>The iniquitous submarine campaign, re-opened
+early in the year 1917, "<i>added materially
+to the responsibilities of the Navy. To meet this
+new and serious menace drastic steps had to be
+taken to supplement those adopted in the previous
+December and January</i>."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Report adds:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>A large number of new destroyers have been built and at
+the same time auxiliary patrol services have been expanded enormously
+so as to deal with the nefarious submarine and minelaying
+methods of the enemy. Before the outbreak of the war there were
+under 20 vessels employed as minesweepers and on auxiliary patrol
+duties. To-day the number of craft used for these purposes at
+home and abroad is about 3,400, and is constantly increasing.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>A new feature of the means adopted for the protection of
+trade against submarines has been a return to the convoy system
+as practised in bygone wars. It has been markedly effective in
+reducing the losses. During the last few months over 90 per cent.
+of all vessels sailing in all the Atlantic trades were convoyed....</p>
+
+<p>The Royal Naval Air Service at the outbreak of war possessed
+a personnel of under 800; at the present moment the numbers
+approach 46,000 and are continually increasing.... Mention
+must also be made of the great value of the air services in combating
+the submarine menace round our coasts.... Illustrating
+their extent it may be stated that in one week the aircraft
+patrol round the British coasts alone flies 30,000 miles.</p>
+
+<p>The general result of the German attack, therefore, though
+serious enough, is far from unprecedented. In the two years after
+Trafalgar, when our command of the sea was unquestioned, we
+still lost 1,045 merchant ships by capture, and in the whole period
+from 1794 to 1875 we lost over 10,000 merchant ships.</p>
+
+<p>Nor should we lose sight of the very heavy losses sustained
+by the enemy in the present war. At the commencement of hostilities,
+Germany had 915 merchant ships abroad, of which only
+158 got home safely; the remainder within a few days were
+cleared from the oceans, either captured or driven to shelter in
+neutral ports. In the aggregate the German Mercantile Marine
+consisted of over 5 million tons of shipping; at the present time
+nearly half of this has been sunk or captured by ourselves or our
+Allies, while the bulk of the rest is lying useless in harbour.</p></div>
+
+<p>Let me now refer to the military effort of
+Great Britain. Under the title:&mdash;"<i>Strength of the
+Army," &amp;c.</i>, the War Cabinet Report gives the
+following most inspiring figures.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The effort which the British nations have made under the
+one item of "Provision of Men for the Armed Forces of the
+Crown" amounts to not less than 7,500,000 men, and of these 60.4
+per cent. have been contributed by England, 8.3 per cent. by
+Scotland, 3.7 per cent. by Wales, 2.3 per cent. by Ireland, 1.2 per cent.
+by the Dominions and the Colonies, while the remainder, 13.3 per
+cent., composed of native fighting troops, labour corps, carriers,
+&amp;c., represent the splendid contribution made by India and our
+various African and other Dependencies.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p><b>Royal Artillery.</b>&mdash;The personnel of the Royal Artillery increased
+17.6 per cent., between August, 1916, and August, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>In the first nine months of 1917 the supply of modern anti-aircraft
+guns in the field increased 44 per cent., that of field guns
+17 per cent., of field-howitzers 26 per cent., of heavy guns 40 per
+cent., of medium howitzers 104 per cent., of heavy howitzers 16 per
+cent., and of heavy-guns on railway mountings 100 per cent.; these
+last have an increased range of about 35 per cent....
+We have also supplied large numbers of heavy guns and trench
+mortars to our Allies in different theatres of war.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>The Medical Service has continued to expand with the
+growth of the Army and its strength is now largely in excess of
+our whole original Expeditionary Force.... More than
+17,000 women are employed as nurses and over 28,000 others are
+engaged in military hospitals on various forms of work....
+Hospitals in the United Kingdom now number more than 2,000.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>The health of the troops in the United Kingdom is actually
+better than the peace rate; the same is the case in France, excluding
+admissions to hospital by reason of wounds.</p></div>
+
+<p>The above quoted figures prove that out of a
+total of 7,500,000 men for the Armed Forces of the
+British Crown, Great Britain&mdash;the United Kingdom&mdash;had
+contributed, at the end of last year, 5,625,000,
+out of which number the shore of England
+and Wales amounted to 4,800,000. The British
+Colonial Empire's contribution had been 1,875,000.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At the date of the current year&mdash;August, 1918&mdash;I
+am writing, I can safely calculate that the
+number of men for the Armed Forces of the British
+Crown&mdash;using the words of the Official Report
+above quoted&mdash;has reached, at least, <i>the grand and
+magnificent total of 8,000,000</i>. The percentage of
+respective contributions of the United Kingdom
+and the Colonial Empire no doubt remaining the
+same, the relative number of each of them is,&mdash;for
+the United Kingdom 6,000,000; for the Colonies
+2,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>I consider the War Cabinet Report of 1917 so
+interesting, so encouraging, that my readers will,
+I am confident, kindly bear with me in a few more
+very important quotations, the full Report itself
+having had only a very limited circulation in
+Canada.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Transport.</span></div>
+
+<p>In addition to the prodigious Naval effort of
+England, both military and mercantile, previously
+illustrated, Great Britain has most powerfully
+contributed to the fighting operations on land by
+an immense improvement in transportation
+facilities by railway construction in all British
+theatres of war.</p>
+
+<p>The Report says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In all these theatres railways have come to play a more
+and more important part. In France a vast light railway system
+has been created, involving the supply during the present year of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>approximately 1,700 miles of track and the whole of the equipment....
+Exclusive of these light railway systems, the total
+amount of permanent railway track supplied complete to all
+theatres of war is about 3,600 miles. In Egypt the railway crossing
+the desert from the Suez Canal has now reached and passed
+Gaza. In Mesopotamia the rapid and successful movements of our
+troops have only been made possible by the construction of a
+whole series of lines since the beginning of 1917. The development
+of road-building has been on a similar scale, and the shipments of
+material, equipment and stores for these two purposes during the
+last nine months have averaged 200,000 tons a month. Much
+labour has also been spent in the organisation of an Overland
+Line of Communication through France and Italy to the Mediterranean
+in order to save shipping. This line was opened for personnel
+traffic in June, 1917, and for goods traffic early in August.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>In France the conveyance of supplies of all kinds to our
+armies along the French rivers and canals is performed by a large
+fleet of tugs, barges, and self-propelled barges. The fleet thus
+employed in France consists of over 700 vessels, and the tonnage
+carried by it averages over 50,000 tons per week.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">The Air Service.</span></div>
+
+<p>In a recital indicating generally what steps
+have been taken in matters of administration and
+control, the Report says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>From the point of view of defence, the new arm presented
+problems pregnant with at least equal importance. The proud and
+ancient inviolability of these islands was being challenged in a
+new and startling fashion, and the seriousness of the problem was
+added to by the fact that the geographical position of the capital
+of the Empire rendered it particularly inviting to attack from the
+air.</p></div>
+
+<p>Respecting the supply of Aircraft, the Report
+says that:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In endeavoring to describe the measures taken to meet the
+aircraft needs of the Navy and Army, the writer is at once confronted
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>by the fact that the information desired by the country is
+precisely the information desired by the enemy. What the country
+wants to know is what has been the expansion in our Air
+Services; whether we have met and are meeting all the demands
+of the Navy and of the Army, both for replacement of obsolete
+machines by the most modern types, and for the increase of our
+fighting strength in the air; what proportion of the national resources
+in men, material and factories is being devoted to aviation;
+what the expansion is likely to be in the future. These are precisely
+the facts which we should like to know with regard to the
+German air service, and for that reason it would be inadmissible
+for us to supply Germany with corresponding information about
+ourselves by publishing a statement on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>It can be said that the expansion of our Air Services is
+keeping pace generally with the growing needs of the Navy and
+the Army.</p></div>
+
+<p>In Chapter VIII, under the heading:&mdash;"<i>The
+Ministry of Munitions in 1917</i>," the following is
+read:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The number of persons engaged in the production of munitions
+in October, 1917, was 2,022,000 men and 704,000 women, as
+compared with 1,921,000 men and 535,000 women in January.
+They have thus been increased during the past six months at the
+rate of 11,000 men and 19,000 women per month. These numbers
+include those employed in Government and in private establishments,
+in the principal munition industries, chemical and explosive
+trades, engineering and munition plants, furnaces and
+foundries, in shipbuilding and in mining other than coal-mining.
+The total represents approximately two-thirds of the total labour
+occupied on Government work in industry.</p></div>
+
+<p>The preceding official statistics prove most
+conclusively that actually, and ever since the beginning
+of the third year of the war, more than
+<i>twelve millions</i> of men and women&mdash;more than
+the fourth of the total population of the United
+Kingdom&mdash;have been either in the Armed Forces
+of the British Crown&mdash;Navy and Army&mdash;or in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+shipbuilding yards, in munitions factories, in
+transportation on land and sea, in the Medical
+Service, in the Air Service, &amp;c., employed for the
+success of the cause of the Allies.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">The Financial Effort of Great Britain.</span></div>
+
+<p>The gigantic military effort of Great Britain,
+in all the branches of its wonderfully developed
+organization, as above illustrated, was only rendered
+possible by a corresponding financial contribution.</p>
+
+<p>During the financial year preceding the
+outbreak of the war, the total expenditure of the
+Government of Great Britain was $987,464,845.
+The hostilities have imposed upon the United
+Kingdom vast expenditures. "For that period"&mdash;again
+quoting the War Cabinet Report&mdash;"from the
+1st April, 1917, to the 1st December, 1917, the
+total Exchequer issues for expenditure (including
+Consolidated Fund Service and Supply Services)
+were £1,799,223,000,&mdash;($8,796,115,000) representing
+a daily average for that period of £7,344,000
+($36,720,000)."</p>
+
+<p>At this rate of expenditure, the total for the
+year equals at least $13,500,000,000. But the financial
+charges entailed by the war being constantly
+on the increase, they can be calculated at a daily
+average of no less than $40,000,000 until the close
+of the conflict.</p>
+
+<p>England has not only incurred very heavy
+financial obligations, met both by an enormously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+increased taxation and the issue of large National
+loans, to pay the cost of her own war expenditure,
+but she has also generously helped her friends
+whose financial resources were not so abundant as
+her own. To the 1st December, 1917, she had made
+advances to the Allies amounting to no less than
+$5,930,000,000. In addition to this large amount,
+the advances she had made to the Dominions for
+the same period summed up $875,000,000.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Achievements of Dominion, Colonial and Indian
+Troops.</span></div>
+
+<p>Under the above title, the War Cabinet Report
+concludes a general review of the past year's
+effort by paying high tribute to the value of the
+services rendered by the whole British Colonial
+Empire, in the following elogious terms:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In the above sketch of military operations during the past
+year, it has not been possible to distinguish between the particular
+services rendered by the various nations and nationalities of the
+Empire. But it must not be forgotten that during the war the
+forces of the Crown have become welded into a true Imperial
+army, representative of every part of the world-wide British
+Commonwealth, and a brief note may be included as to the special
+services of the various overseas forces.</p>
+
+<p>The share of the Australian, New Zealand, Canadian, South
+African and Newfoundland contingents in the successes of the 1917
+campaign are well known. The capture of Vimy Ridge in April,
+the prolonged and bitter fighting around Lens during the whole
+summer and autumn, and the capture of Passchendaele were carried
+out by the Canadian Corps, which has thus proved itself as
+excellent in offensive as its splendid defence of Ypres in 1915 had
+shown it to be in defensive fighting. The New Zealand and Australian
+contingents have corresponding achievements to their credit
+in their share of the battle of Messines and in the long sustained
+and bitterly contested fights in the Ypres salient from July
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>to November. The South African brigade sustained the brilliant
+reputation which it won last year at Delville Wood by the devoted
+services it rendered on the battlefields of Arras and Ypres.
+Finally, the Newfoundland Regiment took a glorious and costly
+part in the same two battles. The troops of all the Dominions
+have shown themselves throughout the campaign of 1917 to have
+maintained the historic standards of the British Army and have
+been worthy rivals of the United Kingdom troops in every military
+effort and achievement.</p>
+
+<p>This testimony to the services rendered by the Dominions
+would not be complete without some reference to the part played
+by South Africa in German East Africa, where her troops have
+borne, under the brilliant leadership of General Van Deventer, a
+conspicuous share in a peculiarly arduous campaign.</p>
+
+<p>The smaller Colonies and Protectorates have naturally been
+unable to play so great and conspicuous a part in the World War,
+but in their own spheres they have contributed their full share to
+the military effort of the Empire. Labour and fighting troops
+were freely drawn upon for the Mesopotamian and East African
+theatres. West Africa, British East Africa, Uganda, Nyasaland
+and Rhodesia have all sent contingents to fight in German East
+Africa. 16,000 men from the West Indies have been sent across
+the Atlantic; and labour corps from the Eastern Colonies have
+been sent to the Mesopotamian and East African fronts, and, despite
+unfavourable conditions, to the Western theatre. A large
+number of individuals from overseas possessions, such as the
+Malay States and Hong Kong, have also joined the Imperial
+forces.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, India's contribution, both in man-power, material
+and money, has steadily increased throughout the year. India has
+taken a very important share in the victorious campaign in Mesopotamia.
+The great majority of the troops in this theatre of war
+are Indian. They have fully sustained the high reputation of the
+Indian Army for gallantry and endurance. India has been responsible
+for much of the supply, medical and transportation system
+by water and on land. Indian forces have also rendered conspicuous
+service in France, Egypt and East Africa. The question
+of the supply of officers, especially medical officers, has been
+solved; commissions have been granted to Indians, and a voluntary
+Indian Defence Force is now being organised and trained. Special
+mention should be made of the loyal and effective assistance
+of the Indian ruling princes and chiefs, from the smallest to the
+greatest.</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Indian Government has moreover generously
+contributed $500,000,000 towards the cost of
+the war.</p>
+
+<p>The foregoing quotations of official figures, of
+facts undeniable, of achievements really most extraordinary,
+constitute the unanswerable refutation,
+complete and crushing, of the Nationalist
+charge that England, while not doing her own
+duty with regard to the war, was using undue influence
+to coerce the British Colonies to participate
+in the conflict far beyond the fair proportionate
+effort to be expected on their part; that an illegitimate
+pressure of Great Britain's Government on
+her Colonies was being practised, as insidiously
+alleged, to promote her Imperialist ambition of
+the World's ascendency.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, those false and most unjust
+notions had taken deeper root in many minds, even
+in some who should have been much above such an
+unfair misconception, than was at first supposed.
+Hence the importance of setting the matter right,
+and the necessity of proving that England's war
+achievements, in every branch of the Military
+Service, were far exceeding what had, at first,
+been expected of her, and was ever considered possible.
+British pluck and manliness were equal to
+the direst emergency that ever called them forth.
+Patriotism, courage, determination, perseverance,
+rising superior to any increased difficulties, have
+truly worked miracles of manly efforts and self-sacrifices
+inspired by the noble cause which
+brought Great Britain in the World's struggle.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Veritable Aims of The Allies.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>After doing their utmost to persuade the
+French Canadians that the Allies, more especially
+England and Russia, were equally responsible for
+the war, together with Germany and Austria, our
+"Nationalist" leaders moreover asserted that they
+were hostile to a just and lasting peace on account
+of their unfair claims. In support of their pretension,
+they repeatedly affirmed that the Allies
+were pledged to the complete destruction of the
+German Empire. No more unfounded charge could
+be made against the Nations suddenly challenged
+to a gigantic struggle for life or death.</p>
+
+<p>It was very important to protect my French
+Canadian countrymen against views which, if not
+proved to be absolutely wrong, were calculated to
+bias their mind against the Allies. With this
+patriotic object strongly impressed upon my mind,
+I fully explained what were the veritable aims
+of Great Britain, France, Russia and Italy, in
+fighting their deadly enemy. When I issued my
+French book, the United States had not then
+entered the contest. Their declaration of war
+against Germany, in the spring of 1917, after the
+outrage of the sinking of the Lusitania, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+numerous criminal provocations of the submarine
+campaign, clearly emphasized, once more, what
+the Allies had been strenuously struggling for
+from the outbreak of the hostilities. They had
+taken up the gauntlet savagely thrown to them,
+declaring to the world that they would battle to
+the last to put an end to German militarism, always
+threatening general peace, to protect the
+small nations, notably Belgium and Servia,
+against the onslaught of mighty and tyrannical
+conquerors, to save Humanity, Civilization and
+Freedom from the crushing ascendency of autocratic
+rule. The great American Republic rallied
+with them to the defence of this most sacred cause.
+Need I refer to the numerous and eloquent messages
+of President Wilson, to the writings of the
+American press, and to the declarations of all the
+leading public men of the United States, in both
+Houses of Congress, or before public meetings, in
+support of the contention which was proved beyond
+controversy for all fair minded men.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa, whether from sheer misconception,
+or blindly carried away by incomprehensible
+German sympathies, having their root in his
+prejudiced hostility to England, could see no difference
+between a war policy aiming at putting an
+end to Prussian militarism, and one having for its
+object the dismemberment of the German Empire.
+Nor could he conceive that fighting for human liberty
+was a nobler purpose than struggling for autocratic
+tyranny. Though ever posing as the champion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+of the small nationalities, he would not utter
+a word of sympathy for martyred Belgium, barbarously
+conquered Servia, oppressed Poland,
+since the beginning of the war.</p>
+
+<p>The great conflict once begun under so terrific
+conditions, every one somewhat posted with the
+immense resources of the belligerents, their respective
+warlike spirit and enduring qualities,
+could easily foresee that, unfortunately, it was
+most likely to last for several years, the contending
+parties being so far apart in their respective
+aspirations. Elated beyond all reason by her triumph
+over France, in 1870, which had for its first
+very important result the final creation of the
+German Empire, proclaimed to the world from
+Versailles,&mdash;the bleeding heart of her vanquished
+foe,&mdash;the new great Power, dominating Central
+Europe, lost no time in setting all its energies to
+the task of perfecting the most gigantic military
+organization ever seen. To all clear sighted men,
+Germany could not be supposed to accept the
+heavy sacrifices required for such an end with the
+sole purpose of maintaining peace. Further conquests
+were evidently her inspiring aim.</p>
+
+<p>Who can forget how Humanity was staggered
+by the rapidity of the onslaught of the Teutonic
+hordes let loose against nations whose greatest
+wish was to keep the peace of the world? In a
+sudden rush, the waves of the torrent overran
+Belgium and Northern France dashing direct
+towards Paris.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The wonderful plan of campaign, so scientifically
+conceived and matured, could then be understood
+as it was boldly and powerfully developed.
+The Berlin military staff, knowing that France
+was not sufficiently prepared for the struggle, that
+England, if forced to intervene in honour bound,
+by the criminal violation of Belgium's neutrality,
+would require a couple of years to organize an
+army of millions of men, decided to strike the first
+blow with such an overpowering strength as to
+conquer Belgium in a victorious run and crush
+France out of the fight. A couple of months were
+to be sufficient to that most coveted end. Meantime
+Austria was to face and resist the Russian
+attack, to allow Germany the necessary time to
+settle victoriously the western part of the campaign,
+so cleverly planned and successfully carried
+out, before transferring her glorious legions to the
+Eastern theatre of the war. Russia was not supposed
+to be able to properly organize her armies in
+less than many months, when it could no longer
+expect to triumph over the enthusiastic Huns.</p>
+
+<p>In the depressing darkness of those anxious
+days, the great Marne victory came like the brilliant
+sun piercing the heavy clouds, pledging final
+success as the reward of the persevering courage
+and heroism to be long displayed to deserve it.
+Germany's first dream of conquering universal
+domination by military operations even overshadowing
+those of the illustrious Napoleonic
+Era, and of Cæsar's marvellously laid deep foundations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+of Roman grandeur, was shattered to
+pieces.</p>
+
+<p>Before the Teutonic armies could be reorganized
+for another great offensive, England's forces
+and those of her Colonies would be in a position
+to enter the struggle; France's resources would be
+brought to bear with all their strength; Italy
+would break away from the Central Empires and
+heartily join the Allies.</p>
+
+<p>Then the conflict turned to that weary trench
+fighting which to the sadness of its trials added
+new evidence of the inevitable lengthening of the
+war. No wonder that the longing for peace was
+intensified under the pressure of conditions becoming
+more and more trying. Without doubt all
+true friends of human prosperity and happiness,
+in their limited possible worldly measure, were fervently
+praying to God in favour of the restoration
+of harmony between the warring Nations. But
+they saw with undeniable clearness that there
+were two essential&mdash;sine qua non&mdash;conditions to
+the peace of the future. To be of any value it must
+be <i>Just</i> and <i>Durable</i>. If it could become permanent,
+much more the better.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, outside the legions of the true
+friends of an honourable peace, there were found,
+in the Allied countries, faint hearted men getting
+tired of the worries and sacrifices consequent upon
+the prolonged struggle. The moment they began
+to show their hands, was the signal for the ultra
+Revolutionists of Russia, finally organized into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+the disastrous bolshevikism, for the paid traitors
+of France, for the disloyal elements of the British
+Empire, to rally around them to set in motion,
+with accrued force, a current of opinion clamouring
+for peace almost at any price. To quiet this unpatriotic
+longing of the disheartened, the political
+leaders of the Allies publicly explained their war
+aims, positively affirming that their objective was
+that <i>Just and Durable</i> peace to which alone they
+could and would agree.</p>
+
+<p>Canada had also her <i>pacifist</i> element. So far
+as the French Canadians were concerned, it was,
+though small in numbers, almost entirely recruited
+in the ranks of the supporters of "<i>Nationalism</i>."
+I feel I must explain that our "<i>Nationalism</i>," as it
+has been repeatedly propounded, does not in the
+least represent the sound views of the very large
+majority of my French Canadian countrymen.</p>
+
+<p>As was to be expected, Mr. Bourassa was
+again the outspoken organ of our French Canadian
+<i>pacifists</i>. He laid great stress on what he
+gave out as a fact: that if peace negotiations were
+not at once entered upon and brought to a successful
+conclusion, it was on account of the Allies' unreasonable
+claims, pointing especially to England's
+determination not to surrender her supremacy on
+the high seas, to develop more and more what he
+termed her <i>imperialism</i> for the purpose of dominating
+the world <i>economically</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In my French work, I strongly took issue with
+the views of our <i>pacifists</i> as expressed by their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
+leader and their press. Addressing my French
+Canadian countrymen on the bounden duties of all
+loyal British subjects, it was my ardent purpose
+to tell them the plain truth. Writing, as I did, in
+1916, I was then, as I had been from the very beginning,
+firmly convinced that the conflict would be of
+long duration, that it was very wrong&mdash;even criminal
+if disloyally inspired&mdash;for any one to delude
+them by vain hopes, or deceive them by false
+charges.</p>
+
+<p>Having some knowledge of military strategy
+and tactics, I saw with the clear light of noon day
+that, despite the gigantic efforts put forth by the
+Allies, and the admirable heroism of their armies&mdash;our
+Canadian force brilliantly playing its part&mdash;final
+victory would be attained only by indomitable
+perseverance, both of the millions of fighting
+men and of the whole Allied nations backing them
+to the last with their moral and material support.
+That profound conviction of mine I was very
+anxious to strongly impress on the minds of my
+French-Canadian readers, imploring them not to
+be carried away by the "Nationalist" erroneous
+pretentions that peace could easily be obtained, if
+the Allies would only agree to negotiate. I told
+them plainly, what was absolutely true, that the
+war aims of Germany were so well known and inadmissible
+that there was not the least shadow of
+hope that peace negotiations could lead to a reasonable
+understanding realizing the two imperious
+conditions of <i>Justice and Durability</i> in a settlement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+to which all the Allies were in honour
+pledged. I explained to them that it was no use
+whatever to be deluded by expectations, however
+tempting they might appear, because under the
+then conditions of the military situation&mdash;time
+and events have since brought no favourable
+change but quite the reverse&mdash;there was not the
+slightest chance of an opening for a successful
+consideration of the questions to be debated and
+settled before the complete cessation of the conflict.
+There was only one conclusion to be drawn from
+the circumstances of the case, and, however sad to
+acknowledge, it was that the fight must be carried
+on to a final victorious issue, any weakening of
+determination and purpose being sure to bring
+about humiliating defeat.</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Only Possible Peace Conditions.</span></p>
+
+<p>Whenever representatives of the belligerents
+shall meet to negotiate for peace, there will of
+course be many questions of first class importance
+to consider and discuss. But the one which must
+overshadow any other and of necessity carry the
+day, is that peace must be restored under conditions
+that will, if not forever, at least for many
+long years, protect Humanity and Civilization
+against a recurrence of such a calamity as ambitious
+and cruel Germany has criminally imposed
+upon the world. I urged my French Canadian
+readers to consider seriously how peace due to a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+compromise, accepted out of sheer discouragement,
+would soon develop into a still more trying
+ordeal than the one Canada had willingly and deliberately
+undertaken to fight out with the Allies.
+I forcibly explained to them that if the present
+war did not result in an international agreement
+to put an end to the extravagant and ruinous
+militarism which, under Prussian terrorism, was
+proving to be the curse of almost the whole universe,
+all the sacrifices of so many millions of
+lives, heroically given, of untold sufferings, of so
+much treasures, would have been made in vain if
+Germany was allowed to continue a permanent
+menace to general tranquillity.</p>
+
+<p>It was a wonder to me that any one could fail
+to understand that an armed peace would be only
+a truce during which militarism would be spreading
+with increased vigour and strength. It was
+evident&mdash;and still daily becoming more and more
+so&mdash;that Germany would only consent to it with
+the determination to renew, on a still much larger
+scale, her military organization with the purpose
+of a more gigantic effort at universal domination.</p>
+
+<p>Then was it not plain that labouring under the
+inevitable necessity of such an international situation,
+the Allied nations,&mdash;the British Empire as
+much as France, the United States and Italy&mdash;would
+by force be obliged to make the sacrifices
+required to maintain their military systems in
+such a state of efficiency as to be always ready to
+face their ambitious foe with good prospects of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
+success. Such being the undeniable case, I affirmed&mdash;I
+am sure with the best of reasons&mdash;that
+Great Britain could not return to her ante-war
+policy of the enlistment of only a small standing
+territorial army, trusting as formerly to her
+Naval strength for her defence and the safe maintenance
+of her prestige and power. Like all the
+continental nations, England would have to incur
+the very heavy cost of keeping millions of men
+always fully armed.</p>
+
+<p>I firmly told my French Canadian countrymen
+that it was no use deluding themselves with
+the "Nationalist" notion that peace being restored
+under the above mentioned circumstances, the
+British Colonies would not be called upon to share,
+with England, the burdens of the extensive military
+preparations necessitated for their own
+safety as well as for that of Great Britain and the
+whole Empire. The very reasons which had
+prompted Canada and all her sister Dominions
+to intervene in the present war, would surely induce
+them to cooperate with the Mother Country
+to maintain a highly and costly state of military
+preparedness in order to be ever ready for any
+critical emergency.</p>
+
+<p>Could it be believed that after the sad experience
+of the actual conflict, the Allied nations&mdash;Great
+Britain perhaps more than any other&mdash;would
+blindly once again run the risk of being
+caught napping and deceived by an unscrupulous
+and hypocritical enemy, unsufficiently prepared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
+to at once rise in their might to fight for their very
+national existence and the safety of Mankind
+against tyrannical absolutism. If such abominable
+pages of History as those that for the last
+four years are written with the blood of millions
+of heroes defending Human Freedom were, by
+fear of new sacrifices, allowed to be repeated,
+shame would be on the supposed civilized world
+having fallen so low as to bow to the dictates of
+barbarism. Let all truly hearted men hope and
+pray that no such dark days shall again be the
+fearful lot of Humanity. Let them all resolve
+that if the world can at last emerge free from the
+present hurricane, they will not permit, out of
+weakness and despondency, the sweeping waves of
+teutonism to submerge Civilization and destroy
+the monuments of the work of centuries of the
+Christian Art.</p>
+
+<p>After showing the dark side of the picture,
+and what would be the fearful consequences of a
+German victory, or of an armed peace pending the
+renewal, with still much increased vigour and resources,
+of the conflict only suspended, I explained
+to my French Canadian readers the great advantages
+to be derived by all, Germany included, from
+the restoration of peace carrying with it the untold
+benefits to be derived from the cessation of
+extravagant military organization, yearly destroying
+the capital created by hard work and the
+saving of the millions of the working populations.
+If an international agreement could be arrived at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+by which militarism would be reduced to the requirements
+of the maintenance of interior order
+and the safeguarding of conventional peace
+amongst the Powers, then many long years of
+material prosperity, in all its diversity of beneficial
+development, would surely follow. Canada,
+like the other British Colonies, would not have to
+incur any very large expenditure for military purposes,
+devoting all her energies to the intelligent
+building of the grand future which her immense
+territorial resources would certainly make, not
+only possible, but sure.</p>
+
+<p>How much could material development be
+conducive to intellectual, moral and religious progress,
+if the Nations of the Earth would only sincerely
+and permanently abide by the Divine teachings
+of Christianity.</p>
+
+<p>Considering all the conditions of the military
+situation, at the end of the summer of 1916, I
+clearly perceived the imperious necessity of the
+Allies&mdash;Canada as well as all her associates&mdash;to
+fight to a finish. That duty I did my best to impress
+on the minds of the French Canadians.
+Events have since developed in many ways, but
+they all tend to strengthen the conviction that ultimate
+victory will only be the price of unshaken
+perseverance, of undaunted courage, of more
+patriotic sacrifices.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Just And Unjust Wars.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>In one of his pamphlets Mr. Bourassa favoured
+his readers with his views on the justice and injustice
+of war. He affirmed that a Government
+could rightly declare war only for the three
+following objects:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+1.&mdash;For the defence of their own country.<br />
+2.&mdash;To fulfill the obligations to which they are<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">in honour bound towards other nations.</span><br />
+3.&mdash;To defend a weak nation unjustly attacked.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I have no hesitation to acknowledge the
+soundness of those principles, as theoretically laid
+down. I took the "Nationalist" leader at his own
+word, wondering more than ever how he could
+refuse to admit the justice of the cause of the
+Allies.</p>
+
+<p>Looking at the case from the British standpoint,
+was it not clear as the brightest shining of
+the sun that England had gone to war against
+Germany for the three reasons assigned by Mr.
+Bourassa as those which alone can justify a
+Government entering a military struggle.</p>
+
+<p>Great Britain was by solemn treaties in honour
+bound to the defence of Belgium whose territory<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+had been violated by Germany, the other
+party to those treaties which she threw to the
+winds contemptuously calling them "<i>scraps of
+paper</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Even outside of all treaty obligations, it was
+England's duty, according to the third principle
+enunciated by Mr. Bourassa as authorizing a just
+declaration of war, to rush to the defense of Belgium,
+a <i>"weak nation" most dastardly attacked by
+the then strongest military Power on earth</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The British Government, being responsible
+for the safety of the British Empire, would have
+been recreant to their most sacred duty, had they
+failed to see that if the German armies were freely
+allowed to overrun Belgium, to crush France and
+vanquish Russia, Great Britain and her Colonies,
+unprepared for any effective resistance as they
+would have been, had they remained the passive
+onlookers of the teutonic conquest of continental
+Europe, would have been the easy prey of the barbarous
+conquerors. Consequently, in accepting
+the bold challenge of the Berlin Government, that
+of England also did their duty for the defence of
+Great Britain and the British Empire.</p>
+
+<p>But the whole British Empire being at war
+with Germany for the three above enumerated
+causes combined, were the free autonomous Colonies
+of England not also in duty bound to help
+her in vindicating her honour and theirs, and to
+do their utmost to support the Mother Country in
+her efforts to oblige the Berlin Authorities to respect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
+their treaty obligations! Were they not
+also in duty bound to participate with England in
+the defence of invaded weak, but heroic, Belgium!
+Were they not in duty bound to at once organize
+for their own defence, sending their heroic sons
+to fight their enemy on the soil of France, instead
+of waiting the direct attack upon their own
+territories!</p>
+
+<p>The British Parliament dealing exclusively
+with the Foreign Affairs of the Empire, the international
+treaties which they ratify are binding on
+the whole Empire. If such a treaty is violated by
+the other party or parties who signed it, violently
+obliging England to stand by her obligations, are
+not the Colonies also bound to uphold the Mother
+land in the vindication of her treaty rights?!</p>
+
+<p>Looking at the same question, in the full
+light of the sound principles of the justice of any
+war, from the German standpoint, what are the
+only true conclusions to be drawn? To satisfy
+Austria's unjust demands and maintain peace,
+Servia had, in 1914, at the urgent request of
+England, France and Russia, gone as far as any
+independent nation could go without dishonour.
+Not only backed, but no doubt inspired, by the
+Berlin Government, Austria would not consent to
+reduce by an iota her unfair pretentions against
+Servia.</p>
+
+<p>It was plainly a case of a great Power unjustly
+threatening a weak nation. Consequently,
+according to the "Nationalist" leader's principle,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+Russia was right and doing her duty in intervening
+to protect the menaced weak State. Instead of
+hypocritically resenting Russia's intervention in
+favour of Servia, it was equally Germany's duty to
+join with her to save this weak nation from Austrian
+unjust challenge. Had it done so, Austria
+would certainly have refrained from exacting from
+Servia concessions to which she could not agree
+without sacrificing her independent Sovereignty.
+The Vienna Authorities backing down from their
+unjust stand, there would have been no war. And
+Germany, together with Russia, would have deserved
+the gratitude of the world for their timely
+intervention, prompted by a clear sense of their
+duty and a sound conception of their international
+right.</p>
+
+<p>It is well known how the very opposite took
+place. Russia, to be ready for the emergency of
+the declaration of war by Austria against Servia,
+ordered the mobilization of that part of her army
+bordering on the Austrian frontier, answering to
+the Berlin request for explanations that she had no
+inimical intention whatever against the German
+Empire, that her only object was to protect weak
+Servia against Austria's most unjust attack. The
+Kaiser's government replied by requesting Russia
+to cancel her order for the mobilization of part of
+her army. And in the very thick of this diplomatic
+exchange of despatches, whilst England and
+France were sparing no effort, by day and night,
+to maintain peace and protect Mankind from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+threatening calamity, Germany suddenly threw
+the gauntlet and declared war against Russia.</p>
+
+<p>Foreseeing clearly that France was consequently
+in honour bound to support Russia, in accordance
+with her international obligations towards
+that great Eastern Power&mdash;in strict conformity
+with the second principle enunciated by
+Mr. Bourassa and previously quoted&mdash;, Germany
+took the initiative of a second unjust declaration
+of war, and this one against France.</p>
+
+<p>The military operations against France being
+very difficult, and certainly to be very costly in a
+fearful loss of man-power, before the strongly fortified
+French frontier could be successfully overrun,
+Germany, after a most shameful attempt to
+bribe England into neutrality, decided to take the
+easy route and ordered her army to invade Belgium's
+neutral territory, in violation of her solemn
+treaty obligations. That treacherous act filled
+the cup of teutonic infamy, and brought Great
+Britain, and the whole British Empire, into the
+conflict.</p>
+
+<p>So Germany was guilty of the most outrageous
+violation of the three sound principles laid
+down by the "Nationalist" leader qualifying a just
+war against an iniquitous one, whilst England and
+France won the admiration of the world by their
+noble determination to stand by them at all cost.</p>
+
+<p>Still Mr. Bourassa, by an incomprehensible
+perversion of mind in judging the application of
+his own loudly proclaimed principles, has not to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
+this day uttered one word openly condemning Germany's
+war policy and eulogizing that of England
+and France. On the contrary, he has tried to persuade
+his readers that both groups of belligerents
+were equally responsible for the war, more especially
+giving vent to his, at the least, very
+strange hostility to England and scarcely dissimulating
+his teutonic evident sympathies. He
+never positively expressed his disapproval of Austria's
+unjust attack against Servia, but condemned
+Russia for her intervention to protect that
+weak country, concluding that the Petrograd Government
+was the real guilty party which had
+thrown the world into the vortex of the most deadly
+conflict of all times.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most damaging and unfair arguments
+of Mr. Bourassa was that in intervening
+in the struggle, England was not actuated by a
+real sentiment of justice, honour and duty, but was
+merely using France as a shield for her own selfish
+protection. And when he deliberately expressed
+such astounding views, he knew, or ought
+to have known, that by her so commendable decision
+to avenge outraged weak Belgium, Great
+Britain had at once, by her command of the seas,
+guaranteed France against the superior strength
+of the German fleet, kept widely opened the great
+commercial avenues of oceanic trade, the closing
+of which by the combined sea power of the Central
+Empires, would have infallibly caused the
+crushing defeat of France by cutting off all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
+supplies she absolutely required to meet the terrible
+onslaught of her cruel enemy. He knew, or
+ought to have known, that the navigation of the
+seas being closed to her rivals by Germany, Russia
+would have been very easily put out of the
+fight, her only available ocean ports, Vladivostock
+and Arkhangel, through which supplies of many
+kinds, especially munitions, could reach her eastern
+coast, at once becoming of no service to her.</p>
+
+<p>He knew, or ought to have known, that if
+Great Britain had remained neutral, Japan, Italy,
+Portugal, would not have declared war against
+either Germany or Austria.</p>
+
+<p>As such consequences of British neutrality
+were as sure as the daily rising of the sun, was I
+not right when I drew the conclusion that if a
+shield there was, it was rather that of Great Britain
+covering France, all her allies and even the
+neutral nations, with the protection of her mighty
+sea power. With such a conviction, the soundness
+of which I felt sure, I told my French Canadian
+countrymen that, for one, I would, to my last day,
+be heartily grateful to England to have saved
+France from the crushing defeat which once more
+would have been her lot, had she been left alone
+to fight the Central Empires. Heroic, without
+doubt France would have been. But with deficient
+supplies, with much curtailed resources, with no
+helpful friends, heroism alone, however admirable
+and prolonged, was sure to be of no avail against
+an unmatched materially organized power, used to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+its most efficiency by the severest military discipline,
+by national fanaticism worked to fury, and
+by soldierly enthusiasm carried to wildness.</p>
+
+<p>In a single handed struggle with Germany, in
+1914, France would have been in a far worse position
+than in 1870. The extraordinary development
+of the new German Empire&mdash;the outcome of the
+great war so disastrous to France&mdash;in population,
+in commerce, in manufacturing industry, in
+financial resources, in military organization, made
+her fighting power still more disproportionate.
+To her wonderful territorial army, she added her
+recently built military fleet, then much superior,
+in the number of vessels carrying thousands and
+thousands of skilled seamen, to the French one.
+Moreover Austria, with another fifty millions of
+people, Bulgaria and Turkey, with more than
+thirty millions, were backing Germany, whilst, in
+1870, France had only Prussia to contend with.</p>
+
+<p>All those facts staring him like any one else,
+how could Mr. Bourassa reasonably charge Great
+Britain with using France merely as a tool for her
+own safety. Under the circumstances of the case,
+such a preposterous assertion is beyond human
+comprehension. I, for one, cannot understand
+how he failed to see that, had England been actuated
+by the selfish and unworthy motives to which
+he ascribes her intervention in the war, she could
+have then, and at least for several years, wrought
+from Germany almost all the concessions she
+would have wished for. Could it not, by an alliance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+with the Central Empires, have attained
+the goal of that dominating ambition which the
+"Nationalist" leader asserts to be her most
+cherished aim.</p>
+
+<p>But such a dishonourable policy England
+would not consider for a single moment. She indignantly
+refused Germany's outrageous proposals,
+stood by her treaty obligations, and resolutely
+threw all the immense resources of her power in
+the conflict which, at the very beginning, developed
+into a struggle for life and death between
+human freedom and absolutist tyranny.</p>
+
+<p>I am sure, and I do not hesitate to vouch for
+them, all the truly loyal French-Canadians&mdash;they
+are almost unanimously so&mdash;are like myself profoundly
+grateful to Great Britain for her noble
+decision to rush to the defense of Belgium and
+France in their hour of need. Comparing what
+took place with what might have been, moved by
+all the ties of affection that will ever bind them
+to the great and illustrious nation from which they
+sprung, they fully appreciate the inestimable value
+of the support given by their second mother-country
+to that of their national origin. They ardently
+pray that both of them will emerge victorious
+from the great conflict to remain, for the good
+of Mankind, indissolubly united in peace as they
+are in war.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">A "Nationalist" Illogical Charge Against
+England.</span></div>
+
+<p>Our Nationalists, after charging England
+with using France merely as a shield against
+Germany, have been illogical to the point of reproaching
+her for not having intervened in favour
+of her close neighbour, in 1870. It is most likely
+that, had she done so, they would have pretended
+that she would have been actuated by the same
+selfish sentiment that prompted her, for the only
+sake of her own protection, to enter into the
+present conflict.</p>
+
+<p>How is it that Mr. Bourassa, so fond of
+charging England with ambitious views of constant
+self-agrandizement, of worldly domination,
+can suddenly turn about and accuse her of having
+shamefully sacrificed France, in 1870, to the overpowering
+German blow?</p>
+
+<p>The circumstances of the two cases&mdash;1870 and
+1914&mdash;were very different. The conflict of 1870
+had, apparently at least, a dynastic cause. The
+House of Hohenzollern had been intriguing to have
+a Prussian prince of her own elevated to the
+Spanish Throne. The Imperial Government of
+Napoleon III strongly objected to such a policy.
+The diplomatic correspondence which ensued did
+not settle the difficulty. France declared war
+against Prussia. Many years later it was discovered
+that by a falsified diplomatic despatch,
+Bismark had succeeded in his satanic design to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+bring the government of Napoleon III to attack
+Prussia, thus shamefully throwing upon France
+the responsibility of the war.</p>
+
+<p>In 1870, England was at peace with all the
+European Powers, as she had ever been since 1815,
+with the only exception of the Crimean War.
+During the diplomatic correspondence that led to
+the hostilities, what reason would have justified
+England to break her neutrality? What would
+the present critics of her course have said if she
+had sided with Prussia? Would they have pretended
+that she would have used Prussia as a
+shield against France?</p>
+
+<p>I personally remember very well the tragic
+events of the terrible year, 1870. The crushing
+military power of Prussia as proved by the triumphant
+march of her victorious armies, was a revelation
+for all, for France still more than for others.
+True Prussia had beaten Austria in the short campaign
+ended at Sadowa. The Prussia France was
+then fighting was not the giant Empire against
+which she is battling with such heroism for the
+last four years. France was at the time the leading
+continental Power. The general opinion was,
+when war was suddenly declared, that France
+would easily triumph over her enemy.</p>
+
+<p>It must not be forgotten that, in 1870, England
+was even less ready than in 1914 to engage in a
+continental conflict. Her standing army was not
+large, and then partly garrisoned in the colonies.
+Some of her best regiments were stationed in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
+Canada. She could have been a really important
+ally of France only as a strong support of another
+continental power joining with her against
+Prussia, for instance Russia or Austria, or both of
+them.</p>
+
+<p>If England had been able to send 500,000 men
+in a few days to the very heart of France, incessantly
+followed by another half million, it is almost
+certain that the Prussian army would not
+have entered Paris. But England had not that
+million of trained men. It would have taken at
+least a year to organize such a large army.</p>
+
+<p>I will speak my mind openly. After Sedan,
+any attempt at saving France by force would have
+been vain and useless. Even Russia and Austria
+were unprepared for such a task. Their intervention,
+coming too late, would most likely have given
+Prussia a chance to win a much greater victory.
+France out of the struggle, Prussia would then
+have had the opportunity to achieve, as early as
+1870, what she has ever since prepared for, and
+tried to accomplish by the war she has brought on
+in 1914.</p>
+
+<p>What then becomes of the "Nationalist" pretention
+that Great Britain has ever been aiming
+at dominating the world, when it is so easy to
+understand that without a very large territorial
+army, which she persistingly refused to organize,
+she was unable to take an important part in any
+continental war. The days were passed, after the
+extraordinary development of Prussian militarism,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
+when she could brilliantly hold her own on the
+continent with a small standing army backed by
+generous subsidies to the European powers. The
+present war is surely proof evident of it, since
+England, instead of the two hundred thousand men
+she was expected to send over to France, as her
+man-power contribution, has had to raise a total
+army, with all the auxiliary services, of 6,000,000
+officers and men, exclusive of the 2,000,000 contributed
+by the whole British Colonial Empire.</p>
+
+<p>The Nationalists accusing England to have
+abandoned France to her sad fate, in 1870, was
+only another instance of their campaign to arouse
+the feelings of the French Canadians against
+Great Britain.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Other "Nationalist" Erroneous Assertions.</span></div>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa has had his own peculiar way
+of explaining the real determining cause of the
+war. Some men are&mdash;by nature it is to be supposed&mdash;always
+disposed to judge great historical
+events from considerations inspired by the lowest
+sentiments of the human heart. In the "Nationalist"
+leader's view, the great war was brought
+about by the treacherous alliance of British and
+German capitalists speculating together, in actual
+partnership or otherwise, in the production of war
+material: cannons, rifles, munitions, war shipbuilding,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>&amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>In my humble opinion, such views are lowering
+to a very vulgar and lamentably repulsive
+cause&mdash;if it could be true&mdash;events of immense significance,
+the result, on the one side, of criminal
+aspirations which, however guilty they may be,
+have not yet been degraded to the profound depth
+of abjection they suppose; on the other, by the
+most noble sentiments which can inspire nations
+to make the greatest sacrifices to avenge outraged
+Justice and Right.</p>
+
+<p>Autocratic German ambition, such as it has
+proved to be, is bad enough. Still the cause of the
+war, such as asserted by Mr. Bourassa, would have
+been far worse. National aspirations, however
+wrongly diverted from their legitimate conception,
+will never be as contemptible as the nasty greed of
+individual speculators treacherously sucking the
+very life blood of their countrymen for the sake of
+squeezing millions of dollars at the cost of their
+country's honour and future.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, illegitimate "profiteering" has
+taken place in the course of every war. Of course
+it must be severely condemned and firmly prevented,
+to the utmost, by governmental authority
+strongly supported by public opinion which
+must, however, be cautious not to be unduly influenced
+and carried away by the wild charges of
+some who denounce others with so much apparent
+indignation for the only reason that they themselves
+are not succeeding as they would like to do
+in their speculative attempts.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Illegitimate "profiteering" is one of the deplorable
+effects of a war; it is never its real cause.</p>
+
+<p>What are the true causes, humanly speaking,
+of the cataclysm so violently shaking the world?
+They were of two kinds. The first was the disordered
+ambition of a nation having reached, by
+prodigious efforts, such a power that she fatally
+determined to dominate everywhere, militarily
+and politically. To this first cause was added that
+of secular race rivalry.</p>
+
+<p>The two causes of the first kind&mdash;which can
+properly be called <i>offensive</i>, were followed by the
+noble one of the resistance to oppression, of the
+defence of the honour of threatened nations, of the
+energetic determination to avenge violated international
+treaties, and to save the civilized world
+from a new barbarous invasion.</p>
+
+<p>If the Allies had humbly bowed to the odious
+German claims, there would have been no war.</p>
+
+<p>Consequently, the two evident causes of the
+war are, on the one hand, German ambition to
+universal domination; on the other, the absolute
+necessity on the part of the Allies to prevent by
+all possible means the success of such a tyrannical
+enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>However much guilty they have been in bringing
+on the most terrible war of all times, it is still
+injurious for the Berlin Government to suppose
+that in assuming this weighty responsibility, they
+were playing the part of an unconscious instrument
+of the most diabolical thirst of money making
+by shameless "profiteers."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But such a charge is absolutely inexplicable
+when one accuses France, England and Belgium
+to be, in their admirable and heroic campaign for
+the world's deliverance and freedom, the pliant
+tools of contemptible speculators in the production
+of war materials.</p>
+
+<p>Governments and nations are, as a rule, far
+from having dropped to such a low state of incurable
+corruption. For many of them, there yet
+exists bright summits, shining with the clear light
+of Justice, Right and Honour, which in those
+times of sufferings and burning tears, are the
+pledge of better days and the promise of the
+world's resurrection.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Incredible "Nationalist" Notions.</span></div>
+
+<p>Can it be possibly believed that the "Nationalist"
+leader has asserted that when the British
+capitalists and bankers invested the savings entrusted
+to their safe keeping, they were principally
+actuated by the desire to create in Canada a financial
+influence which would, in due course, assist
+with force in dragging the Dominion to participate
+in the Imperial wars against her better judgment?
+Yet, so he has positively written and developed the
+wild argument.</p>
+
+<p>Any man, with the slightest business experience,
+knows that, in all cases, would-be borrowers
+go where money is to be lent. I have not yet
+learned that one of them ever went to the North<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+Pole in search of millions for railway building
+and all kinds of industrial and commercial enterprises.
+Daring explorers who ventured thither,
+facing so many risks, were stimulated by a laudable
+thirst of fame and the desire of scientific progress.
+They did not imagine, for a moment, that
+they were likely to discover, in these far away
+regions, great financial markets amply provided
+with millions of accumulated capital waiting for
+safe and profitable investments.</p>
+
+<p>Canada, a young country, as large as all
+Europe in territorial extent, with wonderful undeveloped
+resources of the agricultural soil, of the
+mines, of immense forests, of mighty rivers, of
+large and breezy lakes, could not progress without
+labour and capital. The large natural increase
+of the population, supplemented by immigration,
+was sure to supply the labour. Capital, to the
+amount of hundreds of millions, could not be provided
+by the only savings of our people. Immigration
+of capital was even more pressingly required
+than that of men. The Governments of
+Canada, federal and provincial, city corporations,
+railway companies, industrial concerns, wanting
+money, all went where it could be found. It happened
+that London, the capital of the British Empire,
+was by far the largest financial market of the
+world. No wonder then that instead of going to
+Lapland, Canadian borrowers crowded in London,
+where they met with those of nearly all the nations
+of the world, gathering in the same city for the
+same purpose.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Two incontrovertible economical truisms are,
+without the shadow of a doubt, the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. That a would-be borrower wishes to get
+the money he wants in the easiest way at the lowest
+interest charge;</p>
+
+<p>2. That a wise lender wishes to secure for
+his money the safest investment carrying the highest
+possible rate of interest; the rate of interest
+being however subordinated, in his mind, to the
+safety of the investment.</p>
+
+<p>Such were the sound economical considerations
+which settled for the Canadian borrowers of
+all sorts, and the British investors, the conditions
+of all the loans made on Canadian account.</p>
+
+<p>Any one merely hinting to the British saving
+public that the money invested in Canada was sent
+over to our shores for the object of creating a financial
+influence which would force the Dominion
+into costly wars, could not have adopted a more
+unwise course to destroy the best chances of the
+success of a loan. Canadian credit was of first
+class order, because the British investors knew our
+grand possibilities; because they were aware that
+Canada had always been a safe debtor, honouring
+with clock regularity her interest charges and the
+payment of maturing loans; because also, and in a
+very large measure, they realized that we were not
+in the same position of so many nations of the Old
+World, exposed to frequent warring necessities
+likely to exhaust our means and to jeopardize our
+bright prospects.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Confidence being the sound basis of good credit,
+we got all the money we wanted for all the
+purposes of our national economical development,
+the true interest of Canada and of Great Britain
+being equally well served by the financial intercourse
+between the wealthy mother-country and
+her progressive colony.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Canadian Financial Operations in the United
+States.</span></div>
+
+<p>Our "Nationalists," so eager to discourage
+Canadian effort in the war, and, with this object,
+always prone to magnify German warlike achievements
+and the difficulties confronting the Allies,
+were rather nervous at the increasing prospects of
+the United States joining the <i>Entente</i> Nations.
+Their leader seized every opportunity to argue
+that they would be mistaken in doing so. During
+the weary months when the President of the
+neighbouring Republic was prudently feeling his
+way before taking the bold stand which he has
+ever since so brilliantly and bravely upheld, the
+"Nationalists", through successive ups and downs
+in their expectations, could scarcely help hiding
+their desire that the United States would not intervene
+in the struggle. Those of us who had not
+been moved by the horrors of the Belgian invasion,
+by the murder of so many innocent victims of
+teutonic savageness, by the brutal killing of Edith
+Cavell, by the Armenian massacres, by the wanton<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+destruction of admirable works of Art, could not
+be expected to thrill at the barbarous sinking of
+the Lusitania, sending to the bottom of the ocean
+hundreds of American citizens of the neutral American
+Northern Republic. They were anxious that
+the Washington Government should condone the
+outrageous offence and all the subsequent ones perpetrated
+by the German submarines against our
+neighbours. How much they were dismayed at
+the sudden close of Mr. Wilson's apparent hesitation,
+and at the proud declaration of war from
+Washington to Berlin. Though rejoicing at it,
+they did not consider that the Russian bolsheviki's
+collapse could compensate for the additional military
+and financial resources the Allies were sure to
+derive from the United States participation in the
+war.</p>
+
+<p>Canada having to borrow many millions to
+sustain her warlike effort, and the British money
+market being closed to further outside investments,
+had two sources left for her successful financial
+operations: her own market and that of the
+United States. The Washington Authorities had
+generously decided to help financially the European
+Allies in pressing need of money. The Ottawa
+Government, before making a grand appeal
+to the Canadian public, applied to Washington for
+a loan. Mr. Wilson's cabinet, however much they
+would have liked to meet the wishes of the Canadian
+Government, had to answer that, having such
+a large war expenditure to incur, and such big<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+sums to collect to assist their less wealthy European
+associates in the struggle, they could not see
+their way to grant Canada's demand.</p>
+
+<p>Acknowledging the value of the reasons given
+for not complying with their request, the Canadian
+Ministers then applied to Washington for the permission
+to negotiate a loan in the open American
+market. This was readily granted.</p>
+
+<p>It was, of course, well understood that going
+in the open market, Canada, to secure the required
+sum of money, would have to pay the then current
+rate of interest increasing, as usual, in proportion
+to the increased pressure of the demand of funds.</p>
+
+<p>It is utterly incredible&mdash;but still it is true&mdash;that
+Mr. Bourassa did denounce in his newspaper
+<i>Le Devoir</i>, the Ottawa Cabinet's action in borrowing
+money from the American saving public. In
+severe terms he blamed the Washington Authorities
+for not having lent millions to Canada at the
+low rate of interest they had agreed to accept from
+France and Italy. He asserted that this refusal
+on their part was a testimony of ill-will against
+the Dominion. And in the most violent terms he
+charged all those who favoured Canadian borrowings
+in the American market with being traitors
+selling their country to the United States.</p>
+
+<p>It is hard to say whether the charge is not
+more ridiculous than contemptible. It is the repetition,
+in an aggravated form of absurdity, of
+the argument accusing the British investing capitalists
+to have had for their only object in lending<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+us their money to help coercing Canada into the
+Imperial wars.</p>
+
+<p>Was Mr. Bourassa ignorant of the fact that
+the building of the magnificent railway system of
+the United States, that their great industrial development,
+were due to the billions of British
+capital which for the last eighty years have
+flowed, in rolling waves, towards the shores of the
+Republic, invading, in the most peaceful and
+friendly way, her large territory, and drawing
+from its immense resources the greatest immeasurable
+accumulation of wealth ever created by the
+labour of man? I am not aware that any American
+writer ever ran the risk of being crushed by ridicule
+in accusing all the United States borrowers
+in the English market, governmental and others,
+of the hideous crime of selling their country to
+Great Britain. It would have been sheer madness
+to say so in the broad light of the marvellous economical
+progress of our neighbours. They knew
+very well that the billions of dollars invested by
+the British saving public for the development of
+their territorial riches, were producing returns
+much larger than the rate of interest paid to their
+British creditors.</p>
+
+<p>No one in the United States ever apprehended,
+for a single moment, that because the Republic had
+borrowed enormous sums from Great Britain, she
+was likely to lose her State independence through
+the financial influence of the holders of her securities
+of all sorts.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Such "Nationalist" notions, as above exposed
+and contradicted, can only create very wrong and
+deplorable conclusions in the public mind, were
+they allowed to follow their course without
+challenge and without the refutation proving their
+complete absurdity.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">"Nationalist" Views Condensed.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>After refuting at length the "Nationalist"
+theories, I thought proper to condense them in a
+concrete proposition, and challenge their propagandist
+to call a public meeting in any city, town,
+or locality, in the Dominion,&mdash;Montreal for instance&mdash;and
+to find a dozen of citizens of standing
+in the community, to consent to move and second
+a "<i>Resolution</i>" embodying their doctrines.</p>
+
+<p>This condensed proposition, I translate as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Whereas England has unjustly declared war
+against Germany;</p>
+
+<p>"Whereas Great Britain has done nothing to
+maintain the peace of the world;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that His Majesty King George
+V. <i>had not the right to declare the state of war
+for Canada without the assent of the Canadian
+Cabinet</i>;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that Canada, as an autonomous
+colony, <i>is a Sovereign State</i>;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that British Sovereignty over
+Canada <i>is only a fiction</i>;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that Canada, interfering in the
+present war, <i>should have done so as a Nation</i>;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Whereas Canada should only have fought on
+her own account, like <i>Belgium, Servia, Italy or
+Bulgaria</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Whereas <i>the maintenance of a compact British
+Empire is the most permanent provocation
+against the peace of the world</i>;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that the supremacy of England
+on the seas is unjust;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that Great Britain's aspiration,
+for a long time past, has been universal domination
+by means of her military naval power;</p>
+
+<p>"Whereas England is unfair against France
+in using her as a shield against German invasion;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that England is exercising by
+all possible means a strong pressure upon the
+Colonies for her only benefit;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering <i>that all the social leaders have
+united to demoralize the conscience of the people,
+to poison their mind, to set their vigilance at
+sleep, and to represent to them as a national duty
+what would formerly have been considered as a
+betrayal of national interests</i>;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering <i>that England is trying to crush
+Germany, being afraid of her colonial expansion
+and her maritime and commercial competition</i>;</p>
+
+<p>"Whereas our compatriots of the British
+races have many faults; <i>that they are ignorant,
+assuming, arrogant, overbearing and rotten with
+mercantilism</i>;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that they have acquired <i>many
+of the worst vices of the Yankees</i>;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Considering that Canada should never participate,
+outside of her own territory, in the wars
+of the British Empire;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that the Canadian Cabinet and
+Parliament are criminally guilty of having ordered
+the organization of a Canadian army to go
+and fight against Germany on the French territory,
+and in authorizing the payment of the cost
+of this military expedition;</p>
+
+<p>"Be it "Resolved", that this meeting energetically
+protest against the declaration of war
+against Germany by His Majesty King George V,
+<i>without the assent of the Canadian Cabinet</i>, to
+defend Belgium's territory invaded by Germany
+violating solemn treaties;</p>
+
+<p>"That this meeting is of opinion that, for the
+purpose of favouring the restoration of peace as
+soon as possible, England should notify all the
+Powers that she abdicates for ever her supremacy
+on the seas, which supremacy Germany could
+hereafter safely exercise;</p>
+
+<p>"That this meeting being absolutely convinced
+that <i>the maintenance of a compact British Empire
+is the most permanent provocation against
+the peace of the world</i>, is strongly of opinion that
+Great Britain should, in order to quiet the fears
+of the Nations friendly to peace and opposed to
+militarism, like pacifist Germany, dissolve her
+Empire, at once acknowledging the immediate
+independence of India and of all her autonomous
+Colonies;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That this meeting's formal opinion is that
+the Canadian Parliament's imperious duty is to
+order without delay the dissolution of the British
+bond of connection, <i>which would be a public benefit</i>,
+and to proclaim the immediate independence
+of Canada;</p>
+
+<p>"That a copy of the present "Resolution" be addressed
+to His Excellency the Governor General,
+to the Members of the Federal Cabinet, to the
+Senators and to the Members of the House of
+Commons."</p>
+
+<p>The italics in the above draft "Resolution"
+and "Preamble" are quoted from Mr. Bourassa's
+writings.</p>
+
+<p>The "Preamble" and "Resolution" emphasize,
+in their true and complete meaning, the "Nationalist"
+doctrines perseveringly propounded for years
+past to poison French Canadian mentally. That
+such teachings can only produce disloyal feelings,
+stir up national prejudices and hatred of the
+Mother Country, and be most detrimental to the
+best interests of the Province of Quebec, of the
+Dominion of Canada, and of the British Empire as
+a whole, every one must admit with sadness.</p>
+
+<p>My challenge, which is still maintained, has
+not been taken up yet. All may rest assured that it
+will never be. The most ardent "Nationalist"
+knows that no responsible citizens would move the
+adoption of such views.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Loyal Principles Propounded.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>To the foregoing "Nationalist" proposition, I
+opposed one condensing, in a concrete form, the
+views and principles of the truly loyal Canadian
+citizens. I also translate it as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Whereas, since 1870, the German Empire had
+been a permanent menace against the peace of the
+world by her threatening military policy;</p>
+
+<p>"Whereas England, throughout the same
+period, and more especially during the twenty
+years previous to 1914, had done her utmost efforts
+to maintain peace;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that Great Britain had, in many
+ways, solicited Germany to agree to the limitation
+of armaments, especially of the building of
+war vessels;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that she had persisted in her attempts
+with the German Government to save the
+nations from the ruinous system of excessive
+armaments, in spite of the latter's refusal to
+accede to her demands;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that though in honor bound,
+like England, by three solemn treaties, to respect
+Belgium's neutrality, the German Government
+have, in August 1914, ordered their army to violate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+Belgian territory in order to more easily
+invade France to which they had declared war;</p>
+
+<p>"Whereas Great Britain, in honour bound,
+could not permit the crushing of Belgium by the
+German Empire;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering, moreover, that Germany, after
+mutilating and destroying Belgium, by the deprivation
+of her independence, after triumphing
+over France which she would have once again dismembered,
+would have undertaken to beat England
+to deprive her of sea supremacy, in order to
+obtain, by this last conquest, her domination over
+Europe and almost all the world;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that the defeat of England might
+very likely have resulted in the cession of Canada
+to Germany;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that the world at large is greatly
+interested in the maintenance of England and
+France as first class Powers on account of their
+services in favour of Human Civilization and
+Liberty;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that the German armies have
+accompanied their military operations with untold
+barbarous acts, by the murder of priests, of
+peaceful citizens, of wounded soldiers, of religious
+women, of mothers, of previously criminally
+outraged young girls, of old men, of young
+children, with the destruction by fire and otherwise
+of Cathedrals, Churches,&mdash;monuments of
+the Christian Art,&mdash;of libraries&mdash;sanctuaries of
+Science&mdash;of historical monuments, the legitimate
+glory and pride of Human Genius;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Whereas the German Government is guilty
+of the murder of thousands of persons, men,
+women and children, by the sinking of merchant
+vessels&mdash;the Lusitania, for instance&mdash;by its submarine
+ships, without giving the notices required
+by International Law;</p>
+
+<p>"Whereas from the very beginning of the war,
+the Allied Nations, England, France and Russia,
+have jointly agreed, in honour bound, to require,
+as the essential peace condition, the cessation by
+all the belligerent Powers of the crushing and
+ruinous militarism prevailing before the opening
+of the hostilities, by the fault of Germany's obstination
+to constantly strengthen her military
+organization both on land and sea;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that England and her Allies are
+struggling for the most venerable and sacred
+cause:&mdash;<i>outraged Justice</i>&mdash;; that, being a British
+Colony, <i>Canada is justly engaged in the present
+cruel and deplorable conflict, for the defence
+of the Right and the true Liberty of Nations; that
+our Canadian soldiers are valiantly fighting with
+those of England, France and Belgium for the
+great cause of sovereign importance&mdash;the protection
+of the world threatened by Germanism</i>;</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that England, to which the political
+life of Canada is bound, and France, to
+which the French Canadians owe their national
+existence, <i>have to fight for sacred interests in a
+war of endurance</i> requiring the incessant renewal
+of all the energies of the most ardent patriotism,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
+the victims of which falling on the field of honour
+have the merit of giving their lives <i>for Justice</i>";</p>
+
+<p>"Considering that, though wishing the restoration
+of peace as soon as possible, and earnestly
+praying Divine Providence to favour the world
+with the blessings of peace, more and more urgently
+needed after this assault of abominable
+barbarism against Christian Civilization lasting
+for the last four years, the Allies are absolutely
+unable to terminate the war by giving their consent
+to conditions which would not protect
+Humanity against the direst consequences of the
+militarism fastened by the German Empire on
+the Nations so anxious to bring it to an end;</p>
+
+<p>"Be it "Resolved":&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"That this meeting approves of the free and
+patriotic decision of the Federal Parliament to
+have Canada to participate in the so very Just
+War which England, France, Belgium, the United
+States and Italy are fighting against the German
+and Austrian Empires, allied in an effort to
+dominate the world;</p>
+
+<p>"That this meeting's strong opinion is that, on
+account of the terrible crisis menacing the British
+Empire and Civilization, it was the bounden duty
+of Canada to intervene in the war for the safety
+of the Mother Country and her own, for the salvation
+of Liberty and <i>of the sacred cause of outraged
+Justice</i>;</p>
+
+<p>"That this meeting desires to express her admiration
+and profound gratitude for the braves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
+who enlist in the grand army which the Canadian
+Parliament has ordered to be organized for the
+defence of the cause of the Allies, which is also
+that of the civilized world;</p>
+
+<p>"That this meeting also concur in the opinion
+that Canada is in duty bound to continue to participate
+in the present war until the final victory
+of the Allies, which will guarantee to the world
+a lasting peace and put an end to German militarism
+which has been the direct cause of so much
+dire misfortunes for Humanity."</p>
+
+
+<p>The italics of the above draft "Resolution"
+are quoted from the writings and speeches of
+leaders of French Canadian Roman Catholics.</p>
+
+<p>There was no need of calling meetings to
+adopt the preceding "Resolution" with its well defined
+preamble. It had been approved, in all its
+bearings, at the outset of the hostilities by the unanimous
+decision of the Canadian Parliament, by
+the almost unanimous consent of public opinion,
+by the religious, social, commercial, industrial and
+financial leaders of the country. It had been so
+approved by the four hundred thousand brave
+Canadians who rallied to the Colours; by the subscribers,
+by thousands, to the national war loans.</p>
+
+<p>Since writing the above draft "Resolution",
+its full substance has been almost unanimously
+approved by the Canadian people in general elections,
+the two contending political parties entirely
+agreeing so far as the Justice of the cause of the
+Allies was concerned, differing only as to the best
+means for Canada to adopt to achieve final victory.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Without entering into any considerations respecting
+the divergence of the views of the leaders
+of political thought, in the still recent electoral
+campaign,&mdash;from which it is more advisable for
+me to abstain in the interest of the cause I am defending&mdash;I
+may be allowed to remark that only a
+small remnant of the "Nationalist" element dared
+to reaffirm his hostility to Canada's intervention
+in the conflict and to avow his opinion <i>that the
+country had done enough</i>.</p>
+
+<p>What did those irreconcilable "Nationalists"&mdash;so
+few in numbers as the event ultimately proved&mdash;mean
+by their assertion that <i>Canada had done
+enough for the war</i>? According to its literal wording,
+it must have signified that no more sacrifices
+should have been incurred for the triumph of the
+Allied cause. If it was so, the conclusion to be
+drawn from such sayings was that, to put an end
+to any further Canadian contributions, orders
+should be given to bring back the Canadian Army
+from Europe, and to send home all the forces still
+on Canadian soil. It is plain that even if the new
+Canadian Parliament had decided not to increase
+our contribution of man-power, in order to maintain
+the efficiency of the Canadian divisions at the
+front, large sacrifices would have had to be made
+to keep on the theatre of war the forces which were
+still in the field.</p>
+
+<p>To refuse to participate in the war would have
+been deserting the flag at the hour of danger, and
+a total misconception of our plain duty.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Giving up the fight, once engaged in the
+struggle, before triumphant victory, or irremediable
+defeat, in the very thick of the battle so
+heroically carried on by the Allies, would have
+been sheer cowardice&mdash;bolchevikism of the worst
+kind.</p>
+
+<p>Whether they meant it or not, those few
+"Nationalists" dared not openly propose the recall
+of our troops. The solitary "Nationalist" candidate
+who had the nerve to face the electorate was
+defeated by a very large majority.</p>
+
+<p>No better proof of the weakness of the hold of
+the doctrines of "Nationalism," on sound public
+opinion, is required than the decision of its most
+outspoken advocate and leader, Mr. Bourassa, to
+refrain from being a candidate in any constituency,
+and to advise all his supposed friends to do
+likewise. No one was deceived, with regard to this
+decision, by the reasons, or rather excuses, given
+to explain it.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently, if the "Nationalist" group and their
+leader had been confident of the support of the
+large number of electors whose opinion they pretended
+to represent, they would certainly not have
+lost the chance to show their strength, and the opportunity
+to elect many candidates of their persuasion
+to enter Parliament free from any party
+allegiance but that of their own element. But any
+one somewhat posted with the currents of public
+opinion in the Province of Quebec, knew very well
+that if pure "Nationalist" candidates had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
+nominated in all the constituencies of the Province,
+running between the regular party nominees,&mdash;ministerial
+and opposition&mdash;the average number
+of ballots cast for them would scarcely have
+reached ten per cent. of the French Canadian
+votes, less than two per cent. of the whole Canadian
+electorate.</p>
+
+<p>It was moreover highly probable that, had they
+tried the game, they would not have even succeeded,
+in two-thirds of the constituencies, in inducing
+citizens of sufficient standing to accept their nomination
+and their political program. Once engaged
+in such a hopeless electoral contest, they
+would have had either to humbly retire from the
+field, or to await the doomed day by nominating
+men of no weight whatever. Both alternatives
+would have led them to an equally disastrous
+defeat.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Unjust "Nationalist" Grievances Against
+England.</span></div>
+
+<p>At the end of the very first page of Mr.
+Bourassa's pamphlet, entitled:&mdash;<i>What do we
+owe England</i>?&mdash;in French:&mdash;Que devons-nous à
+l'Angleterre?,&mdash;The following lines are found:&mdash;(<i>Translation.</i>)</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>British Imperialism, in its concrete and practical form, can
+be defined in ten words: <b>the active participation by the Colonies in
+the wars of England</b>. It is almost precisely the definition I gave
+of it as early as the days of the African war. It is exact. Considered
+from a larger point of view, from its profound causes and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>far reaching consequences, British Imperialism calls for a more
+ample definition. Its object is to have Great Britain dominate the
+world by means of the organization and concentration of all the
+Military Forces of the Empire&mdash;both Sea and Land Forces&mdash;; it
+means the gradual annihilation, or at least the enslaving of all
+the divers nationalities constituting the British Empire, in order
+to bring about the World's supremacy of the Anglo-Saxon race,
+of her thoughts, of her language, of her political conceptions, of
+her commerce and her wealth. Its object is to crush all competitions,
+all internal and external oppositions. It is the German
+Ideal; it is the Roman Ideal. It is the Imperialism of all countries,
+at all times, enlarged to the limits of the monstrous pretensions
+of Pan-Anglo-Saxonism.</p></div>
+
+<p>All the propositions of the above quotation
+do not bear, for one single instant, the light of
+historical research, of reason, even of common
+sense.</p>
+
+<p>I challenge Mr. Bourassa, and any one else,
+to read the speeches and the writings of all those
+who have studied the great question of the future
+of the British Empire, and to detect therein one
+single word to justify the assertion <i>that the organization
+and concentration of all the Military
+Forces of the Empire have for their object to help
+England to dominate the world</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I have already abundantly proved that
+England never aspired to dominate the world. I
+answered Mr. Bourassa's unfounded propositions
+as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1&mdash;I will surely be allowed to say that for
+nearly the last fifty years, I have done my best
+efforts to keep myself well informed with the
+opinions expressed by the most authorized political
+men of the Mother Country&mdash;of all parties&mdash;by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+the most renowned publicists, by the most distinguished
+writers of the great English press. I
+have yet to read one sentence leading me to suppose
+that the mind of any one of them was haunted
+by the foolish hope of Great Britain's domination
+of the world. Many of them have spoken and
+written to persuade their countrymen of the growing
+urgency to consider the most effective measures
+to be adopted to defend the Empire, in view
+of the efforts of other nations&mdash;notably Germany&mdash;to
+strengthen their military organizations. No
+one advised them to incur the most heavy sacrifices
+<i>in order to dominate the world</i>. They had too
+much political sense to believe that such a ridiculous
+scheme could ever be carried out.</p>
+
+<p>2&mdash;What the "Nationalist" leader calls British
+Imperialism never had for its objective <i>the
+gradual suppression, or at least the enslaving
+of the divers nationalities constituting the British
+Empire</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Such an assertion is nothing less than a
+stroke of the imagination which recent history utterly
+refutes, proving, as it does, the very reverse,
+as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>A&mdash;The creation, by Imperial Charters, of the
+great autonomous federal Canadian, Australian,
+South African Dominions.</p>
+
+<p>B&mdash;The federal system adopted for the Dominion
+of Canada purposely for the protection of
+the French Canadians whose special interests are
+entrusted to the Legislature of the Province of
+Quebec.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>C&mdash;The South African Union Charter is the
+guarantee of the Boers' control of the future of
+that vast stretch of country, by means of the two
+fundamental principles of the British constitutional
+system:&mdash;government by the majority combined
+with ministerial responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>No Empire in the world grants as large a
+measure of freedom as the British Empire does,
+to the various national groups living under the
+protection of her flag.</p>
+
+<p>3&mdash;British Imperialism, contrary to Mr.
+Bourassa's assertion, was never deluded by the
+wild dream <i>of a world wide supremacy of the
+Anglo-Saxon race, of her thoughts, of her language,
+of her political conceptions, of her commerce and
+her wealth</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Surely, I have yet to learn that Great Britain
+has dreamt, and is dreaming, to impose <i>by Force</i>
+her "mentality," her language, her political institutions
+to China, to Japan, to Russia, to France, to
+all the South American Republics, to Italy, to
+Spain, to Germany, to Austria-Hungary, to Turkey,
+&amp;c., which, considered as a whole, represent,
+any one must admit, a pretty large part of the
+universe.</p>
+
+<p>4&mdash;Mr. Bourassa's assertion that England
+aspires to dominate the world, <i>economically</i>, <i>commercially</i>,
+is most positively contradicted by the
+history of the last eighty years. Who does not
+know&mdash;and I cannot for a moment suppose that
+Mr. Bourassa ignores it&mdash;that, nearly a century<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
+ago, Great Britain, finally rallied in favour of a
+Free Trade Policy, has opened her market free to
+the products of all the nations of the world. Is
+that not a rather strange way of aspiring to
+an economical domination! And whilst all the
+countries of the earth, the British colonies as well
+as foreign nations, can freely sell their goods in
+the British market, they protect their own markets
+by high customs duties&mdash;in some cases almost prohibitive&mdash;against
+British goods.</p>
+
+<p>National commercial statistics are opened to
+the "Nationalist" leader's perusal as to any one
+else. If he had referred to them, he would have
+learned that the Foreign Trade of Great Britain,
+in 1913, the year preceding the outbreak of the
+war, amounted to $7,017,775,335; exports were
+valued at $3,174,101,630; imports totalized $3,843,673,695,
+exceeding the exports by the large amount
+of $669,572,065.</p>
+
+<p>By looking at the figures, Mr. Bourassa would
+only have had to call upon his common sense to
+draw the conclusion that England was certainly
+not moving along an easy road to the commercial
+domination of the world by maintaining a policy
+resulting in an import trade larger, by an annual
+average of nearly twenty per cent., than her
+exportations.</p>
+
+<p>Before the war, Germany, by rapid strides,
+had succeeded in attaining the second rank
+amongst the great trading nations, coming next
+after Great Britain. In the same year&mdash;1913&mdash;her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
+Foreign Trade totalized $5,351,500,000, divided as
+follows:&mdash;Imports $2,801,675,000; exports $2,549,825,000.</p>
+
+<p>The really wonderful industrial and commercial
+expansion of Germany, during the last forty
+years previous to the war, offered another opportunity
+to Mr. Bourassa to show his spite against
+Great Britain. He would have been sorry not to
+make the best of it. Calling into play his fertile
+imagination, he unhesitatingly charged England
+with deep rooted jealousy of Germany's trade
+success and the guilty intent to crush it out of
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>To this absurd assertion&mdash;not using the word
+offensively, being always determined to be courteous
+in any discussion I engage&mdash;I answered by
+quoting the figures of the reciprocal relative external
+British and German trade. In 1913, Great
+Britain sold to Germany goods to the amount of
+$203,385,150, and bought German products for a
+total value of $402,055,285. Great Britain's exports
+to Germany were then only about fifty per
+cent of her imports from the same market. It is
+indeed difficult to detect in such trade relations
+between two nations any sign of the intent, on the
+part of the country buying from the other double
+the value of her sales to her, to dominate her
+people commercially.</p>
+
+<p>Any one knowing all the circumstances and
+the causes that imposed upon Great Britain the
+duty of taking part in the European struggle, cannot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+help being shocked at Mr. Bourassa's accusation
+<i>that England has incidentally been brought
+into the conflict only through the frantic desire of
+her business men to use it to crush the commercial
+competition of Germany</i>. No serious men could
+have entertained such strange notions. And the
+"Nationalist" leader certainly charged the political
+leaders and the business community of England
+with sheer madness.</p>
+
+<p>With all right minded men, the world over,
+I have long ago reached the sound conclusion that
+universal economical domination is only a chimerical
+idea absolutely outside of all possible realization.
+England does not indulge in any such extravagant
+dream, being too well aware how vain
+it would be.</p>
+
+<p>May I ask my readers&mdash;and Mr. Bourassa has
+been one of them,&mdash;to join with me in a short general
+review of the economical progress of the
+world, in its broadest lines, rising, for this purpose,
+as should be done in all cases, superior to all
+national and local prejudices. A grand natural
+scenery is always better appreciated from the
+mountain top. Equally so, questions of universal
+import must be considered from the heights of the
+noblest principles inspiring the Christian desire
+to promote the general good of Mankind. Considered
+from this elevated standpoint, very short-sighted
+indeed is the man who fails to see <span class="smcap">that
+the economical progress of the world, agriculturally,
+industrially, commercially, is bound up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></span>
+<span class="smcap">with intelligent, energetic and persevering
+Labour; that it is the outcome of the improvements
+of all the means of production, to the
+constant increased perfection of the agricultural
+and industrial arts, to the enlargement of
+the resources of capital, accumulated by judicious
+savings</span>. It is bound with the improvement
+of means of transportation by land and sea;
+with the much enlarged facilities of the exchange
+of all kinds of products; with the superior
+management,&mdash;the result of a much wider experience&mdash;of
+all the institutions distributing credit;
+with the energetic development of all the resources
+which generous Providence has profusely provided
+the earth for the good of Humanity.
+It is more than useless to expect economical progress
+from disastrous armed conflicts which, in the
+course of a few years, nay, only a few months,
+destroy the accumulated wealth of many years of
+incessant labour.</p>
+
+<p>War is productive of untold material losses.
+As a general rule, it cannot make the nations of
+the world richer. Many successive generations
+have for a long time to bear the crushing burden
+which they inherit from guilty ambitious Rulers
+as the only result of their thirst of vain glory.
+Materially, a nation may profit by an unjust war,
+resulting in the defeat of a weaker rival, but the
+riches thus acquired by the one, either by territorial
+acquisitions, or by the payment to her of
+war contributions and indemnities, or both, from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+the other, are merely transferred from the vanquished
+to the victor. The great society of nations,
+instead of gaining anything by it, is only
+losing, as a whole, the total amount of the financial
+cost of the military operations, of the squandering
+of hard earned savings, of diminished labour
+and production, of the waste of productive capital,
+of the loss of so many long days which could have
+been so much better employed. But most deplorable
+is the loss entailed by the warring nations,
+and the universe at large, by the sacrifice of the
+younger generations, of early youth and of strongly
+developed manhood, for the success of tyrannical
+and criminal purposes.</p>
+
+<p>There can be but one justification&mdash;and it is a
+noble, a glorious one&mdash;of the sacrifice of so many
+valuable lives and so much material wealth: the
+sacredness, the sanctity of the cause for which a
+nation, or a group of peoples, take up arms against
+an enemy, or enemies, only intent on crushing
+weaker rival, or rivals, by all the illegitimate
+means at his, or their command, for self-aggrandizement,
+for unjust domination. Such is the present
+war: sacred and just on the Allied side; abominable,
+brutal, barbarous on the German side, enhanced
+in its guilt by the ferocious Turks and the
+shameful submission of the enslaved Austrians
+to the overpowering will of their teutonic masters.
+It will not have cost too much if it has the result
+of freeing Mankind from the horrors of German
+militarism, assuring to the world a long reign of
+justice and moral grandeur.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>England can rightly claim a very large part
+of the merit accruing to all those who have contributed
+to the immense material progress of the
+world during the last century. She has actively
+and most intelligently worked for it by her vigorous
+industrial and commercial development, by the
+very numerous billions of dollars she has contributed,
+all over the world, to railway building and
+oceanic navigation. She has contributed to it by
+her extraordinary amount of savings which allowed
+her to supply the capital required for so many
+varied enterprises over all the continents. She has
+played the very important part of universal banker,
+distributing her immense treasures to foster
+production of all kinds everywhere. She has most
+largely contributed to the economic phenomenon
+of the gradual diminution of the universal rate of
+interest.</p>
+
+<p>If, according to Mr. Bourassa's strange notion,
+all this is to be considered as equivalent to
+economical domination, the more the whole world
+will enjoy it the better, more prosperous it will be,
+and future generations will have so much more
+cause for rejoicing at its increased development,
+and to be grateful to England for it.</p>
+
+<p>The witnesses who, for the last sixty years,
+have lived with their eyes opened, preferring the
+full shining light of the bright days of universal
+economical development to the darkness obscuring
+fanatical minds only intent on stirring up local,
+sectional and national prejudices, and miserable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+petty ambitions, have rejoiced at the greatly varied
+advantages Humanity has derived from the
+gifts of Providence favouring her with the great
+scientific discoveries which have worked, are still,
+and will for all times, work wonders for her material
+prosperity. The regular tendency of those
+natural forces recently applied to production is an
+increased movement towards the unification of the
+industrial, commercial and financial interests of
+the world. The vital energies of all peoples have
+more or less been stimulated by the same causes,
+operating everywhere, reaching until lately unknown
+and undeveloped regions. Engineering
+genius, broadened by the new scientific resources
+at its command, has triumphed over all difficulties.
+The gigantic locomotive, drawing palatial passenger
+coaches, and sometimes as much as a hundred
+heavily loaded freight cars, run by thousands and
+thousands daily through luxurious prairies. They
+cross giant rivers, ascend with alertness the highest
+mountains, or rush through tunnels which the
+skill and hard work of man has pierced through
+them, backed by the financial power of millions of
+money. Automobilism covers the whole universe,
+multiplying intercourse and human relations, and
+making possible, in a few days of marvellous
+organization, a glorious military victory like that
+almost miraculously carried at the Marne.</p>
+
+<p>Giant steamers, of fifty to sixty thousand tons&mdash;of
+a hundred thousand in the near future&mdash;ply,
+day and night, over the high seas. In mid-ocean<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+they scatter human thoughts through the air to
+very distant points. They carry within their large
+skulls immense quantities of the most varied
+products.</p>
+
+<p>Means of transportation have become so
+numerous, so improved, so rapid, that the surplus
+agricultural production of the most fertile regions
+do reach, in a few short days, the countries which,
+on account of their numerous industrial and commercial
+population, have to import a large quantity
+of food products. The equilibrium between
+production and consumption becomes yearly more
+easily obtainable. Famine by the inequality of
+agricultural production is very much less to be apprehended.
+Millions of human beings are no longer,
+as hitherto, threatened to die by starvation at
+the same time that more favoured regions had a
+surplus of food products which they could not use,
+sell, or export.</p>
+
+<p>Without a most powerful capitalization of
+savings&mdash;totaling, in some cases, billions of dollars&mdash;without
+the marvellous development of the
+great transportation industry by land and sea,
+could the Canadian and American western grain
+crops be delivered, within a few days' time, with
+an astonishing rapidity and at very small cost,
+on all the markets where they are absolutely
+required for daily consumption.</p>
+
+<p>Every country on earth is multiplying her efforts
+to develop her manufacturing interests by
+an active and intelligent use of the raw materials<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+with which her territory has been favoured by
+Nature.</p>
+
+<p>To this intense economical development of the
+world, all the peoples are contributing their shares
+in various proportions, of course:&mdash;In Europe,
+Great Britain, France, Germany, Russia, Austria,
+Italy, Belgium, &amp;c.; in the two Americas, the
+United States, Canada&mdash;Canada with the sure
+prospects of such a grand future&mdash;the Argentine
+Republic, Brazil, &amp;c.; in Asia, Japan, China, and
+the so very large Asiatic regions of Russia; in
+Africa, the British colonies, Egypt, Algeria, &amp;c.;
+and Australia, so recently opened to the glories of
+Christian Civilization, blooming in the Pacific
+ocean washing her shores, fertilizing her lands
+nearer to its refreshing breeze.</p>
+
+<p>Who does not see that all this development
+tends naturally to the economical unity of the
+world. If Humanity is ever effectively delivered
+from the dangers of wars like the one actually
+desolating her so cruelly, she will have to be grateful
+for this great boon to the unification, on a larger
+scale, of the general interests of all the nations requiring
+permanent peace for their regular and
+harmonious growth.</p>
+
+<p>To the wonderful material prosperity achieved
+as above explained, England has contributed
+her legitimate share, without trying to dominate
+economically the universe which derived all the
+great advantages which her business genius has so
+largely developed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It must not be supposed that I lose sight of
+the inconveniences which material prosperity may
+entail. One of them is the tendency to bend the
+national aspirations to materialism. This can be
+counteracted by the national will to apply material
+development to the more important intellectual,
+moral and religious progress of the people at
+large.</p>
+
+<p>Any nation aspiring to dominate the world by
+brute force or by the power of wealth, would be
+guilty of attempting an achievement just as vain
+as it would be criminal in its conception.</p>
+
+<p>Any nation is within her undoubted right and
+duty in aspiring to the legitimate influence of her
+material progress, of her intellectual culture, of
+her moral development, of her religious increased
+perfection. Happy indeed would be the future of
+Humanity if all the Nations and their Rulers
+understood well, and did their best efforts to practice
+Christian precepts in the true spirit of their
+Divine teaching.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Imperialism.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa is apparently so frightened by
+what he calls <i>Imperialism</i> that the horrible phantom
+being always present to his imagination, he
+shudders at it in day time, and wildly dreams of
+it at night. Judging by what he has said and
+written, he seems to have worried a great deal, for
+many years past, about the dire misfortunes which,
+he believed, were more and more threatening the
+future of the world by the strong movement of imperialist
+views he detected everywhere. It is the
+great hobby which saddens his life, the terrible
+bugbear with which he is ever trying to arouse the
+feelings of his French Canadian countrymen
+against England.</p>
+
+<p>The deceased British statesman, called Joseph
+Chamberlain, by his efforts to promote the unity of
+the Empire, inspired Mr. Bourassa with a profound
+fear which he wanted his compatriots to
+share by all the means at his command:&mdash;public
+speeches, newspaper editorials, pamphlets. He
+charged him with the responsibility of the <i>infamous
+crime</i> he brought England to commit in accepting
+the challenge of President Kruger and the
+then South African Republic, and fighting for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+defence of her Sovereign rights in South Africa.
+According to the Nationalist leader, a vigorous
+impulse was given by the South African war to
+the political evolution which he termed <i>British
+Imperialism</i>. Nothing was further from the true
+meaning of this important event.</p>
+
+<p>In refuting Mr. Bourassa's assertion, I showed
+that the South African war was not the outgrowth
+of Imperialist ideas, and that it has in no
+way resulted in a dangerous advance of the kind
+of Imperialism which so much frightens him and
+all those who experience his baneful influence.</p>
+
+<p>As I have previously proved, the South
+African campaign was imposed upon England by
+the then aspiration of a section only of Boer opinion,
+led by the unscrupulous and haughty President
+Kruger, imprudently relying on the support of the
+German Kaiser who had hastened to congratulate
+him for his success in the Jameson Raid. It resulted
+not in favor of Imperialism of the type so
+violently denounced by Mr. Bourassa, but in a
+most beneficent expansion of Political Freedom by
+the granting of the free British institutions to the
+new great South African overseas Dominion. It
+is only the other day that ex-Premier Asquith, on
+the occasion of a great public function, has declared
+that Premier Botha, the former most prominent
+Boer General, was now one of the strongest
+pillars of the British Empire.</p>
+
+<p>It being so important to set the opinion of the
+French Canadians right respecting that question<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+of Imperialism, so much discussed of late, and by
+many with so little political sense and historical
+knowledge, I would not rest satisfied with a refutation
+of the special Bourassist appreciation of the
+causes and results of the South African conflict.
+I summarized, in a condensed review, the divers
+phases of the political movement which can properly
+be called <i>Imperialism</i>, tracing its origin as
+far back as the organization of the first great
+political Powers known to History: the Persian,
+the Egyptian, the Greek Empires, &amp;c. More than
+ever before, Imperialism was triumphant during
+the long Roman domination of almost all the then
+known world. Every student of History is impressed
+by the grandeur of the part played by the
+Roman Empire in the world's drama. Constantine
+struck the first blow at Roman Imperialism&mdash;unwillingly
+we can rest assured&mdash;in laying the
+foundations of Constantinople, and dividing the
+Roman Empire into the Western and Eastern Empires.
+At last, after repeated invasions, the Northern
+barbarians succeeded in smashing the Roman
+Colossus.</p>
+
+<p>After many long years during which European
+political society passed through the incessant
+turmoil of rival ambitions, Charlemagne sets up
+anew the Western Empire, being coronated Emperor
+in Rome. Ever since, amidst multiplied ups
+and downs, Imperialism has swayed to and fro by
+the successive edification and overthrow of the
+Holy Roman Empire, the short lived Napoleonic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+European domination, the recently organized
+North German Empire.</p>
+
+<p>So far as Imperialism is concerned, all those
+great historical facts considered, how best can it
+be defined? Is it not evident that from the very
+birth of political societies for the government of
+Mankind, a double current of political thoughts
+and aspirations has been concurrently at work,
+with alternate successes and retrocessions: one
+tending towards large political organizations, uniting
+a variety of ethnical groups; the other operating
+the reverse way to bring about their dissolution
+in favour of multiplied small sovereignties.
+Each of the two opposing political systems has had
+its ebb and flow tides; the waves of the one, in their
+flowing days, washing the shores of the other until
+they had to recede before the pressure caused by
+the exhaustion of their own strength and the increased
+resistance of internal opposition.</p>
+
+<p>Viewed from this elevated standpoint, Imperialism
+is not new under the sun. It is as ancient
+as the world itself. Mr. Bourassa has been
+uselessly spending his energy in breaking his head
+against a movement which is in the very nature of
+things, developing the same way under the same
+favourable conditions and circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>Are the days we live so fraught with the dangers
+of Imperialism as to justify the fears of the
+alarmist? The answer would be in the affirmative,
+the question being considered from the point of
+view of Germany's autocratic Imperialism, if the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
+free nations of the world had not joined in a holy
+union to put an end to its extravagant and tyrannical
+ambition. But how is it that Mr. Bourassa,
+the heaven-born anti-imperialist, so frightened at
+the supposed progress of British Imperialism, is
+so lenient towards Teutonic Imperialism? How
+is it that from the very first days of the gigantic
+struggle calling for the most heroic efforts of
+the human race to emerge safe and free from the
+furious waves powerfully set in motion by the most
+daring absolutism that ever existed, he has not
+thought proper to chastise as it deserved the worst
+kind of Imperialism that he could, or any one else,
+imagine?</p>
+
+<p>Taking for granted that the present economical
+conditions of the universe, likely to intensify,
+are working for great political organisations,
+from the causes previously explained, any intelligent
+observer could not fail to see that for the last
+century four great imperialist evolutions have
+been concurrently&mdash;or rather simultaneously&mdash;developing
+themselves; they were the British,
+the Teutonic, the Russian, the Republican in the
+United States. Let no one be astonished at seeing
+the two words <i>Imperialism</i> and <i>Republicanism</i>
+coupled together. In their true sense, they are
+easily conciliated.</p>
+
+<p>The Roman Republic, by the grandeur of its
+part, was Imperialist as much as the Empire to
+which she gave birth. Cæsar, without the imperial
+crown was Emperor as much as August. He was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+more so by his genius, and by the eminent position
+he had acquired by one of the most brilliant
+careers in History.</p>
+
+<p>Bonaparte, General and First Consul, in the
+closing days of the first French Republic, was
+Emperor as much as he became on the day of his
+Coronation, at Paris, by the Sovereign Pontiff.</p>
+
+<p>Imperialism being a great historical fact
+through all the ages, and most certainly destined
+to further developments, is it to be judged favourably
+or alarmingly?</p>
+
+<p>No doubt the problem is of the greatest possible
+political importance. The question can, I
+consider, be at the outset simplified as follows:&mdash;Would
+the prosperity, the freedom, the happiness
+of the world be better served by great political
+Powers, or by the multiplication of small sovereignties?
+It is just as well, and even better, to
+admit at once that a unique, a dogmatic, answer
+cannot be given to that question. Independent
+nations, sovereign societies, are not created at will
+by men, merely according to their fancy, to their
+variable and very often undefined wishes. History
+teaches that they are the outgrowth of various circumstances,
+of many divergent causes,&mdash;the most
+important, the one inscrutable, being always the
+action of Divine Providence directing the destinies
+of peoples as well as those of every human being.
+Different causes produce, of course, different results.
+Large and small political communities can
+surely be productive of much good for their populations.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+Much depends upon the intelligence, the
+wisdom, the devotion, the patriotism of the rulers
+and the governed. They can also do much harm.
+Unfortunately, the readers of past events have too
+much reason to deplore that both large and small
+political organizations have been equally guilty of
+maladministration, of ambitious cupidity of their
+neighbours' possessions, of unjust wars. As an uncontrovertible
+example, can I not point to the
+present German Empire, whose origin dates back
+to the days of the very small Prussia of two centuries
+ago, fighting her way up to her actual greatness
+by successive, unfair, and often criminal
+aggressions.</p>
+
+<p>After reading much of the history of past ages,
+I have not been able to come to the conclusion&mdash;and
+the more I read, the less inclined I am to do
+so&mdash;that the days when England, France, Central
+Europe, Italy, &amp;c., were subdivided into numerous
+small political organizations, almost always warring,
+were preferable to ours, even darkened and
+saddened as they are by the present trials and
+sufferings.</p>
+
+<p>If, on the other hand, the causes which at all
+times have tended to the creation of large political
+sovereignties are gradually acquiring an increased
+momentum of strength and activity, from the
+changed conditions brought about by the great
+scientific discoveries so wonderfully developing the
+commercial relations of the nations, is it not more
+advisable to study the true nature of the evolution<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
+and the good it can produce, rather than to shiver
+at the supposed prospects of an Imperialist cataclysm
+so certainly to be averted if public opinion is
+sound and Rulers wise. Crying on the shores of
+the St. Lawrence, against the advance of the rolling
+waves, would not prevent the tide from running
+up. The mad man who would try it, and persist
+in remaining on the spot, displaying his indignant
+and extravagant protest, would surely be
+submerged and drowned.</p>
+
+<p>Political developments, like many others, obey
+natural laws which no true statesman can ignore
+nor overlook. Because the limits of a political
+organization are extended, does it necessarily follow
+that only deplorable consequences can be
+expected from their enlargement? Surely not.
+One might as well pretend that unity, cohesion,
+strength, grandeur, are only productive of baneful
+results. Is it not a certainty that they can be
+equally beneficial or harmful, according to the intellectual
+and moral qualities of those who are
+called upon to apply them to the best interests of
+those they govern.</p>
+
+<p>German Imperialism, for instance, was not
+<i>per se</i> a public misfortune. It became such because
+instead of using its instrumentality for the general
+good of the world as well as that of Germany,
+it was applied to a barbarous and criminal purpose
+to satisfy unjust and senseless aspirations.</p>
+
+<p>In the same years, all the resources of
+British Imperialism,&mdash;so abhorrent to Mr. Bourassa<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
+and his Nationalist adepts who view with
+such meekness the Teutonic type&mdash;have been
+brought into play for the freedom of the world and
+the protection of the small nationalities&mdash;notably
+Belgium.</p>
+
+<p>Bulgaria was a small State. Was it on this
+account less ambitious and troublesome for its
+neighbours? Any one conversant with the recent
+Balkan history knows that Bulgaria has from the
+start aspired to dominate the Balkan States.
+When the Berlin Government struck the hour
+which was to throw not only Europe, but three-fourths
+of the universe into the worst horrors of
+war, has Bulgaria rallied to the defence of her
+weak neighbour, Servia? Has she proved any
+sympathy for treacherously crushed Belgium?</p>
+
+<p>I emphatically declare that I would oppose
+Imperialism with all my might, if I thought that
+it is by nature a necessary producer of absolutism,
+of autocratic tyranny. But, the British precedent
+considered through all its beneficial developments,
+I must recognize that true Imperialism is not incompatible
+with the just and wise exercise of political
+liberty, with respectful protection of the
+rights and conditions of the divers national
+elements under its ægis.</p>
+
+<p>I pray to remain to my last day a faithful
+friend of the political liberties of the people.
+Knowing, as I do, how hard it is to apply them to
+the government of nations&mdash;great or small&mdash;I am
+not bewildered by vain illusions. But I cannot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+conceive&mdash;and never will&mdash;that the justice of the
+real principles of Political Liberty is to be denied
+on account of the difficulties of their satisfactory
+working, certainly obtainable when applied in conformity
+with the dictates of moral laws owing all
+their power to their Divine origin.</p>
+
+<p>The best political institutions which can work
+out such great advantages for the populations
+enjoying them, are too often diverted from their
+beneficient course by the vicious passions of those
+who are charged with, and responsible for, their
+administration. It would be most illogical to draw
+the inference that good institutions become bad by
+their guilty management.</p>
+
+<p>Free and autocratic governments are essentially
+different in their natural structure. Though
+liable to mismanagement by unscrupulous politicians,
+free institutions can, under ordinary favourable
+conditions, be trusted to be productive of
+much good for the peoples living under their protection.
+Autocracy&mdash;the whole human history
+proves it&mdash;by nature engenders absolutism.
+Crowned or revolutionary despots as a rule are
+not imbued with the patriotism nor purified by the
+virtues required for the good government of a
+country. Kaiserism, Terrorism and Bolshevikism
+are equally despicable and unfit to contribute to
+the sound progress which liberty, practiced by
+sensible and wise men, can develop.</p>
+
+<p>Reverting to the Nationalist bugbear, which
+does not in the least move me to despair of Canada's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
+future, I consider that Imperialism, sensibly
+appreciated, is of two kinds: Autocratic Imperialism;
+Democratic Imperialism:&mdash;Absolutism is the
+foundation stone of the former; Political Liberty
+that of the latter. I am energetically opposed to
+the first. I sincerely believe that the second can
+do a great deal for the prosperity of the countries
+where it has regularly and justifiably been developed
+according to the natural laws of its growth.</p>
+
+<p>Autocratic Imperialism, in contemporaneous
+history, is almost exclusively typified by its
+Teutonic production. A general review of the
+world shows that for the last century, and more,
+with one sad exception, all the nations have been
+moving along the path leading to a greater freedom
+of their institutions. Even Japan and China
+have joined in the race. Russia had deliberately
+done so. Much was expected from her first efforts,
+and much would certainly have been reaped in due
+course had not the calamitous war still raging at
+first opened an opportunity for the reactionary
+Russian element, strongly influenced by German
+intrigues, spies and money, to check, through the
+Petrograd Court, the forward movement of Russian
+political liberty, and to impede, for Germany's
+sake, the success of the Russian military operations.
+Under those circumstances&mdash;as was also to
+be expected&mdash;the advancing wave of the aspirations
+of the great Russian people for more political
+freedom, was bound either to recede before the
+autocratic outburst, or to rush impetuously against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
+the wall Germany was to her best helping to raise
+against it. The latter prevision happened, history
+once more repeating itself.</p>
+
+<p>Even barbarous Turkey, in recent years, had
+been somewhat shaken by a sudden desire to
+remove some of her secular shackles. The young
+Turks movement might have had some desirable
+results had the Ottoman Empire, as every national
+and political considerations should have induced
+her to do, sided with France and England.</p>
+
+<p>Germany is actually the only country in the
+world where Autocratic Imperialism has been
+flourishing during the last century. We all know
+the extent and the grievousness of the calamity it
+has wrought on the universe.</p>
+
+<p>During the same last century, Democratic
+Imperialism&mdash;using the term in its broadest and
+most reasonable meaning&mdash;has had two distinct
+beneficial developments:&mdash;the Monarchical Democratic
+Imperialism, and the Republican Democratic
+Imperialism.</p>
+
+<p>The Monarchical Democratic or free Imperialism&mdash;it
+is scarcely necessary for me to say&mdash;is
+that of Great Britain.</p>
+
+<p>The Republican Democratic or free Imperialism
+is that of the United States of America, of the
+Argentine Republic, of Brazil.</p>
+
+<p>Happily the two great and glorious countries
+which are favoured with the advantages of the
+Democratic type of Imperialism are united in a
+grand and noble effort to destroy the German<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+Autocratic Imperialism in chastisement of its
+criminal aspirations to universal domination.</p>
+
+<p>The two types of Democratic or free Imperialism&mdash;the
+Monarchical and the Republican&mdash;can be
+better illustrated by a comparative short historical
+study of their development in Great Britain and
+her colonies, and in the United States. I summarize
+it as follows, beginning by the last mentioned,
+as it requires a shorter exposition.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">American Imperialism.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>The still recent and wonderful growth of the
+two American continents, in population and
+wealth, is almost an incredible marvel. It is none
+the least politically.</p>
+
+<p>The two Americas, by the extent of their areas,
+the vastness of their productive lands, the length
+and largeness of their mighty Rivers, the broadness
+of their Lakes, the grandeur of their scenery,
+seem to be most adapted to great developments of
+many kinds. It is difficult to think of small conceptions
+originating in the New World, which the
+genius of Columbus discovered and the combined
+genius of all the great races of the Old are united
+in developing.</p>
+
+<p>Let me first put the question:&mdash;when the
+leading European nations undertook to colonize
+the new Continents, were they not, consciously or
+not, throwing the Imperialist seed in a fertile land
+where it was sure to take root and blossom? Spain,
+France, and, last, England were certainly not
+obeying the dictates of our "Nationalist school"
+when they brought under their Sovereign authority
+such vast stretches of American territory.</p>
+
+<p>That Christian Civilization was to be extended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
+to the new great Hemisphere, goes without saying.
+That the riches, then unknown, of the New World,
+were to be extracted from the land so full of them,
+was one of the duties of the discoverers, all will
+admit. The European Governments in extending
+their Sovereignties to America unfortunately
+adopted the mistaken Colonial Policy then still too
+much prevalent. Their error was to stick to the
+wrong conception that a colony was important
+only in the measure that it could be favourable to
+the interests of the Metropolis. History proves
+that this colonial system is bound to lead to unfair
+treatment of the colonies. Absolutism, then dominant
+in Europe, could not be expected to show any
+tender leniency towards the Colonials who were
+above all to work for the wealth and glory of the
+Metropolis. Spain proved to be the worst promoter
+of that Regime. Her failure has been most
+complete. She has had to withdraw her flag from
+the very large part of America over which it might
+have been kept waving, if sounder and more just
+political notions had prevailed in the narrowed
+minds of her Rulers.</p>
+
+<p>England, treading along the wrong path of
+Colonial oppression, but in a much less proportion,
+had to face a like result in the revolt of her American
+Colonies. Fortunately for her, for America
+and the world at large, the event widely opened her
+eyes. In acknowledging the independence of the
+young Republic of the United States, she was destined
+to be proud of her offspring in witnessing the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+astonishing development of the child to whom she
+had given birth. Could she have then foreseen
+that the day would come when at the hour of her
+dire trial, the daughter who threw off her motherly
+authority, too stringently exercised, would
+rush to her support for the defence of the very
+principles of Political Liberty for which she, the
+child, had fought for her independence, how soon
+would England have forgotten the sufferings of the
+parting and blessed Providence for them!</p>
+
+<p>The American Revolution, successfully carried
+out, was the occasion for England to revolutionize
+her Colonial Policy. She was the first nation&mdash;and
+I am sorry to say she has remained alone&mdash;to
+understand with great clearness that the old
+Colonial Regime, fraught with such disastrous
+consequences, must be done away with and replaced
+by the new one which called the colonies to
+the enjoyment, to the largest possible extent, of
+the free institutions of the Mother Land.</p>
+
+<p>Like every new born child, whose laborious
+birth was critical, the American Republic experienced
+great difficulties the very moment she
+commenced to breathe freely. So true it is always
+that national development, like personal success,
+cannot be achieved without struggle.</p>
+
+<p>The United States offer the example of the
+best development of the Imperialist evolution in
+the world. It dates as far back as the proclamation
+of the Independence of the Republic. When
+she was admitted into the international society of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+Sovereign States, she had at first to settle her
+political organization. The framing of a constitutional
+charter proved to be a very arduous task,
+at times almost desperate.</p>
+
+<p>Three sets of divergent opinions were fighting
+at close range during the protracted and solemn
+deliberations which at last reached a happy
+conclusion. Thirteen American British Colonies
+had coalesced to wring their Independence from
+England. The goal once attained, a first group of
+opinion was favoured by the supporters of the
+dissolution of the temporary union organized to
+secure the Independence of the whole, but to
+revert, they said, if successful, to their previous
+separate status. Had this view prevailed, at the
+very start North America would have been cumbered
+with thirteen Sovereign States. Many were
+alarmed at the creation of so many small Republics.
+More reasonable persons suggested to
+organize three or four of them, instead of thirteen,
+meeting as much as possible the wants natural to
+geographical conditions. It was no doubt an improvement
+on the first mentioned scheme. It met
+with the hearty support of devoted adepts.</p>
+
+<p>It is much to be hoped that they will forever
+receive from the successive generations of their
+countrymen the reward of the gratitude they deserve,
+the true statesmen who, at this important
+juncture, stepped on the scene and bravely took
+their stand in favour of the maintenance of the
+Union which had conquered Independence, and of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
+the establishment of only one great Republic. The
+celebrated Hamilton was their trusted leader. They
+knew they were undertaking an herculean task.
+At that time, the population of the thirteen original
+States, scarcely four millions in number, was
+scattered over a vast territory, and located, for
+the most part, on the lands near the Atlantic
+coasts, two thousand miles in length, from North
+to South. Transportation was in a very primitive
+stage. Many years had yet to run before the
+whistle of the locomotive, powerful and struggling,
+would be echoed by the solitude of immense forests.
+No one foresaw that, in less than a century, the
+overflowing tide of European immigration would
+roll its waves so powerfully as to cross the whole
+continent and the Rocky Mountains to reach the
+coast of the Pacific Ocean.</p>
+
+<p>With such conditions, so unfavourable to the
+aspirations of only one new Independent State,
+moulding together political groups so far apart,
+interests apparently so hostile, the local point of
+view, local prejudices, were sure to dominate.
+They inspired the strong current of opinion in
+favour of the dissolution of the temporary Union,
+and the organization of every one of the old
+provinces into a separate Sovereign State.</p>
+
+<p>How, under such circumstances, the friends
+of a unique National American Union succeeded
+in the marvellous achievement of carrying their
+point by a prodigy of persuasive demonstration,
+will forever be a wonder for the student of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+Republic's history. Few in numbers when they
+boldly threw their challenge, they encountered the
+shock of local fanaticism heightened by their offensive.
+Everything seemed to predict their utter
+failure. If ever Founders of States have proved
+the heroism of their convictions, the American
+Federalists have most gloriously done so. Undoubtedly,
+the force of the argument was with
+them. But what can logic, reason, good sense, too
+often do against inveterate prejudices? Were
+they, in this particular instance, destined to be
+powerless?</p>
+
+<p>The Federalists&mdash;such is their historical
+name&mdash;were not to be disheartened by the formidable
+obstacles thrown in their way. An <i>Imperialist</i>
+inspiration was certainly the basic foundation of
+their demonstration finally triumphant. They
+told their countrymen that if they were to erect
+thirteen small Republics upon the burning ruins
+of the first Union to which they owed their Independence,
+they would prepare a very sad future
+for their children and children's children. European
+immigration was setting in, slowly but
+surely. They predicted that the World, this time,
+would witness, not a barbarous invasion like that
+which overthrew the Roman Empire, but one which
+the Old World would overflow to the New Continents.
+This surplus European population would
+bring over to America Christian Civilization, the
+training of hard work, large hopes, courage, experience
+in many ways, persevering energy, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+would transform the boundless regions which
+could become their national heritage&mdash;until then
+the domain of the wandering Indian&mdash;into one of
+the greatest and wealthiest countries on earth.
+Would they commit the irreparable error to destroy
+the certainty of such a magnificent National
+Destiny, by creating thirteen separate governments,
+with the sure result of renewing in
+America, by such race groupings, the atrocious
+military conflicts which, for centuries, have flooded
+the European soil with human blood.</p>
+
+<p>Hamilton and some of his most distinguished
+friends published that work, entitled: "<i>The
+Federalist</i>", which will ever live as one of the
+broadest and most elevated productions of Political
+Intelligence. To all, and especially to the
+"Nationalist" theorists, I strongly recommend the
+reading of that book, a monument of the genius of
+great statesmen.</p>
+
+<p>In short, after a lengthy discussion characterized
+by their brilliant eloquence and their argumentative
+strength, the supporters of the Federal
+Union of the thirteen States, under one Sovereignty,
+carried the day. They had well deserved their
+glorious triumph. The Republic of the United
+States of North America was founded under the
+ægis of the free constitutional Charter which has
+done so much for her prosperity and her grandeur.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the initial move of the evolution of
+American Imperialism. Those amongst us who
+desire to learn more about its developments have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+only to look over the boundary line. The thirteen
+original States, federally united, have increased
+to number forty-four, with three more territories
+gradually developing into Statehood.</p>
+
+<p>The actual population of the Republic is already
+much over a <i>hundred million</i>, living in unrivalled
+prosperity and contentment on a territorial
+area of more than <i>three millions and a half
+square miles</i>, larger than all the European Continent.
+The sun of the present century will set
+upon a people of more than 250,000,000, with a
+splendid situation in a world to the destinies of
+which they will contribute in many admirable
+ways, if they are only true to the Christian principles
+which alone can assure Civilization and
+Progress.</p>
+
+<p>If the term <i>Imperialism</i> truly means what
+the word implies,&mdash;<i>Sovereignty being exercised
+over a large population and a vast territory</i>, this
+political evolution, so decried by some, has most
+undoubtedly achieved a great success amongst our
+neighbours to the South.</p>
+
+<p>In all sincerity, may I not ask every unprejudiced
+mind:&mdash;has not the whole World every
+reason to be much elated at witnessing the
+beneficent results of the triumph of the American
+Federalists? Evidently, it has been <i>Imperial</i> in
+its nature, in its proportions. It is so in its promises
+for the future greatness of the Republic. It
+has maintained, with only one exception, peace and
+harmony during nearly a century and a half,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+between the descendants of the European nationalities
+who have trusted their future welfare to
+the Sovereignty of the United States. Instead of
+wasting their energies in endless conflicts, such as
+numerous small States would have infallibly occasioned,
+thanks to the unity of the Sovereign
+Power binding into an admirable whole territories
+larger than Europe, they have learned to consider
+themselves as citizens of the same free country, as
+the free subjects of the same governmental authority.
+The temporary rupture of the Union, caused
+by the war of Secession, was but a vain reactionary
+action against the powerful current driving the
+Republic towards her grand future.</p>
+
+<p>It is most unlikely&mdash;I can say <i>impossible</i>
+without the slightest hesitation&mdash;that the United
+States, after taking such a grand and glorious part
+in the present war, will abandon the broad and
+felicitous policy by which they have grown to be
+one of the greatest independent nations of the
+world, to drop so low as to adopt the blinding
+notions of a narrow, sectional, prejudiced and fanatical
+"Nationalism", such as the type which would
+ruin the future of our own Dominion, if ever it was
+allowed to prevail. They know too well, by the
+happiest experience, that the only true "<i>Nationalism</i>"
+is that which by the united effort of the intelligence,
+the culture, the strength, the patriotism
+of citizens of divers races has wrought for them
+their present admirable national status so full
+of the brightest promises. When peace shall have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+been restored, the great and mighty American
+Republic will be one of the leading Powers on
+earth, owing her unrivalled prosperity in a very
+large measure to her appreciation of the wonderful
+results obtainable by the union of all her subjects,
+of whatever racial origins, working with the same
+heart and devotion for the grandeur of their
+common country.</p>
+
+<p>I am not unduly enthusiastic, I am only speaking
+the plain truth, when I affirm that the Republican
+Imperialism of the United States has been
+most beneficent, having guaranteed to Mankind the
+inestimable boon of laying deep and strong in a
+virgin soil, providentially gifted with the most
+varied, the most abundant, the richest resources,
+the destinies of a great Sovereign Nation comprising
+numerous ethnical groups. This liberal, progressive,
+peaceful, harmonious Imperialism, it is
+a duty to approve wishing it to achieve new triumphs
+for the general good of Humanity.</p>
+
+<p>Republican Imperialism is also making its
+way&mdash;contaminating it, our "Nationalists" would
+say&mdash;in Southern America. This large and splendid
+half of the New World has been for too many
+years the theatre of civil troubles which appeared
+endless. A great change for the better has taken
+place since the beginning of the concentration
+movement which has united almost the entire
+Southern American Continent into eight Sovereign
+States, two of which with really Imperial
+proportions.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Brazilian Republic has a territorial area
+of 3,218,991 square miles, with a population of
+more than 24,000,000 increasing at the average
+rate of six or seven hundred thousand a year.
+With the great natural resources at her command,
+she will certainly develop into one great Power.
+The day is not so far distant when it will have a
+population exceeding <i>fifty millions</i> living in
+comfort on a soil of luxurious wealth.</p>
+
+<p>The Argentine Republic has a territory of 1,153,119
+square miles in extent. Her population is
+over 8,000,000, having doubled during the last
+twenty years. At this rate of a yearly increase of
+five per cent., it is easily foreseen what large total
+it will reach in a few years. It is wealthy, doing
+the best with her splendid resources, already
+contributing extensively to feed the population of
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p>The other Southern American Republics&mdash;the
+Bolivian, the Chilean, the Colombian, the Peruvian,
+the Venezuelan&mdash;have all territorial areas
+double in extent of those of the Great Powers of
+Western and Central Europe.</p>
+
+<p>In Southern America, like everywhere else,
+the rising tide is not running in favour of a multiplicity
+of small Sovereignties, always in a warring
+frame of mind. Since her political reorganization,
+South America, as a whole, has enjoyed the advantages
+of peace and of a large material progress.</p>
+
+<p>In reality the same political phenomenon is
+to be found in the five continents forming the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+whole earthly globe. Let the "Nationalists" call
+it <i>Imperialism</i> if they like, I cannot help concluding
+that it is the outgrowth of natural causes
+operating in the sense of larger political units,
+giving to the Nations getting so constituted, prestige,
+power, grandeur, favouring public order
+and, in many instances, the development of free
+institutions.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">British Imperialism.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Let me now consider the wonderful development
+of what I have called Monarchical Democratic
+or free Imperialism. It has so far been
+exclusively of British growth. It is the typical
+form of Imperialism which has been honoured with
+the most violent, the most unjust, denunciations of
+our "Nationalists".</p>
+
+<p>How did it deserve such an hysterical reprobation?
+Such is the question to which I shall now
+endeavour to give a decisive negative answer.</p>
+
+<p>I have previously once said that British Imperialism,
+like American Imperialism, has Political
+Liberty as its foundation stone. I think this
+can easily be proven.</p>
+
+<p>Any close observer of political events, will
+agree with me, I am confident, that Imperialism is
+also "<span class="smcap">OFFENSIVE</span>" and "<span class="smcap">DEFENSIVE</span>" in its expansion.
+The meaning of these two terms is clear.</p>
+
+<p>For the last fifty years, <span class="smcap">"Offensive" Imperialism</span>
+has been the <span class="smcap">German despotic Imperialism</span>.
+The present war&mdash;its criminal work&mdash;is the convincing
+evidence in support of the charge.</p>
+
+<p>I have, I believe, proved to the satisfaction of
+every fair minded man, that during the same last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+fifty years England's constant efforts have been to
+maintain peace. Consequently, I am authorized
+to draw the conclusion that British Imperialism
+was not intended to be, and has not been
+"<span class="smcap">Offensive</span>".</p>
+
+<p>The Imperialist effort <span class="smcap">OFFENSIVELY</span>, <span class="smcap">AGGRESSIVELY</span>
+and <span class="smcap">VIOLENTLY</span> tending to the continuous
+and unmeasured expansion of a Sovereign Power,
+with the objective of universal domination by all
+possible means, however unjust, immoral and
+savage they may be, is a most guilty effort deserving
+the severest condemnation. Such is the German
+autocratic Imperialism.</p>
+
+<p>On the contrary, the <span class="smcap">DEFENSIVE</span> Imperialist
+effort, having for its only object the protection of
+an Empire, the maintenance of her standing in the
+society of nations, and of peace so essential to the
+general prosperity of the world, is meritorious,
+beneficient and laudable. Such has been the
+British Monarchical democratic Imperialism.</p>
+
+<p>It is from this elevated standpoint that
+I will consider the negotiations which, for the last
+few years, have taken place between the Metropolis
+and her autonomous Colonies, respecting Imperial
+defence. While admitting the right of all the free
+citizens of Canada to appreciate them, and entertaining
+a real respect for the sincerity of opinions
+which I cannot conscientiously share, I cannot
+help considering that many amongst us have fallen
+into a serious error in judging the nature of these
+negotiations.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Is it truly, as has been asserted, in obedience
+to a powerful wave of "<span class="smcap">Offensive Imperialism</span>"
+that Great Britain has of late convened representatives
+of her free Colonies to meet, in London, to
+confer about the best means to adopt for the
+general security of the whole British Empire?</p>
+
+<p>Is it, as also asserted, with the unworthy
+design to entrap the Colonies that their self-appointed
+delegates have been called in secret
+conclaves where the political leaders of England
+would, by unfair and foul means, prevail upon
+them to agree to unjust sacrifices on the part of
+the peoples they represented?</p>
+
+<p>I am absolutely unable to share such erroneous
+views. I must admit with all candor that I
+have not yet been brought to the conclusion that
+British Statesmen are all contaminated with
+"Machiavellism". A free country like the United
+Kingdom is not a land where such deplorable
+principles are likely to blossom.</p>
+
+<p>What are then the extraordinary events which
+have recently taken place to justify the assertion
+of the "Nationalist" leader that, in the course of
+the last few years, a complete <span class="smcap">Revolution</span> has
+been wrought in the relations of the autonomous
+Colonies with their Metropolis? Of such a Revolution,
+cunningly promoted to bring the colonies
+against their will to participate in the Imperial
+wars&mdash;<i>les guerres de l'empire</i>&mdash;I do not perceive
+the smallest shadow of traces.</p>
+
+<p>As everybody else, living with their eyes not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+closed to the light of day, I clearly saw, principally
+during the last twenty years, that important
+developments were taking place under the sun;
+that European equilibrium upon the maintenance
+of which universal peace so much depended, was
+rapidly breaking asunder; that the German Empire
+was more and more unmasking her guilty
+ambition to dominate an enslaved universe; that,
+to reach that goal, she was organizing an army
+formidable by its millions of warriors, their superior
+training, their ironed discipline and their unrivalled
+armament. I knew that the sadly famous
+Kaiser Wilhelm II. was determined, at all cost, to
+increase the power of his Empire by the addition
+of a military fleet in such proportions as to be able,
+in a successful naval battle, to conquer the supremacy
+of the seas.</p>
+
+<p>Under such circumstances, was it to be supposed
+that the Statesmen responsible for the government
+of Great Britain would be so careless and
+so blind as not to see the dark spots crowding on
+the horizon!</p>
+
+<p>The problem of Imperial defence was then
+once more raised, not by a mere caprice of vain
+glory on the part of England, but by the inevitable
+outcome of the initiative of would-be opponents,
+if not actually declared enemies. The overseas
+colonies being more and more likely to be attacked,
+in a general conflict, was it surprising that the
+British Government was induced to confer with
+them for their common defence under the new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+conditions which were surely not of their own
+metropolitan or colonial creation.</p>
+
+<p>All the representatives of Great Britain, of
+Canada, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, at
+the London conferences, took part in those solemn
+deliberations with the full sense of their responsibility.
+None of them was so mistaken as to
+consider the question, of paramount importance,
+of the <span class="smcap">DEFENSIVE</span> organization of the Empire, as
+futile, merely to be used by the astuteness of some
+and the guilty complicity of others, joining together
+to sacrifice the future of their common country.
+The odious imputation, the shameless charge,
+were equally unjust and calumnious for the British
+ministers and the colonial public men who, in
+their turn, went to London to deliberate on subjects
+so vitally interesting all the component parts
+of the Empire.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Situations of 1865 and 1900-14 Compared.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Our "Nationalist" opponents of all colonial
+participation in the Imperial wars, affirm that
+Canada should have abided with the convention
+of 1865. Are they not aware that, since that year,
+a great deal of water has run along the rivers; that
+the world, although perhaps not wiser, has at least
+grown half a century older; that so many ancient
+conditions have radically changed; that nations,
+like individuals, to be progressive, cannot go on
+marking time on the same small hardened spot?</p>
+
+<p>Any man sincerely desirous to form for himself
+an enlightened opinion on the question of
+Imperial defence, must first admit that two national
+and general situations, totally different,
+create widely different duties.</p>
+
+<p>Let us compare for a moment, 1865 and 1900-14&mdash;<i>yesterday
+and to-day</i>&mdash;as the "Nationalist"
+leader says.</p>
+
+<p>Fifty years ago, the German Empire was non-existent.
+Nothing pointed to the early birth of
+this terrible child destined to grow so rapidly to
+such colossal proportions.</p>
+
+<p>The French Empire was the leading continental
+Power; Great Britain, then as now, the leading
+naval Power, both military and mercantile.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Those two nations, without a formal alliance,
+had been united ever since the days when Lord
+Palmerston favoured the advent of Napoleon III.</p>
+
+<p>The Union of England and France was doing
+much to maintain the peace of the world.</p>
+
+<p>The United States were just emerging from
+the trials of their great Civil War. They had to
+solve the very difficult problem of their national
+reconstruction. Their population did not exceed
+thirty-five millions.</p>
+
+<p>How different was the situation of 1900-14!</p>
+
+<p>The German Empire had become formidable
+with her population of 68,000,000, her soldiers
+numbering more than 7,000,000, with 1,000,000 of
+men permanently under arms, ever ready for an
+offensive campaign, with her fleet much enlarged
+yearly at the cost of enormous financial sacrifices;
+allied to Austria-Hungary, with her population of
+50,000,000, to Italy, with her 36,000,000&mdash;then
+being one of the Triple Alliance&mdash;supported by
+Turkey and Bulgaria,&mdash;in all a combined strength
+of 150,000,000 bodies and souls; with the Germans
+exalted to the utmost by persistent appeals to their
+feelings and to their ambitious dreams.</p>
+
+<p>The American Republic grown to the rank of a
+first class Power, with a population of 100,000,000
+and a magnificent military fleet.</p>
+
+<p>Was it even sensible to pretend that such altered
+worldly conditions did not make the revision
+of the understanding arrived at in 1865 an
+imperious necessity.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>They are living in an imaginary world those
+of us who assert that Canada could remain a British
+Colony under a permanent agreement&mdash;never
+to be amended&mdash;by which the Mother Country
+would be bound to defend her, at all costs and all
+hazards, whenever and by whomsoever attacked,
+Canada in the meantime refusing, whatever the
+perils of England might be, to spend a dollar and
+to send one man for her defence. There could be
+but one issue to the consideration of such propositions:
+the dissolution of the British Empire. I
+regret to say that Mr. Bourassa has audaciously
+declared that such has been the objective of his
+oppositionist campaign to the Canadian participation
+in Imperial wars.</p>
+
+<p>If Canada, through its constitutional organ,
+the Ottawa Parliament, had signified to England,
+in 1914, that she would not take the least part in
+the war imposed upon her by Germany, nor do anything
+to help her Allies, France and Belgium,
+could she, without blushing with shame, have
+claimed the protection of the British flag, if her
+territory had been attacked.</p>
+
+<p>Would not England have been fully justified
+in taking the initiative to break the bond which
+could henceforth but be disastrous to her, our
+shameless attitude towards her, at the hour of her
+peril, being most favourable to her mortal enemy.</p>
+
+<p>Have I not every sound reason to conclude that
+Canadian participation in the present war was in
+no way whatever the outcome of an Imperialist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
+attempt to drag her, against her will, in the conflict
+into which she so nobly hastened to enter with the
+determination to fight to the last, and to deserve
+her fair share of the glory which will be but one of
+the rewards that will accrue to all those who will
+have united together to save Liberty and Civilization
+from the German barbarous onslaught.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">British Imperialism Naturally Pacifist.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>According to its "Nationalist" opponents,
+British Imperialism has always been of a conquering
+nature, like that of the Roman type and those
+of ancient history.</p>
+
+<p>This opinion is formally contradicted by a
+long succession of undeniable historical facts. Undoubtedly
+the splendid structure of the British
+Empire was not erected without armed support.
+The creation, without an army organization, of a
+Sovereign State comprising a fourth of the Globe,
+which component parts, themselves of colossal
+proportions, situated in all the continents, separated
+by the immensity of the seas, would have been
+more than marvellous.</p>
+
+<p>I will not pretend that always and everywhere
+the expansion of British Sovereignty has
+taken place according to the dictates of strict justice.
+Still I do not hesitate to say that, on the
+whole, it has developed under conditions which
+were never the outcome of a mere conquering
+ambition.</p>
+
+<p>With much reason, English citizens are proud
+of the fact that their Empire is the result of a
+<span class="smcap">NATURAL GROWTH</span>. When the call to arms had to
+be made, it was oftener for <span class="smcap">DEFENSIVE WARS</span>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The British Empire, outside the United Kingdom,
+comprise, for the most important part, Canada,
+Australia, the South African Dominion, and
+India. It is easy to explain, in a few lines, under
+what general circumstances those immense regions
+were brought under the British flag. I shall, of
+course, begin this short historical review by the
+acquisition of Canada by England.</p>
+
+<p>The great event of the discovery of the New
+World, at the end of the fifteenth century, tempted
+the western European nations to acquire vast colonies
+in the new continent. Spain, France, Portugal,
+Holland, were the first in the field. If the
+craving for large colonies in the new Hemisphere
+was of Imperialist inspiration, England does not
+appear to have been one of the first Powers infested
+with the disease so dreaded by our "Nationalists".
+She was rather late to catch it. Hollanders
+settled in New York before the British.</p>
+
+<p>As all ought to know, Spain took hold of the
+whole of Southern America. France displayed her
+flag on the larger part of Northern America, commanding
+the St. Lawrence and Mississippi Rivers,
+and the Great Lakes. Those immense regions, extending
+from the cold north to flowery Louisiana,
+were called <span class="smcap">New France</span>. Later on, that part of
+North America bordering on the Atlantic, from
+Maine to Virginia, became British, and was subdivided
+into thirteen provinces, or separate colonies.
+For such a dominating Imperialist, as some
+pretend she has ever been, it must be admitted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+that England was rather in a modest frame of
+mind with regard to her colonial enterprises. The
+British Government itself was slow in moving
+towards the Imperialist goal which was stirring
+up Spain and France to a much greater activity.
+The first British emigrants were Puritans looking
+for that religious liberty, under a new shining sun,
+which was denied to them by their native land in
+those days when fanaticism was unfortunately too
+much triumphant in many countries.</p>
+
+<p>As it was inevitable, the European Colonies
+in America, all satellites of their metropolis, fell
+victims to the political rivalries of the nations
+who settled them. Not satisfied with fighting in
+Europe, those Powers also decided to gratify the
+New World with a specimen of what they could do
+on the battlefields. The Seven Years War did not
+originate in America, as it was the outcome of
+secular European international difficulties.</p>
+
+<p>If the European nations, in taking possession
+of America, were making a conquest, it was that of
+the white race over the yellow one of the New
+World. Spain and France, in raising their flags
+over four-fifths of the American continent, were
+surely strengthening Imperialism. Will our "Nationalists"
+accuse them of having unduly saved the
+New World from the secular Indian barbarism?</p>
+
+<p>More especially, Spanish Imperialism in America
+was most despotic. By a very false political
+conception, Spain undertook a great settlement
+work in America with the sole object of bleeding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+her colonies to her only profit. It failed disastrously
+as it deserved to. It is because she persevered
+in her fatal error that, in 1898, she was
+forced out of Cuba. The last stone of her immense
+colonial edifice was cast away.</p>
+
+<p>England shared Spain's error, but much less
+heavily. Like Spain, she reaped what she had
+sowed. The thirteen British American colonies
+revolted and conquered their Independence. Alone
+French Canada remained loyal to England.</p>
+
+<p>If the French Canadians had sided with the
+British Colonies to the South in the contest for
+their Independence, the Canada of those days
+would certainly have been included in the American
+Republic when England was forced, by the
+fate of war, to acknowledge the new Sovereign
+nation. Her offspring then violently broke away
+from the parental home, but has recently hastened
+to her defence, at the hour of danger, only remembering
+the first happy years of her childhood.</p>
+
+<p>Following the loyal advice of their spiritual
+leaders, and of their most trusted civil chieftains,
+the French Canadians remained true to England,
+refusing to desert her, thus maintaining her Sovereign
+rights over the Northern half of the Continent
+destined, a century later, to develop into the present
+Dominion, enjoying the free institutions of the
+Mother Country.</p>
+
+<p>As previously stated, the American Revolution
+brought for ever to an end British absolutism
+in the new continent. Henceforth, liberty and autonomy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+were to be the two foundation stones of a
+new colonial Policy which, far from disrupting the
+Empire as the autocratic one had done, was to
+cement its union so strongly as to make possible
+the gigantic military effort she has displayed for
+more than the last four years.</p>
+
+<p>The Treaty of Paris brought the Seven Years
+War to a close. Once more the peace of the world
+was temporarily restored. By the Treaty of Paris,
+Canada was ceded to England, our "Nationalists"
+say. If so, how can they pretend that the extension
+of British Sovereignty over the regions which
+have become the great autonomous Dominion of
+Canada was an undue manifestation of British
+conquering Imperialism?</p>
+
+<p>An intelligent and impartial student of the
+early settlements of the two continents of America
+can only draw the conclusion that the New World
+has not been the theatre of the operations of British
+Imperialism. Its first real attempt was tried&mdash;with
+much laudable success&mdash;in 1867, by the federal
+union of the Canadian provinces, decreed by
+the Sovereign legislative power of the Parliament
+of Great Britain, at our own request and in accordance
+with our own freely expressed wishes.</p>
+
+<p>Australia is the second autonomous colony of
+England in extent and importance. It comprises
+nearly all the territory of the Oceanic continent,
+so called from the geographical position, in the
+Pacific Ocean, of the Islands forming it. New
+Zealand is the second group of these Islands. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+is another autonomous British colony, called, since
+1907 "<span class="smcap">The Dominion of New Zealand</span>".</p>
+
+<p>Those two Dominions have a combined territorial
+area of more than 3,000,000 square miles&mdash;almost
+as large as the whole of Europe&mdash;with a
+population of six millions rapidly increasing.
+Their two largest cities, Sydney and Melbourne,
+each having a population of 700,000, are great
+commercial centres.</p>
+
+<p>If British Imperialism has had anything to
+do with the bringing of Australia and New Zealand
+under British Sovereignty, it must be admitted
+by all fair minded men that it has worked its way
+in the most pacific manner. Deservedly renowned
+British explorers&mdash;Cook, Vancouver, and others&mdash;discovered
+and took possession of the Oceanic continent
+in the name of their Sovereign. Welcomed
+by the aboriginal tribes, they raised the British
+flag over the fair land of such a promising future
+in the latter end of the eighteenth century&mdash;Cook
+in 1770. It has ever since been graciously waving,
+by the sweet breeze of the Pacific, over one of the
+happiest peoples on earth, enjoying the blessings of
+interior peace and all the advantages of the political
+liberties conferred upon these great colonies,
+more than half a century ago. As a matter of fact,
+England has organized her Australasian possessions
+into free autonomous colonies at the very
+dawn of their political life, dating from the middle
+of the last century, when they began that splendid
+progressive advance developing more and more
+every year.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Is it not evident, beyond the shadow of a
+doubt, that the settlement of the Australasian
+colonies by England, so satisfactory and so promising,
+has not been brought about by the illegitimate
+ambition of an unmeasured Sovereign
+aggrandizement by a guilty sort of Imperialism.</p>
+
+<p>The establishment of British Sovereignty in
+the Indian country, immense in extent, wealth and
+population, is one of the greatest events of the
+historical development of the British Empire.</p>
+
+<p>I shall not say that all that took place in the
+government of India deserves a blind approval.
+That British authority was much too long left in
+the control of a company was a misfortune. Under
+such a regime abuses were sure to develop and increase.
+They did and were energetically denounced&mdash;more
+especially on that day when
+Sheridan rose to such an eloquence, in the House
+of Lords, that a motion of adjournment had to be
+carried, to allow the peers to recover the free control
+of their minds before rendering judgment in
+the case brought before their tribunal, impeaching
+Warren Hastings.</p>
+
+<p>The rule of the Indian Company was abolished,
+in 1858, by <i>The Government of India Act</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In 1876, the illustrious Disraëli&mdash;Lord Beaconsfield&mdash;took
+the statesmanlike decision of adding
+a new prestige to the British Crown and to the
+Sovereign wearing it. He had Parliament to adopt
+the <i>Royal Titles Act</i>, by which Her Majesty Queen
+Victoria was proclaimed <span class="smcap">Empress of India</span>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Such, in due course, and without any trouble,
+was accomplished that great political evolution
+which substituted, for populations numbering
+more than three hundred millions of human beings,
+an Imperial system in place of the deplorable government
+by a company. For the last sixty years,
+the new regime has given peace, order and prosperity
+to India.</p>
+
+<p>A French publicist wrote as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>After troubles of nine centuries duration, India has recovered
+peace under the tutelage of England, the best colonizer of the
+peoples of Europe. England has rendered an evident service to
+India. She has freed her from the intestine wars tearing her since
+her historical origin; she has given her a police and an administrative
+system.</p></div>
+
+<p>Nations, like individuals, are not perfect. To
+judge equitably, impartially, the government by a
+Metropolis of the regions under her Sovereignty,
+one must not only be scandalized at her failings,
+but must take the broader view of her whole history
+in appreciating its final good and commendable
+results. So judging the government of India by
+England, every impartial mind must conclude that,
+on the whole&mdash;and more especially for the last
+sixty years&mdash;it has been beneficient. It promises
+to be still more so, as a consequence of the admirable
+share India is taking in the present war.</p>
+
+<p>Egypt and the Soudan have a territorial area
+of 1,335,000 square miles, with a population of
+15,000,000. I pride to be one of those who congratulate
+Great Britain to have freed the ancient
+and glorious Egyptian country from Turkish tyranny.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+A proclamation, dated the 18th of December,
+1914, has finally placed Egypt under England's
+protectorate with the agreement of France.</p>
+
+<p>In the chapters respecting the Soudanese and
+South African wars, I have shown how satisfactory
+has been the rule of Great Britain in those
+African countries.</p>
+
+<p>It being ever true that the earth was Providentially
+created for men to live in the legitimate
+enjoyment of the blessings of peace multiplied by
+the fruits of their labours, the Egyptians and the
+Soudaneses have every reason to congratulate
+themselves for their liberation from the Turkish
+barbarous yoke, and for the protection they receive
+from one of the most civilizing nations.</p>
+
+<p>I sincerely believe that this short review of the
+respective situation of five of the principal component
+parts of the British Empire, is sufficient
+to form the honest conviction that if England has
+practised Imperialism, she has done so for the
+real benefit of the peoples living under the ægis of
+her Sovereignty, the most favourable to colonial
+political liberty.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">British Imperialism and Political Liberty.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>British history, for the last century and more,
+proves that Imperialism is not naturally incompatible
+with Political Liberty, nor with the respect
+due the national aspirations of divers ethnical
+groups. The unity and the consolidation of the
+Empire made their greatest strides since the close
+of the war which resulted in the independence of
+the neighbouring Republic. As previously explained,
+they were the outcome of the very wise
+and statesmanlike change of colonial policy then
+adopted by England. The days were to come when
+they would be put to the severest test and would
+prove more than equal to its greatest strain.
+Those are the days which the British Empire
+is living through, with brilliancy and heroism,
+amidst the dazzling lightning and the roaring
+thunder of an unprecedented military conflict,
+with every prospect of surviving its sufferings and
+sacrifices with a still stronger political structure.</p>
+
+<p>The same evolution by which Great Britain
+was to reach the summit of Political Liberty by
+the final triumph of the new constitutional principle
+of ministerial responsibility, was spreading
+to her far overseas Colonies. Canada, Australia,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
+New Zealand, South Africa, Newfoundland were
+successively granted constitutional charters based
+on the same principles as those of the institutions
+of the United Kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>As I have already said, Imperialism becomes
+dangerous and deserves the severest condemnation,
+only where and when it is the instrument of
+autocratic absolutism. It causes me no alarm
+whatever when it is developed under free institutions,
+guaranteed and protected by ministerial
+responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever said to the contrary, by prejudiced
+and designing writers, imbued with the extravagant
+notions of a narrow and fanatical "Nationalism",
+Canada, the most important of the autonomous
+Colonies of the British Empire, is freer than
+ever. Like all the other nations, she suffers
+from disastrous events shaking the whole worldly
+edifice, but she is none the less the absolute mistress
+of the initiative of whatever efforts she considers
+her duty to make under those trying circumstances.
+England has imposed nothing upon
+Canada, has asked nothing from Canada, since the
+beginning of the war. She has, of course, accepted,
+with much pleasure and gratitude, the help we
+have freely offered and given her. Let our "Nationalists",
+in their inspired unfairness, say, if
+they like, that Canada, like all the Allies defensively
+fighting, was forced in the conflict by the
+imperious necessity of the situation created by
+those who expected to reach the goal of their ambition.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
+But they have no right to charge Great
+Britain to have coerced the Dominion, against her
+will, to join in the struggle which the British
+Government had done their utmost to prevent.</p>
+
+<p>If it was not giving to this work too wide a
+range, I would like to undertake an historical
+sketch of all the good the British constitutional
+system has produced in the United Kingdom and
+in the Colonies. I shall quote only a few of the
+most important examples.</p>
+
+<p>In my opinion, the one development in England's
+history, since the close of the eighteenth
+century, most interesting to the French Canadians,
+is certainly that which resulted in the emancipation
+of the Roman Catholics of the United
+Kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>To persuade my French Canadian countrymen
+of the good to be wrought by the patriotic use of
+the British institutions, I explained to them that at
+the beginning of the last century, the Roman Catholics
+of the United Kingdom enjoyed no political
+rights. They were neither electors, nor eligible to
+the House of Commons. They asked that justice
+be done to them. True statesmen, high and fair
+minded, admitted the justice of their claims and
+supported them. The ensuing political contest
+lasted more than twenty years.</p>
+
+<p>To obtain the proposed change in the long
+standing laws of the realm from an exclusively
+Protestant electorate, was indeed a great task
+to accomplish. The public men supporting the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
+Roman Catholics' claims were courageous and eloquent.
+They carried the day. Have not the true
+friends of political freedom every reason to congratulate
+themselves that a great measure of justice
+granting political rights to Roman Catholics
+was voted by an Electorate and a Parliament
+exclusively Protestant.</p>
+
+<p>King George IV, through fear that his Royal
+prerogative might be impaired by the change, was
+hostile to it. He was persuaded to agree to the
+measure by Sir Robert Peel, the life long opponent
+of Roman Catholic emancipation. Whatever
+were the religious convictions and feelings of Sir
+Robert Peel, he was a statesman of a high class.
+As all the leading public men of England, he had a
+broad conception of the duties of the chief adviser
+of the Crown, and of the true spirit of the British
+constitution. The voice of the nation having
+spoken in no uncertain sounds, the national will
+must be followed. He plainly said so to His
+Majesty who yielded. Then, in a most admirable
+speech, he&mdash;Sir Robert Peel&mdash;moved himself the
+passing of the bill granting justice to the Roman
+Catholics, carried it through the two Houses of
+Parliament and had it sanctioned by the King.</p>
+
+<p>A great act of national justice always receives
+its due reward. The Roman Catholics have
+been faithful and loyal subjects. George IV and
+his successors have lived to see many evident
+proofs of their loyal devotion, more especially
+since the opening of the present war.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The final success of the free discussion of the
+question of granting to the Roman Catholics of
+the United Kingdom all the rights enjoyed by the
+British subjects of all the other religious denominations,
+carried in spite of difficulties not easily
+overcome, is certainly one of the greatest and most
+honorable triumphs that Political Liberty has
+ever obtained. I was often deeply moved at reading
+the historic account of that most interesting
+debate in Parliament, on the public platform and
+in the press. More and more, the conviction was
+firmly impressed on my mind and soul that a great
+people accomplishing a grand act of justice gives
+a most salutary example to posterity deserving
+the admiration and gratitude of all generations to
+come.</p>
+
+<p>I was only appreciating with justice and fairness
+the part played by England in Canada, in telling
+my French Canadian countrymen that they enjoyed
+the political rights of British subjects many
+years before the same privileges and justice was
+granted to the Roman Catholics of the United
+Kingdom. That much in answer to the charge of
+our fanatical extremists that England and her
+Government always wanted to oppress the French
+Canadians on account of their religious faith.</p>
+
+<p>Without going back to the eventful days of
+<i>Magna Charta</i> and of the <i>Bill of Rights</i>, both embodying
+the fundamental constitutional principles
+which were finally bound to overcome the last
+pretentions of absolutism of yore, I considered a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+short review, in broad lines, of the work performed
+by the British Electorate and the Imperial Parliament,
+during the last century, would help in destroying
+in the minds of my French readers the
+prejudices forced upon them by "Nationalist"
+writers. That great work is principally illustrated
+by eight important measures of general interest.</p>
+
+<p>I have just mentioned that most honourable
+one emancipating the Roman Catholics of Great
+Britain.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after, it was followed by that abolishing
+the Corn Laws after a protracted and very
+interesting discussion. That important measure
+was also carried on the proposition of the same
+Sir Robert Peel, for a long time its determined
+opponent. The manufacturing population, increasing
+so rapidly, would soon have been starved by
+the continuously augmenting cost of bread. Sir
+Robert Peel foresaw the fearful consequences sure
+to ensue, if no relief was granted to millions
+threatened with hunger. He was, as I have already
+said, too much of a statesman to hesitate in
+doing his duty. He gave up his own opinion and
+advised his Sovereign to do away with the Corn
+Laws, the repeal of which he had Parliament to
+vote.</p>
+
+<p>With the advent of Queen Victoria, ministerial
+responsibility for all the acts of the Sovereign
+became definitely the fundamental principle of
+the British constitution.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Complete ministerial responsibility, once fully
+recognized in Great Britain, was without delay
+granted to all the British colonies having representative
+institutions.</p>
+
+<p>The abolition of slavery all over the British
+Empire is, every one must admit, a political development
+of first magnitude, one doing the greatest
+possible honour to the great nation having first
+taken the glorious initiative of granting to the
+black race the justice ordered by Christianity.
+It is undoubtedly a very valuable reform to the
+credit of England.</p>
+
+<p>The Imperial Parliament realized that the
+constitutional regime of the United Kingdom
+could not bear all the fruits to be expected from
+it with an electorate restricted to privileged
+classes. To support such a splendid edifice, admirable
+in structure and strength, a larger basic
+foundation, more solid, laid deep in the national
+soil, was required. After a long political struggle,
+freedom was once more triumphant in the Motherland.
+The first great Reform Bill of 1832 was the
+starting point of successive legislative enactments,
+enlarging the franchise, calling to the exercise of
+political rights various classes of the people, bringing
+up the British electorate to the glorious standard
+of being one of the freest, the most enlightened,
+and most independent in the world. The crowning
+measure of this extensive political reform has
+been the Bill of 1917 providing for the addition of
+some 8,000,000 voters to the roll, including about
+6,000,000 women.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The rotten boroughs of old were abolished
+and replaced by a much better redistribution of
+electoral divisions.</p>
+
+<p>Dating from 1867, great autonomous federal
+colonies, with full Sovereign rights in the administration
+of all their interior affairs, have been
+created by Imperial charters. The Canadian,
+Australian, South African, and New Zealand
+Dominions, of a total territorial area exceeding
+7,000,000 square miles, with a total population of
+over 25,000,000, nearly 20,000,000 of which belong
+to the white race, have commenced their new political
+career with all the confidence and the hopes
+inspired by their free institutions.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, the Imperial Parliament passed a
+law granting Home Rule to Ireland. Unfortunately,
+the war, so disastrous in many ways, prevented
+the immediate carrying out of the will of Parliament,
+certainly representative of that of the
+nation. But this vexed question must at last be
+settled once for all. It is to be hoped that the day
+is not far distant when it will be removed from the
+political arena by a solution satisfactory to Ireland,
+to England and to the whole Empire.</p>
+
+<p>Besides all those very important measures of
+political reform, the British Parliament has
+passed many laws of urgent social improvement.</p>
+
+<p>The crowning act of the Imperial Parliament
+has been its determined attitude for the maintenance
+of peace through a long series of years.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>If all the above enumeration of measures of
+widespread influence for the general good is to be
+called Imperialism, I say without hesitation that
+it is an Imperialism worth favouring. The world
+will never have too much of it.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Imperial Federation and "Bourassism".</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>The leader of our "Nationalists," always
+frightened, apparently at least, with the supposed
+dangers of further Imperialist encroachments detrimental
+to the best interests of the British autonomous
+Colonies, seems alarmed at the prospects
+to follow the close of the hostilities. Consequently,
+it has been a part of his campaign to bring the
+French Canadians to share his fears for their
+future.</p>
+
+<p>Not in the least worried by such apprehensions,
+it was also my duty to try and persuade my
+French Canadian compatriots not to be unduly
+disturbed by the sayings of a publicist magnifying
+the errors of his excited imagination.</p>
+
+<p>That there will be after-the-war problems to
+consider, is most likely. What will they be? It is
+very difficult to foresee just now with sufficient
+definiteness. So much will depend upon the general
+conditions of the restoration of peace. However,
+broad lines have, for the last four years, been
+outlined with fair clearness permitting a general
+view of what is likely to happen.</p>
+
+<p>Let us for a moment examine the traces of the
+initial phases of the constitutional developments<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
+likely to be the outcome of the joint effort of the
+whole Empire to win the war.</p>
+
+<p>The second chapter of the Report of the War
+Cabinet for the year 1917&mdash;already quoted somewhat
+extensively&mdash;deals with the new aspect of
+Imperial Affairs more especially the consequence
+of the war. The opening paragraph partly reads
+as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The outstanding event of the year in the sphere of Imperial
+Affairs has been the inauguration of the Imperial War Cabinet.
+This has been the direct outcome of the manner in which all parts
+of the Empire had thrown themselves into the war during the
+preceding years. Impalpable as was the bond which bound this
+great group of peoples together, there was never any doubt about
+their loyalty to the Commonwealth to which they belonged and to
+the cause to which it was committed by the declaration of war.
+Without counting the cost to themselves, they offered their men
+and their treasure in defence of freedom and public right. From
+the largest and most prosperous Dominion to the smallest island
+the individual and national effort has been one of continuous and
+unreserved generosity.</p></div>
+
+<p>After mentioning that during 1917 "great
+progress has been made in the organisation both
+of the man-power and other resources of the Empire
+for the prosecution of the war," and that "the
+British Army is now a truly Imperial Army, containing
+units from almost every part of the
+Empire," the Report says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The real development, however, of 1917 has been in the
+political sphere, and it has been the result of the intense activity
+of all parts of the Empire in prosecuting the war since August,
+1914.</p>
+
+<p>It had been felt for some time that, in view of the ever-increasing
+part played by the Dominions in the war, it was necessary
+that their Governments should not only be informed as fully
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>as was possible of the situation, but that, as far as was practicable,
+they should participate, on a basis of complete equality, in the
+deliberations which determined the main outlines of Imperial
+policy.</p></div>
+
+<p>Accordingly, a Special War Conference was
+convened to meet in London, where for practical
+convenience it was divided into two parts: one,
+"known as the Imperial War Cabinet, which consisted
+of the Oversea Representatives and the
+members of the British War Cabinet sitting
+together as an Imperial War Cabinet for deliberation
+about the conduct of the war and for the
+discussion of the larger issues of Imperial policy
+connected with the war." The other "was the
+Imperial War Conference, presided over by the
+Secretary of State for the Colonies, which consisted
+of the Oversea Representatives and a number
+of other ministers, which discussed non-war
+problems connected with the war but of lesser
+importance."</p>
+
+<p>On the 17th May, 1917, the British Prime
+Minister, giving "to the House of Commons a short
+appreciation of the work of the Imperial War
+Cabinet," said in part:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I ought to add that the institution in its present form is
+extremely elastic. It grew, not by design, but out of the necessities
+of the war. The essence of it is that the responsible heads of the
+Governments of the Empire, with those Ministers who are
+specially entrusted with the conduct of Imperial Policy should meet
+together at regular intervals to confer about foreign policy and
+matters connected therewith, and come to decisions in regard to
+them which, subject to the control of their own Parliaments, they
+will then generally execute. By this means they will be able to
+obtain full information about all aspects of Imperial affairs, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>to determine by consultation together the policy of the Empire in
+its most vital aspects, without infringing in any degree the autonomy
+which its parts at present enjoy. To what constitutional
+developments this may lead we did not attempt to settle. The
+whole question of perfecting the mechanism of "continuous consultation"
+about Imperial and foreign affairs between the "autonomous
+nations of an Imperial Commonwealth" will be reserved
+for the consideration of that special Conference which will be
+summoned as soon as possible after the war to readjust the constitutional
+relations of the Empire. We felt, however, that the
+experiment of consulting an Imperial Cabinet in which India was
+represented had been so fruitful in better understanding and in
+unity of purpose and action that it ought to be perpetuated, and
+we believe that this proposal will commend itself to the judgment
+of all the nations of the Empire.</p></div>
+
+<p>The preceding are words of political wisdom,
+worthy of the best form of British statesmanship.
+Were they the dawn of a new era, dissipating the
+clouds accumulated by the trials of a long period
+of military conflict, and showing in a future, more
+or less distant, the rising constitutional fabric of
+a still greater Imperial Commonwealth, not so
+much in size, than in unity, in freedom and
+strength? Time will tell. But can we not at once
+note with confidence that the fundamental principle
+upheld by all the leading British public men is
+that, whatever constitutional developments may
+be in store for us all, they will not be allowed to
+infringe "in any degree the autonomy" presently
+enjoyed by the Oversea Dominions.</p>
+
+<p>The Imperial War Conference held in London,
+last year, passed the following very important
+"Resolution" dealing with the future constitutional
+organisation of the Empire:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"The Imperial War Conference are of opinion that the readjustment
+of the constitutional relations of the component parts
+of the Empire is too important and intricate a subject to be dealt
+with during the war, and that it should form the subject of a
+special Imperial Conference to be summoned as soon as possible
+after the cessation of hostilities.</p>
+
+<p>"They deem it their duty; however, to place on record their
+view that any such readjustment, while thoroughly preserving all
+existing powers of self-government and complete control of domestic
+affairs, should be based on a full recognition of the
+Dominions as autonomous nations of an Imperial Commonwealth,
+and of India as an important portion of the same, should recognise
+the right of the Dominions and India to an adequate voice in
+foreign policy and in foreign relations, and should provide effective
+arrangements for continuous consultation in all important matters
+of common Imperial concern and for such necessary concerted
+action, founded on consultation, as the several Governments may
+determine."</p></div>
+
+<p>We can await without the slightest alarm the
+holding of the proposed "<i>special Imperial Conference
+to be summoned as soon as possible after
+the cessation of the hostilities</i>." The fundamental
+principles upon which "<i>the readjustment</i>," if any
+one is made, "o<i>f the constitutional relations of the
+component parts of the Empire</i>" are to rest, are
+well defined in the above "Resolution":&mdash;<i>through
+preservation of "all existing powers of self-government
+and complete control of domestic affairs</i>;&mdash;<i>full
+recognition of the Dominions as autonomous
+nations of an Imperial Commonwealth, and of
+India as an important portion of the same</i>";&mdash;the
+admission of "<i>the right of the Dominions and India
+to an adequate voice in foreign policy and in
+foreign relations</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Upon that large and strong basis, I, for one,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
+am ready to wait with patience and confidence the
+result of the deliberations of the future special
+Imperial Conference. With regard to the proposed
+Conference, I cannot see any reason for anyone
+to indulge in the "Nationalist" hysterical fears
+of an oppressive Imperialism devouring, as the old
+mythological god&mdash;Saturn&mdash;his own children.</p>
+
+<p>As I have said, the work of the special Imperial
+Conference will be rendered more or less
+easy by the conditions of the future peace. I pray,
+with all the fervour of my soul, that the war shall
+not end by a hasty compromise&mdash;as wished for by
+our blind, if not really disloyal, pacifists&mdash;by
+which the world would be doomed to another disaster
+far worse than the one it is straining every
+nerve to overcome, and that after years of the most
+costly warlike preparations. Such a peace would
+be the saddest possible conclusion of the present
+conflict, and much worse than the sacrifices yet to
+be borne by the prosecution of the war to a finish.
+We must all implore Providence to save Humanity
+from such a cataclysm.</p>
+
+<p>A special Imperial Conference meeting under
+such disheartening circumstances would indeed
+have a most difficult task to accomplish. It was
+evidently an act of wisdom on the part of the Imperial
+War Conference of last year to express the
+opinion that the special Imperial Conference
+should be summoned only after the cessation of
+hostilities.</p>
+
+<p>When peace shall have been restored with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
+only conditions which can be satisfactory to the
+Allies and to the world at large, a special Imperial
+Conference will be in order, having for its object
+to consider the readjustment of the constitutional
+relations of the component parts of the Empire, in
+conformity with the requirements of the new situation
+which will have grown out of the necessities
+of the war. However important the task, the
+tranquility of the world being, let us hope, assured
+for many long years, there will be no reason for the
+Conference to proceed hastily to any insufficiently
+matured conclusion. The representative public
+men who will meet in London from all over the
+Empire will not forget, we may rest confident, that
+the safest way to a good working readjustment
+will be, as it has always been in the past, that
+which will follow the straight line of natural
+growth. Dry cut resolutions, imprudently adopted,
+and pressed upon unwilling populations would
+have ninety-nine chances out of a hundred to be
+more injurious than profitable.</p>
+
+<p>Every sensible man must acknowledge that
+the war has in an extraordinary manner hastened
+the rapidity of the advance towards the turning
+point in the Constitutional organization of the
+British Empire. The day is near at hand when
+the problem will have to be faced with courage and
+broadness of mind. Very blind indeed, and far
+behind the times, is he who does not realize that
+<span class="smcap">TO BE</span>, OR <span class="smcap">NOT TO BE</span>, for the Empire, is confined to
+two clear words: <span class="smcap">CONSOLIDATION</span> or <span class="smcap">DISSOLUTION</span>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
+The tide has either to ebb or flow, the wave to advance
+or recede. The edifice must be strengthened
+or left to decay. Like any living being, a political
+society, be it great or small, after its birth, more
+or less laborious, grows to a prosperous and
+healthy old age, or crumbles down prematurely.
+Very much depends, for either course, on the wisdom
+or extravagance of the way of passing through
+life. Unmeasured ambitions, wild expectations,
+are too often, alike for the individual and the nation,
+the surest road to a lamentable ruin. Wisdom,
+the outcome of sound moral principles, and
+wide experience, is, on the other hand, the safest
+guarantee of longevity, of bright old days full of
+contentment, honour, prestige and true grandeur.</p>
+
+<p>Grave will be the responsibility of those who
+will meet in solemn conclave to lay down the foundations
+of the future British Imperial Commonwealth.
+No less serious will be the responsibility
+of the populations, scattered over the five continents,
+who will be called upon to pronounce, freely
+and finally, upon the propositions which will be
+submitted to their approval or disavowal. Consequently
+undue haste would be more than ill-advised.</p>
+
+<p>For instance, the paramount question to be
+considered by the new Imperial Conference will
+most likely be that of the future military organization
+of the Empire. Is it not evident that this
+problem will be much more easily settled if the
+Allied nations succeed in carrying the point they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
+have the most at heart:&mdash;The reduction of permanent
+armaments as the safest protection against
+any new outburst of savage militarism flooding
+the earth of God with human blood. If this <i>sine
+qua non</i> condition is the top article of the future
+peace treaty, the great Powers having agreed, in
+honour bound, to maintain the world's tranquillity
+and order, will all be afforded the blessings of a
+long rest from the ruinous military expenditures
+too long imposed upon them by the mad run of
+Germany to conquer universal domination. The
+British Empire, as a whole, will, as much as any
+other nation, enjoy the full benefits of such a
+favourable situation. She will, like her Allies,
+return to the pursuits of peace, with millions of
+veteran soldiers who, for the next ten years at
+least, would, in large numbers, certainly join the
+Colours once more, if need be, to defend their country
+in a new just war. Then, under such circumstances,
+why should the peoples of the whole Empire
+be immediately called upon to incur more
+expenses for military purposes than absolutely
+necessary for the maintenance of interior order,
+and to meet any sudden and unforeseen emergency.</p>
+
+<p>The liquidation of the obligations necessarily
+accumulated during the war will be the first duty
+of all the Allied nations. The task will no doubt
+be very large, most onerous. Still I trust that it
+will not be beyond their resources of natural
+wealth, of capital and labour, of courageous
+savings.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As the "Resolution" adopted by the Imperial
+War Conference says, "the readjustment of the
+constitutional relations of the component parts of
+the Empire is too important and intricate a subject
+to be dealt with during the war." When
+taken up after the war&mdash;even if just <i>as soon as
+possible</i>&mdash;it will be none the less <span class="smcap">IMPORTANT AND
+INTRICATE</span>. Such a subject should not be dealt
+with without matured consideration and given a
+hasty solution. If the peace treaty satisfactorily
+settles the world's situation for a long future of
+general tranquillity which will certainly bless all
+the nations with many years of unprecedented
+prosperity, plenty of time will be afforded to deliberate
+wisely upon the paramount question of the
+building of a "new and greater Imperial Commonwealth."
+Our frenzied "Nationalists" can quiet
+their nerves. The imperialist wild bear will not
+be growling at the door. Because we are all likely
+to be called upon to consider how best to promote
+the unity and the future prosperity of the Empire,
+we will have no reason to fear that we shall be,
+from one day to the other, forcibly thrown into
+perilous adventures by the Machiavellic machinations
+of out and out Imperialist enthusiasts.</p>
+
+<p>I have already said that it is becoming more
+and more evident that <span class="smcap">TO BE</span>, or <span class="smcap">NOT TO BE</span>, the
+British Empire must either <span class="smcap">CONSOLIDATE</span> or <span class="smcap">DISSOLVE</span>.
+I must not be understood to mean that
+with the restoration of peace under the happy
+conditions all the Allies are fighting for, the Empire,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
+as she will emerge from the tornado, could
+not, as a whole, resume, for more or less time, her
+prosperous existence of <i>ante</i>-war days. What will
+be best to do, it is too early to foresee. Then it is
+better to wait for the issue of the war, trusting
+that all the truly loyal British subjects will then
+join together to pronounce upon whatever questions
+of imperial concern will claim their urgent
+consideration.</p>
+
+<p>But there is a certainty that can be at once
+positively affirmed. All the peoples living and
+developing under the ægis of the British flag are
+determined that the British Empire is to be.
+Whenever a special Imperial Conference sits in
+London, all the representatives of the many component
+parts of the British Commonwealth will
+meet in the great Capital surely to deliberate over
+the most practical means <span class="smcap">to consolidate the
+Empire</span>. We may all depend that no one will
+propose to destroy it.</p>
+
+<p>How best to consolidate the Empire, such will
+be the important question. To be sure, the future
+special Conference will not likely be wanting in
+propositions from many outside would-be constitutional
+framers. Schemes may be numerous,
+some worth considering, others useless if not mischievous.
+No reason to feel uneasy and to worry
+about them. We can confidently hope that British
+statesmanship will be equal to the new task it will
+be called upon to perform. Our Canadian public
+men will have much to gain by closer intercourse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
+with their Imperial colleagues, and by judging
+great questions from a higher standpoint.</p>
+
+<p>Let there be no mistake about it: the true
+secret of the most effective consolidation of the
+Empire was discovered by the British statesmen
+the day when they realized that henceforth free
+institutions and the largest possible measure of
+colonial autonomy were the only sure means to
+solidify the structure of the British Commonwealth.
+Such is the opinion of the Imperial War
+Conference outlining in their previously quoted
+"Resolution" what must be the fundamental basis
+of any future "<span class="smcap">readjustment of the constitutional
+relations of the component parts of the
+Empire</span>."</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Constitutional Development of India.</span></div>
+
+<p>As a preliminary to the prospective readjustment
+of the political status of the Empire, it is
+worth noting the advance of India towards political
+autonomy. It was made manifest by the
+significant step of inviting India to the deliberations
+of the Imperial War Cabinet, and by the
+"Resolution" adopted by the Imperial War Conference
+that India must be fully represented at all
+future Imperial Conferences.</p>
+
+<p>Respecting India, the Report of the War
+Cabinet, for the year 1917, says:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>It was clear, however, that this recognition of the new
+status of India in the Empire would necessarily be followed by
+substantial progress towards internal self-government. Accordingly,
+on August 20th, the following important declaration of His
+Majesty's Government on this subject was made in the House of
+Commons by the Secretary of State for India:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The policy of His Majesty's Government, with which the
+Government of India are in complete accord, is that of the increasing
+association of Indians in every branch of the administration
+and the gradual development of self-governing institutions
+with a view to the progressive realization of responsible government
+in India as an integral part of the British Empire. They
+have decided that substantial steps in this direction should be
+taken as soon as possible, and that it is of the highest importance,
+as a preliminary to considering what these steps should be, that
+there should be a free and informal exchange of opinion between
+those in authority at home and in India. His Majesty's Government
+have accordingly decided, with His Majesty's approval,
+that I should accept the Viceroy's invitation to proceed to India
+to discuss these matters with the Viceroy and the Government of
+India, to consider with the Viceroy the views of local Governments,
+and to receive with him the suggestions of representative
+bodies and others. I would add that progress in this policy can
+only be achieved by successive stages. The British Government
+and the Government of India on whom the responsibility lies for
+the welfare and advancement of the Indian peoples, must be the
+judges of the time and measure of each advance, and they must
+be guided by the co-operation received from those upon whom
+new opportunities of service will thus be conferred and by the
+extent to which it is found that confidence can be reposed in their
+sense of responsibility. Ample opportunity will be afforded for
+public discussion of the proposals, which will be submitted in due
+course to Parliament."</p>
+
+<p>In accordance with this declaration, the Secretary of State
+left for India in October, and has since been in consultation with
+the Government of India and deputations representative of all
+interests and parties in India in regard to the advances which
+should be made in Indian constitutional development in the immediate
+future. No reports as to the results of these discussions had
+been made public by the end of the year.</p>
+
+<p>Another important decision relating to India was that
+whereby the Government abandoned the rule which confines the
+granting of commissions in the Indian army to officers of British
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>extraction. A number of Indian officers, who have served with
+distinction in the war, have already received commissions.</p></div>
+
+<p>Who, only twenty years ago, would have believed
+that the day was so near at hand when this
+Asiatic vast and populous country, called India,
+would be most earnestly considering, through
+numerous representatives, in consultation with the
+British Government, the proper steps to be taken
+"<span class="smcap">for the gradual development of self-governing
+institutions with a view to the progressive
+realization of responsible government in India
+as an integral part of the British Empire</span>." In
+every way, it is a most extraordinary political
+evolution. If it reaches the admirable conclusion
+aimed at&mdash;for which success every true friend of
+Political Liberty will fervently pray&mdash;it will have
+realized one of the greatest constitutional achievements
+of modern times.</p>
+
+<p>Behold just now how safely and wisely this
+Indian evolution is proceeding under the experienced
+direction of British statesmanship. It is
+"<span class="smcap">to be achieved by successive stages</span>", declares the
+Secretary of State for India, speaking in the name
+of the whole British responsible Cabinet. Such
+have been accomplished all the constitutional developments
+which have wrought so much perfection
+for British free institutions.</p>
+
+<p>True progress, in every form, is never revolutionary.
+And why? For the very reason that instead
+of fighting for destruction by brute force,
+it aims at perfecting by regular advances in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
+right direction, by successive improvements which
+experience justifies, which reason, intelligence and
+wisdom approve, which political sense recommends,
+which sound moral principles authorize
+and sanction.</p>
+
+<p>A country favoured with the free British constitutional
+regime is not the land where bolshevikism
+of any grade or stamp, can flourish and bear
+fruits of desolation and shame.</p>
+
+<p>The wonderful Indian country, for so many
+centuries tortured by intestine troubles, at last
+rescued by England from that barbarous situation,
+given a reorganized administration able to maintain
+interior peace, favoured by British business
+experience and capital with material progress in
+many ways, specially in transportation facilities,
+may soon see&mdash;let us hope&mdash;the dawn of the glorious
+days of a large measure of political freedom
+and responsible government.</p>
+
+<p>Far away indeed from the perilous Imperialism
+abhorred by our much depressed "Nationalists"
+is India safely moving.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Future Constitutional Relations of the
+Empire.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Though very difficult to say what they will be,
+I thought proper, for the better information of my
+French Canadian readers, to consider some of the
+suggestions which of late years have been repeatedly
+made.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa, in his recent pamphlets, reviewing
+the situation from his wrong and prejudiced
+standpoint, has decidedly come out in
+favour of Canadian Independence. The least that
+can be said is that the time was very badly chosen
+to raise the question. To select the moment when
+the Motherland was engaged in a fight for life or
+death, to propose to run away from the assailed
+home where we had lived many happy years, was
+certainly not an inspiration of loyal devotion and
+gratitude. I am glad to say that the wild proposition
+met with no countenance on the part of our
+French Canadian compatriots.</p>
+
+<p>To the point raised in England, some years
+ago, that it was not to be supposed that the British
+Empire was destined to exist forever, one of the
+leading British statesmen of the day, then a member
+of the Cabinet, answered that, though it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
+likely to be true that the British Commonwealth
+would not be eternal, like many other great political
+societies of times gone by, it was surely not the
+particular duty of a British minister to do his
+best to hasten the day of the final downfall of the
+country he was sworn to maintain. The rejoinder
+was no doubt peremptory. It can very properly
+be used in answer to Mr. Bourassa's plea for the
+independence of Canada.</p>
+
+<p>However, the question having been so unwisely
+raised, to say the least, for the obvious purpose
+of disheartening the French Canadians from their
+present situation and raising in their minds extravagant
+hopes of a change for the better, I
+believed it advisable to tell them not to be carried
+away by dreams of a too far distant possible
+realization.</p>
+
+<p>In all frankness, I must say that I have never
+taken any stock in the suggestion made from time
+to time, for the last fifty years, in favour of Canadian
+Independence. It always seemed to me that
+our destinies were not moving along that way. In
+my opinion, which nothing has happened to alter,
+the steady growth of the consolidation of the Empire
+was yearly working against the assumption
+of the prospective independence of the Dominion.</p>
+
+<p>But even supposing that the course of events
+would change and put an end to British connection,
+could we pride ourselves with having at last,
+though in a very peaceful way, achieved our
+national independence? I am more and more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
+strongly impressed by the paramount consideration
+that, nominally independent, Canada would
+be very little so in reality. Situated as she would
+be, she could not help being under the protectorate
+of the United States. I have always thought so.
+I think it more firmly than ever, when I see looming
+larger every day on the American political
+horizon the fact that the neighbouring Republic
+will come out of the present war with flying
+Colours, taking rank as one of the most powerful
+nations on earth.</p>
+
+<p>Be that as it may, there is every certainty
+that the question of Canadian Independence is
+not within the range of practical politics. Mr.
+Bourassa's proposition is doomed to the failure it
+deserves.</p>
+
+<p>Consequently, it is much better to try and
+foresee what the future political conditions of
+Canada are more likely to be after the close of the
+hostilities. And this must be done with the only
+purpose of wisely, and patriotically,&mdash;in the larger
+sense of the word&mdash;contributing our due share to
+the sound and solid framing of the changes, if any,
+which the best interests of the Empire, generally,
+and of all her component parts, in particular, may
+require.</p>
+
+<p>We have not, and I most earnestly hope and
+pray that we shall not have, to consider what new
+political conditions would be as the consequence
+of the defeat of the Allies, or even as necessitated
+by a peace treaty due to a compromise. We must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
+only look ahead for the encouraging days to follow
+the victory won by the united efforts and heroism
+of the nations who have rallied to put an end to
+Prussian militarism.</p>
+
+<p>One certainty is daily becoming more evident.
+All loyal British subjects will applaud the triumphant
+close of the war with the desire to do their
+best to maintain and consolidate the Empire they
+will have saved from destruction at the cost of so
+much sacrifices of heroic lives and resources.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">No Taxation Without Representation.</span></div>
+
+<p>The great objection raised by Mr. Bourassa
+against the participation of Canada in the wars of
+the Empire is that the Dominion is not represented
+in the Parliament to which the British ministers,
+advising the Sovereign on all matters of foreign
+relations, are responsible. He draws the conclusion
+that the Colonies are called upon to pay for
+the war expenditures of Great Britain in violation
+of the constitutional principle:&mdash;<span class="smcap">no taxation
+without representation</span>. The principle is no
+doubt true. But it is altogether wrong to pretend
+that so far it has been violated to coerce the Dominion
+to participate in the wars which England
+has been obliged to wage. Our "Nationalists"
+would be right in their opposition if the Imperial
+Parliament had attempted to pass laws compelling
+the autonomous Colonies to contribute men and
+money to a conflict. Had they claimed the right to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
+raise revenues in Canada by an Imperial statute,
+we would certainly have been entitled to affirm
+that not being represented in the British House of
+Commons, we could not be taxed in any way for
+any Imperial purpose&mdash;war or others.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing of the kind has ever been done, ever
+been attempted, even ever been hinted at.</p>
+
+<p>The argument falls entirely to the ground,
+shattered to pieces, from the fact that Canada has
+only participated in the wars of the Empire of her
+own free will, in the full enjoyment of her constitutional
+rights. Whatever sums of money the
+Dominion has to pay for the conflicts into which
+we have freely and deliberately decided to intervene,
+are perceived by the Canadian treasury in
+virtue of laws passed by our federal Parliament
+upon the advice of our responsible Cabinet.</p>
+
+<p>Last year, the people of Canada were called
+upon to elect new members of our House of Commons.
+The citizens of the Dominion had the undoubted
+constitutional right to pass condemnation
+on the ministers and on the members of Parliament
+who had voted for the participation in the
+war with men and money. They could have elected
+a new House of Commons to discontinue such
+participation and recall our army from Europe.
+But had they not the equally undoubted right to
+do what they have done by such a solemn expression
+of a decided and matured opinion:&mdash;approve
+and order to fight until victory is won?</p>
+
+<p>In accepting with deep gratitude the noble and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
+patriotic support we, Canadians, were giving her
+in the most terrible crisis of her Sovereign existence,
+was England in any way violating any of our
+cherished constitutional privileges? No sensible,
+no reasonable, no unprejudiced man can so pretend.
+The case being such as it is, there is not
+the shadow of common sense in the assertion that
+Canada is taxed without representation for Imperial
+war purposes.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Colonial Representation.</span></div>
+
+<p>If the question of Colonial representation is
+raised at the special Imperial Conference to be
+held as soon as possible after the war, Mr. Bourassa
+and his friends will not be welcomed to cry if it
+is settled very differently from their wishes, after
+their unwise clamour for an excursion into the
+unknown.</p>
+
+<p>The question of the readjustment of the constitutional
+relations of the component parts of
+the Empire, when duly brought up, will very likely
+take a wide range, so far at least as consideration
+goes. What will be the conclusions arrived at,
+nobody knows.</p>
+
+<p>Pending that time, any one is allowed to express
+his own views. I thought proper to explain
+mine in my book dedicated to the French Canadians.
+I now summarize them as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Would it be advisable to have the Colonies represented
+in the present Imperial Parliament?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
+After full consideration of the question, I must say
+that I have finally dismissed it from my mind as
+utterly impracticable. Can it be supposed for a
+moment that the electors of Great Britain would
+agree to have the Dominions overseas and India
+represented in their House of Commons, to participate
+in the government of the United Kingdom
+for all purposes? With representation in the present
+British House of Commons, would the Colonies
+be also represented in the British Cabinet, to advise
+the Crown on all matters respecting the good
+government of England?</p>
+
+<p>Would the Colonies be represented according
+to their population in the British House of Commons?
+If they were, India alone would have a
+number of representatives five times larger than
+all the other parts of the Empire.</p>
+
+<p>Is it within the range of possibility that the
+people of Great Britain would consent to colonial
+representatives interfering, even controlling the
+management of their internal affairs, whilst they
+would have no say whatever in the internal government
+of the Colonies?</p>
+
+<p>Would the colonial ministers in the British
+Cabinet be constitutionally responsible to the people
+of the United Kingdom without holding their
+mandate from them?</p>
+
+<p>Such a system would be so absurd, so radically
+impossible, that it is not necessary to argue to
+prove that it would not work for one single year.</p>
+
+<p>In my opinion, Colonial representation would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
+be practicable only with the creation of a new
+truly Imperial Parliament, the present British
+Parliament to continue to exist but with constitutional
+powers reduced to the management of the
+internal affairs of the United Kingdom. If such
+is the scheme of the "Nationalists," then they are
+converts to that Imperial Federation which they
+have vehemently denounced for years, and to the
+largest measure possible of that Imperialism
+which has been cursed with their worst maledictions.</p>
+
+<p>If ever complete Imperial Federation becomes
+an accomplished fact, how will it be organized?
+Will the new Imperial Parliament consist of one
+Sovereign, one House of Lords&mdash;or Senate&mdash;one
+House of Commons?</p>
+
+<p>Would the Sovereign be King or Emperor?
+I, for one, would prefer the word <span class="smcap">Emperor</span>. He
+might be titled His Majesty the Emperor of the
+British Commonwealth and the King of Great
+Britain.</p>
+
+<p>With Imperial Federation&mdash;a regime of complete
+Imperial autonomy&mdash;the word "colonies"
+would no longer apply. Would Canada, Australia,
+South Africa, India, New Zealand be called Kingdoms,
+like Prussia, Bavaria, Saxony, Wurtemberg,
+of the German Empire?</p>
+
+<p>Evidently, the constitutional powers of the
+new Parliament would be limited to external relations,
+to strictly Imperial affairs.</p>
+
+<p>The new constitutional organization of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+British Empire would combine Imperial, National
+and Provincial autonomy, each operating within
+the well defined limits of their respective privileges
+and attributions.</p>
+
+<p>Under such a regime, there would be three
+sorts of responsible Cabinets: The Imperial Cabinet
+responsible to the whole Imperial electorate;
+the National Cabinets of the component Kingdoms
+of the British Empire responsible to the electorate
+of each one of those Kingdoms respectively; the
+Provincial Cabinets responsible to the electors of
+each province respectively.</p>
+
+<p>The Royal&mdash;or rather Imperial&mdash;Prerogative
+to declare war and to make peace would be exercised
+upon the responsibility of the Imperial
+Cabinet.</p>
+
+<p>To the new Imperial Parliament would undoubtedly
+be given the right and the duty to provide
+for Imperial defense. They would have to
+organize an Imperial army and an Imperial navy
+for the protection of the whole Empire.</p>
+
+<p>The whole of the reorganized Empire would
+have to pay the whole of the expenditures required
+for Imperial purposes, defense and others, on land
+and sea, out of revenues raised by laws of the
+Imperial Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>Under the new Imperial constitutional regime,
+would the Imperial Parliament be given the authority
+to regulate Imperial trade and commerce,
+the Imperial postal service, &amp;c.?</p>
+
+<p>Would the new Parliament have the exclusive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
+right to approve commercial treaties sanctioned by
+His Majesty the Emperor, upon the advice of his
+responsible Imperial Cabinet, without reference
+whatever to the National Parliaments of the
+component Kingdoms?</p>
+
+<p>How easily is it ascertained that numerous
+questions of paramount importance are at once
+brought to one's mind the moment the vast problem
+of a new and greater Imperial Commonwealth
+is considered. Shortsighted and inexperienced
+are the politicians and the publicists who imagine
+that it could be given a satisfactory solution after
+hasty and insufficient deliberations. It is very
+reassuring to know that the matter necessarily
+being suggested for consideration at the Imperial
+War Conference, last year, it was immediately
+decided, by a "Resolution," adopted on the proposition
+of the Canadian Prime Minister, "<span class="smcap">that the
+readjustment of the constitutional relations
+of the component parts of the Empire is too important
+and intricate a subject to be dealt with
+during the war</span>."</p>
+
+<p>What would be the real meaning of such a
+radical change? It is worth while to enquire at
+once.</p>
+
+<p>The British Empire would no longer comprise
+a Metropolis holding autonomous Colonies
+and Crown Colonies, but would be organized in a
+new Sovereign State with an Imperial Parliament
+to which all the component parts&mdash;or Kingdoms&mdash;would
+send representatives.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Indeed it would be a grand, a magnificent,
+political edifice. But to find shelter under it,
+Canada would have to renounce her right to decide
+alone, and freely, to participate, or not, in the
+wars of the Empire, to determine alone what her
+military organization should be, to raise ourselves,
+without the intervention of a superior Parliament,
+the revenue which we consider proper to apply to
+Imperial purposes.</p>
+
+<p>I, for one, do not foresee that such an important
+constitutional change, if ever it is made, will
+be suddenly brought about, in the dark, as the
+result of the machinations of a most mischievous
+Imperialism inspiring our "Nationalists" with
+shivering terror. It is positively sure that no one
+holding a responsible political position, or having
+a responsible standing in the British political
+world, will ever be mad enough to propose, suggest,
+or even hint, to build a new Imperial structure
+without the solid foundation of the deliberate
+consent of all the Colonies, of all the would-be
+component parts of such a vast Commonwealth.</p>
+
+<p>How many years of serious discussion, of
+earnest consideration, did it not take to bring
+about the creation of the Canadian, Australian
+and South African Dominions. It cannot be reasonably
+imagined that the creation of the new and
+greater Imperial Commonwealth will be a much
+easier task to accomplish with the necessary
+conditions of successful durability.</p>
+
+<p>I also thought proper in my French book to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
+write a few lines on the important question respecting
+the mode of ascertaining the deliberate
+consent of the Colonies to any intended readjustment
+of the constitutional relations of the component
+parts of the Empire, specially if it was proposed
+to rear a new and larger political fabric. I
+did so because of late it has been frequently suggested
+to use the <i>plebiscit</i> or the <i>referendum</i> as the
+most opportune way to consult public opinion.</p>
+
+<p>I must say that, without going to the length
+of denying that a public consultation may, in a
+particular case, be advantageously made by way of
+a <i>plebiscit</i> or <i>referendum</i>, I am not a strong believer
+in the efficiency of either proposition, and
+why? Because I cannot help considering them as
+more or less contrary to the solid constitutional
+principle of ministerial responsibility which they
+would gradually undermine if frequently appealed
+to.</p>
+
+<p>I feel specially adverse to the <i>plebiscit</i>, because
+History proves that, by nature, it engenders
+<span class="smcap">despotism</span>, <span class="smcap">cæsarism</span>. Contemporary history offers
+two striking examples never to be forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon the First, whose power was the legitimate
+result of his wonderful genius and of his
+eminent services to France, wanted his dynasty to
+rest on the <i>plebiscitary</i> foundation. Millions of
+votes&mdash;almost the unanimity of French public
+opinion&mdash;answered enthusiastically to his call.
+He was not such a man as to refuse the chance
+offered him to exercise a supreme power so manifestly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
+tendered to him. All know that he very
+soon unbridled his devouring ambition and ruled
+France with all the might of an absolutism
+strengthened by the glories of military campaigns
+truly marvellous. To any attempt at freedom of
+criticism, he could reply that his Imperial power&mdash;mightily
+supported by his commanding genius&mdash;was
+strongly entrenched on the unanimity of
+opinion of the French nation expressed by the
+result of the plebiscit.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon III, favoured by the immortal prestige
+of his glorious uncle, but far behind him in
+genius, though intellectually well gifted, as he
+proved it during his Presidential term of the second
+French Republic and during the first years he
+occupied the Imperial Throne of France, used the
+plebiscit to have his famous <i>coup d'Etat</i> of the
+second day of December 1851, prepared with consummate
+skill and carried out with great energy,
+ratified by the nation by an overwhelming majority
+of several millions of votes. He lost no time
+in drawing the final result of this first great success
+and in reaching the term of his ambition.
+The tide of popular enthusiasm was all flowing his
+way, carrying him to the Throne elevated for his
+uncle who had lost it after the hurricane which
+exhausted its strength at Waterloo. On the second
+of December of the following year&mdash;1852&mdash;the
+second French Empire was proclaimed to the international
+world. Following the example and
+the precedent of the first Bonaparte, Napoleon III<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
+also decided to use the plebiscit to legitimate his
+Imperial power. He triumphantly carried the
+day by some seven millions of votes&mdash;almost the
+unanimous voice of the French people.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, in less than half a century, after having
+twice tried the Republican system of government,
+and, in both cases, having overdone by deplorable
+excesses the experiment of Political Liberty&mdash;more
+specially during the years of terrorism of the first
+Republic&mdash;France, by a regular reaction, went
+back to the other extreme, and reestablished
+arbitrary power not, in the two instances, upon
+the principle of the Divine Right of the ancient
+Monarchy, but on that of the Sovereignty of the
+people, as expressed by the certain will of the
+whole nation. But <span class="smcap">absolutism</span>, whether the outcome
+of Divine Right or of popular sovereignty,
+is always the same and steadily works against the
+true principles of Political Liberty.</p>
+
+<p>It is a great mistake to suppose that <span class="smcap">absolutism</span>
+is possible only under monarchical institutions.
+The terrorist republican epoch, in France, from
+1792 to 1795, was <span class="smcap">absolutism</span> of the worst kind,
+really with a vengeance. As much can be said of
+the present political situation in Russia, which
+has substituted <span class="smcap">revolutionary absolutism</span> to that
+of the decayed Imperial regime, suddenly brought
+to a tragic end by the pressure of events too strong
+for its crumbling fabric, shaken to its foundation
+by a most unwise reactionary movement which
+only precipitated its downfall, instead of averting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
+it, as extravagantly expected by the Petrograd
+Court, which betrayed Russia in favour of Germany,
+and unconsciously opened the road which
+led the weak and unfortunate Czar to his lamentable
+fate.</p>
+
+<p>In my humble opinion, <span class="smcap">plebiscitary cæsarism</span>
+is not compatible with a system of ministerial
+responsibility for all the official acts of the
+Sovereign.</p>
+
+<p>The frequent use of the plebiscit would certainly
+tend to diminish in the mind of political
+leaders the true sense of their responsibility. It
+would too often offer an easy way out of an awkward
+position without the consequence of having
+to give up power.</p>
+
+<p>If I understand right the real meaning of the
+two words: <i>plebiscit</i> and <i>referendum</i>, the first
+would be used to try and ascertain how public
+opinion stands upon any given question of public
+policy, of proposed public legislation: the second
+would be employed for the ratification by the electorate
+of a law passed by Parliament. I have less
+objection to the second system which, in reality, is
+an appeal from Parliament to the Electorate. But
+to the well practised, the adverse vote of a majority
+of the electors should have the same result as a
+vote of the majority of the House of Commons rejecting
+an important public measure upon the
+carrying of which the Cabinet has ventured their
+existence.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Without the immediate resignation of the
+ministers meeting with a reverse in a <i>referendum</i>,
+I consider that ministerial responsibility would
+soon become a farce destructive of constitutional
+government. The defeat of a Cabinet in a <i>referendum</i>
+would be equivalent to one in general elections
+and should bear out the same consequence.</p>
+
+<p>Surely, no one having some clear notions of
+what <span class="smcap">ministerial responsibility</span> means, will pretend
+for a moment that a Cabinet who, on being
+defeated in the House of Commons, advises the
+Sovereign&mdash;or his representative in Canada&mdash;to
+dissolve Parliament for an appeal to the people,
+could remain in power if the Electorate approved
+of the hostile stand taken by the House of
+Commons.</p>
+
+<p>I can see no difference whatever in the
+meaning of an hostile referendum vote and that
+following a regular constitutional appeal from an
+adverse majority of the popular House of representatives.
+In both cases, the downfall of the
+defeated ministers should be the result.</p>
+
+<p>From the above comments, I draw the sound
+conclusion, I firmly believe, that any important
+readjustment of the constitutional relations of the
+Colonies with Great Britain, should be first ratified
+by the actual Parliaments of the Dominions
+and subsequently by the electors of those Dominions.
+But I am also strongly of opinion that the
+ratification by the electorate should be taken upon
+the ministerial responsibility of the Cabinet who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
+would have advised the Sovereign and asked
+Parliament to approve the proposed readjustment.
+It would be the safest way to have the Cabinet to
+consider the question very seriously before running
+the risk of a popular defeat which would have to
+be followed by their resignation.</p>
+
+<p>Another most important reason to quiet the
+fears of our "alarmists" at an impending wave of
+flooding Imperialism, is that any radical change
+in the constitutional relations of England with her
+Colonies for the unity and consolidation of the
+Empire, should be adopted by the Parliaments and
+the Electorates of all the Colonies to be affected by
+the new conditions.</p>
+
+<p>Consequently, from every standpoint the
+Dominions and the Empire herself are guaranteed
+against the dangers of rashness in changing the
+present status of the great British Commonwealth.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">The Far Off Future.</span></div>
+
+<p>Though it may be of little use, and perhaps
+perplexing, to look too far ahead to try and foresee
+what the distant future has in store for the generations
+to come, still a simple call to common sense
+tells one that the political destinies of any Commonwealth
+are, in a long course of time, largely
+and necessarily shaped by the increases in population
+and wealth, irrespective of the actual more
+or less harmonious working of present and immediately
+prospective constitutional institutions.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Broadly speaking, was it to be supposed, for
+instance, that the two wide continents of America
+would have, when peopled by hundreds of millions,
+continued in a condition of vassalage to the European
+continent, though owing their discovery and
+early settlements to European genius and enterprise?
+No doubt the growing national families of
+the New World would have liked a much longer
+stay under the roofs where they were born, had
+they received better and kinder treatment from
+their fatherly States. But at best the hour of
+separation would only have come later, postponed
+as it would have been by the bonds of enduring
+affection made more lasting by mutual good relations.
+Do we not see, almost daily, desolated
+homes often the sad result of senseless misunderstandings,
+or of guilty outbursts of intemperate
+passions? Yet, family home life, even when blessed
+by the inspiring smile of a lovely wife, the sweet
+voice of a devoted mother, the manly and Christian
+example of a good father, the affectionate sentiments
+of well bred children, is far too short under
+the most favourable circumstances. And why?
+Because it has to follow the Divine decree ordering
+separation for the building of new homes, to keep
+Humanity advancing towards the final conclusion
+of her earthly existence.</p>
+
+<p>Had the American colonies been favoured by
+the constitutional liberties the Dominion of Canada
+enjoys, they would not have revolted and
+British connection would have endured many years<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
+longer. Still, one cannot conclude that those British
+provinces, realizing the marvellous development
+all can witness, would have for ever agreed
+to be satisfied with their colonial status. When
+they would have grown taller and bigger than the
+mother-country, most likely Great Britain herself
+would have taken the initiative of a friendly separation
+followed by a close alliance which would have
+perpetuated the familial bond actually so happily
+restored.</p>
+
+<p>As prophesied by Sir Erskine May, more than
+half a century ago, in speaking of the probable
+future of the then British colonies, the American
+Republic would <i>have grown out of the dependencies
+of the British Empire</i>.</p>
+
+<p>And to-day, when the United States are doing
+such a gigantic effort, conjointly with the whole
+British Empire, to save Humanity from German
+cruel domination, England, to use the very words
+of the distinguished writer and historian just
+cited, "<span class="smcap">may well be prouder of the vigorous
+freedom of her prosperous son than of a hundred
+provinces subject to the iron rule of
+British pro-consuls</span>."</p>
+
+<p>The possibilities of the material development
+of the Dominions of Canada, Australia, New
+Zealand and South Africa&mdash;without counting
+India and the lesser colonies&mdash;on account of their
+immense natural resources, are such as to justify
+very great hopes for their future. The time will
+come when they will number together a much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
+larger population than the United Kingdom. Will
+the British Empire, as foreseen by one of the
+greatest political minds Canada has produced,
+declared by his chief and worthy opponent the
+equal to the celebrated William Pitt, then develop
+into a grand Commonwealth of nations.</p>
+
+<p>If so, as wrote Sir Erskine May, England
+"<i>will reflect, with exultation, that her dominion
+ceased, not in oppression and bloodshed but in the
+expansive energies of freedom, and the hereditary
+capacity of her manly offspring for the privileges
+of self-government</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Several generations will certainly rise and
+disappear before such an important question,
+looming far off in the future, is likely to be&mdash;if
+ever&mdash;raised requiring a practical solution. But
+foreseeing such a distant possibility, it is still
+more our bounden duty to be true to our present
+and prospective obligations for many years to
+come, as foreshadowed by the actual course of
+events shaping themselves in the sense of the consolidation
+of the Empire which may never be really
+dissolved even by the separation of her manly
+<i>offspring</i>. Family bonds, strengthened by deep
+affection, are not broken because the faithful boy,
+grown up a healthy and strong man, leaves to go
+under his own blessed roof, taking with him to his
+last day the cherished recollections of the happy
+days he has passed in the equally blessed parental
+home.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One of our most ardent desires must be that
+our successive generations of children be so well
+trained to the intelligent and patriotic use of
+Political Liberty, as to accumulate, in due course
+of time, an admirable heritage of sound principles
+of self-government enriched by the honourable examples
+of our faithful loyalty to the Mother land
+never grudged to her, but given with overflowing
+measure, not only as a matter of duty, but also as
+a reward from grateful subjects for the regard and
+respect always paid to their constitutional rights
+and privileges.</p>
+
+<p>If such is ever the natural outcome of our
+political achievements, the vast Empire reared
+with such a great success would truly survive
+separation, being merely transformed into a splendid
+galaxy of independent States still bound
+together by the strong ties created by centuries of
+reciprocal devotedness. It would constitute a real
+league of nations working in concert and with
+grandeur for the peace and the prosperity of the
+whole world.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">A Machiavellian Proposition.</span></div>
+
+<p>On reading Mr. Bourassa's pamphlet entitled:&mdash;<i>Yesterday,
+To-day, To-morrow</i>, I discovered
+what I have qualified a <i>Machiavellian proposition</i>.
+What <i>Machiavellism</i> means is well known. It expresses
+the views of that most corrupt and
+contemptible politician and publicist, called
+<span class="smcap">Machiavel</span>, born at Florence, in 1649.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At page 140 of the above mentioned pamphlet,
+Mr. Bourassa wrote:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">I will speak my mind openly</span>&mdash;<i>je vous livre
+toute ma pensée</i>&mdash;: <span class="smcap">if in default of Independence,
+I claim Imperial representation, it is because it
+would weaken the military organization of
+England</span>,&mdash;<i>l'armature de guerre de l'Angleterre</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">precipitate
+the dissolution of her Empire,
+hasten the day of deliverance, for us and for
+the whole world.</span>"</p>
+
+<p>Such are the loyal sentiments expressed by
+the "Nationalist" leader. He clamours for the Imperial
+representation of the Colonies, for the
+solemnly avowed object to use the privilege for the
+destruction of the Empire. To achieve this end he
+declares that the military power of England must
+first be weakened.</p>
+
+<p>No wonder then that he started his "Nationalist"
+campaign by fighting with all his might the
+two successive proposals of contribution to the
+great military naval fleet of Great Britain.</p>
+
+<p>No wonder that he opposed Canada's intervention
+in favour of England in the South African
+war.</p>
+
+<p>No wonder that from the outbreak of the
+hostilities, in 1914, until the day when he was shut
+up by the Order-in-Council censuring all disloyal
+speaking and writing detrimental to the winning
+of the war, he has tried to move heaven and earth
+to prevent Canada's participation in the conflict.</p>
+
+<p>He tells his countrymen that if he has become<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
+a convert to Imperial representation&mdash;in other
+words, Imperial Federation&mdash;it is because he considers
+it would be the best way of ruining the Empire
+and of delivering, not only Canada, but the
+whole world from British domination.</p>
+
+<p>For fear that the French Canadians, whom he
+especially wished to influence, would not be very
+easily caught in the disloyal trap, he tries hard to
+prevail upon them by the following reasons:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>"If we are not sufficiently clear-sighted and
+energetic to work for this salutary object by the
+most constitutional, the most British, means at
+our disposal, others, happily, will do it for us.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"The English-Canadians, the Australians, the
+New Zealanders persistingly claim representation
+in the government of the Empire. When the war
+is over, their claims will be reaffirmed with increased
+ampleness and energy. The Indians (les
+Hindous) themselves will do the same. Shall we
+remain alone to rot stupidly (croupir béatement)
+in colonial abjection."</i></p>
+
+<p>Without the slightest doubt, there are many
+English-Canadians, Australians, New Zealanders,
+South Africans, Indians, in favour of Colonial Imperial
+representation. The number is increasing
+and likely to increase. But Mr. Bourassa is absolutely,
+I might as well say, absurdly, mistaken, if
+he really believes that they do so for his own purpose
+of destroying the British Empire. They want
+the very reverse: their object is <span class="smcap">to consolidate the
+Empire</span>, not <span class="smcap">to dissolve her</span>. They will not accept<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
+as a very flattering compliment Mr. Bourassa's
+charge that their desire to strengthen the British
+Commonwealth proves that they prefer to continue
+<i>stupidly rotting in colonial abjection</i> rather than
+work for their deliverance from British domination.</p>
+
+<p>But what in the world has brought the "Nationalist"
+leader to the conclusion that the surest
+way to save Canada from the peril of Imperialism
+was to secure Imperial representation for the
+treasonable purpose, on entering the fort, to pull
+down the flag and destroy the whole Empire? To
+frighten his French Canadian compatriots with
+terror at the slightest move in favour of an increased
+Imperialism, he waves before them, with
+wild gesticulation, any and every extravagant
+writings he lays his hand on preaching a ridiculous
+expansion of Imperialist aspirations. He is perhaps
+the only man in Canada who has read a most
+absurd work which he pretends to have been written
+by a General named Lea, and from which, in
+horror stricken, he summarized a few unbelievable
+views.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa said that General Lea, <i>gifted
+with an astonishing foresight, predicted all that
+was happening in Europe and in the world. The
+General</i>, again affirms Mr. Bourassa, <i>has proved
+in a striking way that if England wishes to maintain
+her Empire and to continue exercising her
+domination over the world she must make the sacrifice
+of her political liberties and of those of her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
+Colonies, abolish the Parliamentary and Representative
+Governments and resolutely adopt the
+ironed regime of the Romans of old, of the Germans
+of the present day</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Once so brilliantly inspired, General Lea
+went on in a splendid manner. He added, says Mr.
+Bourassa, <i>that England must transform her Empire
+into a vast armed camp, must keep in her own
+hands all the powers of command, must subdue
+all the non-British races to the supremacy of the
+Anglo-Saxons united together by the unique
+thought of dominating the world by brutal force</i>.</p>
+
+<p>These views&mdash;so says Mr. Bourassa&mdash;are to
+be found in a book entitled: "<i>The Day of the
+Saxon</i>." If they have been really expressed with
+the full sense given to them by Mr. Bourassa's
+translation into French, I cannot say less than
+that they are most absurd, most extravagant. The
+Nationalist leader would have proved himself a
+much more sensible, a wiser man, if, laughing at
+such senseless notions, he had refrained from
+quoting those lines for the purpose of telling the
+French-Canadians that like all non-British races
+on earth they were doomed to be devoured&mdash;flesh
+and bones&mdash;by the voracious Anglo-Saxons bent on
+swallowing humanity. And to save them from
+such a cruel fate, he implores them to clamour for
+Imperial representation with the criminal intent
+of betraying their trust, and to use the honourable
+privilege they would be granted to ruin the Empire
+they would swear to maintain and defend.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
+So far as the political program of General Lea
+is concerned, we have not yet learned that its benevolent
+author was doing much in the war to carry
+it out. If I had the honour to meet the General,
+being presented, I presume, by Mr. Bourassa, I
+would ask him, first, when and where he has discovered
+that England was <i>dominating the world</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I know that there exists a great England
+holding a large situation on earth. Her Empire
+extends to almost a fourth of the globe. Her Sovereignty
+reigns over nearly four hundred million
+of human beings; a truly beneficient Sovereignty,
+because it rules according to the wishes, to the
+opinions of its subjects, managing their own affairs
+in virtue of the freest political institutions in the
+whole world.</p>
+
+<p>I know of no England dominating, or even
+aspiring to dominate, the world. Such an England
+only exists in the heated imagination of that General
+Lea and in the minds of all those, like the
+Nationalist leader, who are, or feign to be, tortured
+by the bugbear of military Imperialism of
+the old Roman ironed type.</p>
+
+<p>As long as three-fourths of the earth will remain
+independent of the British Empire, under
+numerous sovereignties, England's pretended domination
+of the world will ever only be an extravagant
+dream.</p>
+
+<p>Wishing England <i>to continue her domination
+of the world</i>, General Lea, no doubt to please Mr.
+Bourassa, was bound to suggest the means to do
+so. Let us analyze them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>1.&mdash;England <i>must make the sacrifice of her
+political liberties and of those of her Colonies</i>.</p>
+
+<p>2.&mdash;She <i>must abolish parliamentary and representative
+governments</i>.</p>
+
+<p>It is beyond conception that Mr. Bourassa
+should have for one minute seriously considered
+such absurd notions.</p>
+
+<p>I would enjoy attending large public meetings
+in Great Britain, where General Lea would propose
+to British free men the sacrifice of all their
+political liberties, to witness the rather warm
+reception he would be favoured with. I am sure
+he would have to rush out of the halls much faster
+than he would have walked in.</p>
+
+<p>Where is the sane man who really believes
+that, dreaming of a domination of the world by
+<i>brute force</i>, British free men would consent to do
+away with their Parliamentary system <i>to transform
+the whole of the Empire into an armed camp</i>?
+Such a proposition was sheer madness, a most
+foolish talk, unworthy of the slightest attention
+from sensible people. Mr. Bourassa was very
+wrong in giving it publicity, and very unwise, to
+say the least, in using it to frighten his French-Canadian
+compatriots by blandishing before their
+eyes that ridiculous specimen of the phantom of
+Imperialism.</p>
+
+<p>Is it to be supposed for one single instant
+that the British people, so rightly proud of their
+political liberties, and of their representative
+government, which after centuries of efforts and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
+trials they have successfully brought to such perfection,
+basing its future permanency on the solid
+rock of ministerial responsibility, would consent
+to sacrifice them for the sake of a vain, a ridiculous,
+an odious and impracticable scheme <i>to dominate
+the world by brute force</i>?</p>
+
+<p>It is ten times worse than madness to believe
+that the British people who have torn away from
+the British soil the last root of <span class="smcap">ABSOLUTISM</span>, would,
+for any earthly reason, renounce their most legitimate
+conquests, to rebuild, on the burning ruins of
+their most sacred rights, an ironed political
+regime of the old Roman or present German type!
+Is it to be believed that they would agree to replace,
+on the glorious Throne which they protect
+with all the might of their loyal affection, their
+present constitutional Sovereign by a new Nero
+or another Wilhelm II?</p>
+
+<p>If it is with the purpose of preventing such a
+dire calamity that the Nationalist leader became
+a convert to Imperial Federation, he is absolutely
+losing his time and his energy in promoting such
+a regime. If ever Imperial Federation becomes a
+fact, we can all rest perfectly assured that the new
+Imperial Parliament will not vote their own
+destruction to be replaced by an autocratic and
+tyrannical government.</p>
+
+<p>I hope that Mr. Bourassa is the only believer,
+all over Canada, in the assertion of General Lea
+that England's aspirations is <i>to dominate the
+world by brute force</i>. It is a most injurious, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
+can say, calumnious, charge. All know, or should
+know, that England was the first nation to completely
+abolish slavery over all her Empire; that
+has granted, in the largest possible measure,
+Political Liberty to all her Colonies; that guarantees
+to all races the same rights and privileges,
+never interfering in colonial internal management.
+He is wilfully guilty of a calumnious charge the
+man who accuses the British race to aspire to
+dominate the world by an <i>ironed regime</i>, when he
+should know that Great Britain ran the risk of a
+crushing defeat, in refusing to organize a standing
+army of several millions of trained officers and
+men.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">A Treasonable Proposal.</span></div>
+
+<p>The Nationalist leader wants the French-Canadians
+to support his scheme in order <i>to work
+for the salutary object of demolishing the British
+Empire by the so very constitutional means of Imperial
+Federation</i>. How he has failed to realize
+the infamous kind of suggestion he was making
+will always be a wonder to all those reading it.</p>
+
+<p>If, sooner or later, Great Britain and her
+Colonies are politically organized as an Imperial
+Federation, the Province of Quebec will have several
+French-Canadian representatives in the new
+Greater Imperial Parliament. The Nationalist
+leader wants those French-Canadian Members to
+go to London pledged to destroy the Empire to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
+which they will have to swear allegiance and fealty
+before crossing the threshold of the House of
+Commons and taking their seats. Does he not understand
+that any French-Canadian doing what he
+wishes and recommends would deliberately perjure
+himself? Does he not comprehend that he
+was paying a rather poor compliment to his British
+countrymen from Canada, Australia, New
+Zealand and India, when he affirmed, without the
+shadow of truth, that they would elect to the Imperial
+Parliament members holding the mandate
+from them to work for the dissolution of the
+Empire?</p>
+
+<p>I notice, with surprise, that in the enumeration
+he has drawn of the future destroyers of the
+future federated British Empire, he has not convened
+his friends, the Boers, to his holy task. Does
+he not consider them as <i>farsighted</i> and <i>energetic</i>
+as the others he has pompously mentioned with
+such childish illusion. Or, has he not, unconsciously,
+paid them the high compliment to suppose that
+they would be unable to accomplish the treasonable
+act which, with confidence, and even certainty,
+he expects from the others. Our countrymen, the
+Boers of South Africa, have, by a large majority,
+become so loyal to the Crown, to the Empire,&mdash;and
+they have so gloriously proved it since the outbreak
+of the war&mdash;that it is manifestly evident
+that they are very well satisfied with their present
+position, that they have dispelled from their minds
+all bitter recollections of the struggle which, a few<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
+years ago, finally brought them within the Empire
+they are doing such a noble effort to maintain and
+save from the German tyrannical grasp.</p>
+
+<p>The following views, recently expressed, in
+London, by Mr. Burton, Minister of Railways and
+Harbours in the Government of South Africa, a
+leading public man of the far away sister Dominion,
+is refreshing reading after Mr. Bourassa's
+outrageous outburst above quoted. He said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>One of the motives which prompted South
+African support of the British cause was the fact,
+which appealed not only to the English-speaking
+population, but moved the Dutch population&mdash;the
+fact that the British cause had embraced all the
+progressive peoples of the world. It was not
+Britain's wealth, or influence, or power that appealed
+to them; it was the priceless privilege of
+the maintenance of our constitutional liberties.
+He could illustrate their attitude by a single incident
+which had come within his own experience
+in connection with a Transvaaler, born and bred,
+whom he had questioned as to his future in the
+military service in which he was an officer. The
+officer replied that he had been through the German
+South-West African campaign, that he was
+going through the German East African campaign,
+and when that was done he intended making for
+Flanders. He added: "I mean that as a man I
+could not act otherwise in view of the treatment
+dealt out to us by Great Britain. If she had not
+done what she did for us I should not have stirred
+hand or foot.</i>"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>"</p>
+
+<p>No one need be surprised that the South
+African Dominion is suffering a little from the
+"Nationalist" fever, a disease infesting many
+countries, in various degrees, and with time cured
+by the safe remedy of the sound common sense of
+the people. We know too much about it ourselves,
+after nearly eighty years of free responsible government,
+to wonder at the fact that a small minority
+of the Dutch South Africans&mdash;from the Boer
+element&mdash;is not yet fully reconciled with their lot
+under the British Crown. They apparently dream
+of Republicanism, in sullen recollection of a recent
+past which only some of the present generation
+still regret, but which the next will strive to cherish
+only as the stepping stone to their actual status
+so full of good promises for their future. The few
+South Africans suffering from this virus are almost
+exclusively recruited amongst the populations
+of the late Republics of South Africa. The
+people of the provinces of Natal and Cape Colony,
+with a long experience of British rule, have no
+faith in the "republican nationalism" desired by
+some, which does not in the least appeal to their
+good sense and their sound political foresight.
+Mr. Burton believes "<i>that the instigators of the
+movement are looking for votes more than for
+anything else</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Burton, moreover, truly said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>It was part of the history of all countries
+that what was called "Nationalism" made a powerful
+appeal to the finer classes of young men. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
+was an admirable sentiment, but what was complained
+of in South Africa was that the sentiment
+was expended upon a wrong conception of "nationalism"
+and what nationhood should be. In South
+Africa it was restricted, it was sectional, and practically
+racial. The energy and activity displayed
+were being spent upon a mistaken cause.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Every word of this quotation applies with
+still greater force to the "nationalism" of the
+Province of Quebec.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Burton goes on saying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>It was the cause of South Africa first&mdash;as it
+should be&mdash;but it was more than that. It was
+South Africa first, last, and all the time, and South
+Africa alone. He and those who were associated
+with him could not accept that view. It would
+mean ruinous chaos in South Africa. They had
+obligations to Great Britain. It was not merely
+that they had received recognition from the beginning
+that their Constitutional cause was just. It
+was not merely that Great Britain in its relation
+with South Africa had been actuated by that
+beneficent influence which the British system of
+liberty effected under the sway of its flag throughout
+the world, but it was that the people of the
+Union realized the true inward significance of the
+struggle in which the Empire was engaged. They
+knew that the world's freedom was at stake, and
+with it their own. The people in South Africa had
+long ago awakened to this great fact, and they
+were realizing it more and more as the war went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
+on. When he had spoken of putting "South Africa
+first" as the motto of a party he wished it to be understood
+that he and the people of South Africa
+generally accepted it, as every nation was bound to
+accept it. But they also realized that their future
+as a nation and their freedom as a nation were at
+stake, and that their interests were bound up with
+those of the British Empire.</i></p>
+
+<p>"<i>It was because they realized that fact that
+the Government of the Union had in these troublous
+times nailed its flag to the mast. It was the
+honourable course, the right course, and they had
+stuck to it through good report and ill report, and
+through much trial and sacrifice. His last message
+as representative of the Union Government
+was: Upon that attitude of the Union Government
+they might depend to the very last. They might be
+forced&mdash;he did not see any present prospect of it&mdash;to
+abandon office, but so long as they were in office
+they would adhere absolutely in the letter and in
+the spirit to the undertaking they had given and
+would continue in the path they had followed
+hitherto.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Sensible, truly political and patriotic, noble
+words, indeed. Are they not the complete expression
+of the powerful wave of enthusiasm which
+spread throughout the length and breadth of the
+whole British Dominions overseas, when, after
+exhausting to the last drop her efforts to maintain
+peace, Great Britain, in honour bound, threw
+her gallant sword in the balance in which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
+destinies of the world were to be weighed during
+the frightful years of the most terrific thundering
+storm ever witnessed by man?</p>
+
+<p>How weighty those words are is evident.
+They are still more so by the fact that they positively
+and firmly express the views and sentiments
+of the two most trusted and illustrious leaders of
+the Boers, who, both of them, took a very prominent
+part in the South African war, as generals
+commanding the forces of the South African Republics:
+General Botha and General Smuts.</p>
+
+<p>General Botha is, and has been for several
+years, the Prime Minister of the South African
+Dominion. General Smuts is minister of Defence
+in General Botha's Cabinet. He is the representative
+of the Government of the Union of South
+Africa in the Imperial War Cabinet. In June,
+1917, he was, moreover, "invited to attend the
+meetings of the British War Cabinet during his
+stay in the British Isles."</p>
+
+<p>Both General Botha and General Smuts have
+often spoken about the present relations of their
+great Dominion with England. The press of the
+whole British Empire has published their speeches,
+most favourably commented by that of the Allied
+nations. In every case, they were brilliant with
+true and staunch loyalty, worthy of the real statesmen
+the speakers are, in every sense fully up to
+what could be expected from the illustrious military
+and political leaders of a valiant race deserving
+the respect of all by her heroism of the
+past and her loyalty of present days.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>If ever Mr. Bourassa, as I hope he will, reads
+the above quoted lines, I am sure he will find
+therein every reason to be satisfied with his decision
+not to call upon the South Africans to join
+with him and those he has summoned, in the unworthy
+task of bringing on Imperial Federation
+for the very treasonable purpose of destroying
+the British Empire. For once, his judgment did
+not fail him.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody knows if representatives from the
+whole present colonial Dominions and India will
+ever sit, in London, as members of a new Imperial
+Parliament. It is most unlikely, at all events,
+that any one, merely to please Mr. Bourassa, will
+help building such a political structure with the
+criminal and treasonable purpose of throwing it
+at once to the ground with a tremendous crash.
+But we can all safely join in the affirmation that
+in the event of such a great historical fact being
+accomplished as that of a federated British Commonwealth,
+the representatives of the Colonies
+overseas will meet in the Imperial Capital to do
+their duty with loyalty and honour. I have no
+hesitation whatever to pledge my word that the
+French Canadian representatives in London would
+be amongst the most loyal to their Sovereign and
+to the Empire, the most true to their oath.</p>
+
+<p>I solemnly protest against the injurious imputation
+the Nationalist leader has addressed to
+my French Canadian compatriots in charging
+them with the desire <i>to rot stupidly in colonial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
+abjection</i>. Let us repulse the unfounded accusation
+from an elevated standpoint. I feel the utmost
+contempt for all kinds of narrow prejudices,
+of blind fanaticism. Nations, like individuals, all
+pursue Providential destinies in this human world.
+There is no more abjection in the colonial status
+than in any other. Canada is a British colony by
+the decree of Providence. Every nation&mdash;like
+every individual&mdash;has duties to perform in any
+situation she may occupy in the course of historical
+events. Abjection is not the result of the
+faithful discharge of duty, however trying the circumstances
+may be. It would be in its violation
+with the guilty intent to betray.</p>
+
+<p>A hundred times better it is to remain a colony
+as long as the Supreme Ruler of the world will so
+order, than to attempt to break through by the
+dark plot of an infamous conspiration.</p>
+
+<p>Let our destinies follow their natural development,
+striving to the best of our ability and patriotism
+to have them to achieve the happy conditions
+which we enjoy. Any man aspiring to a
+legitimate influence on the mind of our compatriots,
+must encourage them, by words and
+deeds, to faithfully accomplish their daily task in
+showing them the advantages of their position.
+Inconveniences are the outgrowth of any political
+standing. In the true Christian spirit, trials are
+everywhere to be met with. Sacrifice, when necessary,
+ennobles national as well, and as much, as
+individual life.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is very wrong on the part of any one to
+trouble the mind of our compatriots in purposely
+exhibiting to their view discouraging pictures of
+the difficulties of their situation. Their national
+existence is not, never will, never can be, exclusively
+rosy. Be it as it may, who can pretend, in good
+faith, that there exists, on the surface of the globe,
+a population, all things considered, happier than
+our own. Our race freely grows on a fertile and
+blessed soil which she cultivates with her vigorous
+and intelligent daily toils, which she waters from
+the sweat of her brow, to which she clings by all
+the affections of her heart, by the noblest aspirations
+of her soul. On week days, proudly working
+on her domains; on Sundays, kneeling before the
+Altars of her Church, fervently thanking Him for
+past graces and gifts, she prays to the Supreme
+Giver of all earthly goods to continue to favour
+her with peace, with order, in the legitimate enjoyment
+of her liberties, together with the moral,
+intellectual and material progress she is striving
+to deserve.</p>
+
+<p>Guilty is the man who tortures them with
+chimerical aspirations, who advises them to conspire
+against the legitimate authority which she
+must, and will, respect in spite of the seductions
+attempted to have her to fail in her duty.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Outrages Are No Reasons.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>The failings of human nature, the differences
+of temper, of the qualities and defects of heart and
+soul, are such that harmony and good-will amongst
+men in private life are too often difficult to secure.
+The Divine precept, so frequently broken, should,
+however, always rule the relations between man
+and man. It should, with still more constant application,
+rule the relations between different
+races Providentially called to live together on the
+same soil, under the same Sovereign authority,
+enjoying the same institutions, the same liberties,
+protected by the same flag. That the house divided
+against itself is sure to fall is true of the nation
+as well as of the home. National and family happiness
+and prosperity are alike dependent on the
+feelings of real brotherhood which prevail in both.
+Any good hearted man appreciates how much
+kindness of speech, courtesy of dealings, cordiality
+of manners, contribute to reciprocal good-fellowship,
+brotherly in the home, inspiring in the daily
+intercourse of citizens, patriotic in the nation at
+large. The more a Sovereign State is inhabited
+by numerous ethnical groups, like the British Empire
+and the American Republic, the more important<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
+it is that the freedom of expressing one's
+opinion on all matters of public interest should
+be used with fairness, with respect for those holding
+different views, with due regard for the feelings
+which are the natural outcome of racial developments,
+of cherished recollections, of legitimate
+hopes.</p>
+
+<p>Such are the principles, I am most happy to
+say, that I have admired and try to practice in the
+exercise of my rights as a citizen of the Province
+where I saw the light of day, of Canada where I
+have lived and hope to live all my years, of the
+British Empire whose loyal subject I have been
+and am determined to remain to my last moment.</p>
+
+<p>How then could I have helped being shocked
+when I came to read the following lines I translate
+as follows from page 121 of Mr. Bourassa's
+pamphlet:&mdash;"<i>Yesterday, To-day, To-morrow</i>":&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Were the French Canadians to persist in
+their obstination to rot in colonialism and to consider
+that it is for them the happiest and the most
+glorious condition of existence, the English Canadians
+would force them out of it. Our countrymen
+of the British races have grave defects: they
+are</i> <span class="smcap">IGNORANT</span>, <span class="smcap">PRETENTIOUS</span>, <span class="smcap">ARROGANT</span>, <span class="smcap">SHORT-SIGHTED</span>,
+<span class="smcap">DOMINEERING</span>. <i>They are, more than ourselves</i>,
+<span class="smcap">ROTTEN WITH MERCANTILISM</span>. <i>They seem to
+have lost some of the best qualities of the English
+people, to have developed their faults and acquire
+many of the</i> <span class="smcap">vices natural to the worst category
+of Yankees</span>. <i>But they have not</i>, <span class="smcap">LIKE US</span>, <i>totally</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
+<span class="smcap">ABDICATED</span> <i>the</i> <span class="smcap">PROUD CHARACTER</span> <i>and the</i> <span class="smcap">PRIMORDIOUS
+RIGHTS</span> <i>of the British peoples. When the war
+is over, they will claim, like the Australians, the
+New Zealanders, and the Indians (les Hindous),
+a readjustment of the powers of government</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Thus, in a few lines the Nationalist leader, in
+appealing to his disordered imagination, has succeeded
+in slapping, in one single stroke, with
+dynamical outrages, the faces of the English-speaking
+Canadians of the three great British
+races, of our neighbours, the Yankees, and of his
+own compatriots, the French-Canadians. How
+could he expect that such vitriolic language would
+promote, in the Dominion, that harmony of feelings
+never before so essential as at the very time he
+was writing that injurious paragraph of his work,
+surely not intended to help winning the war so
+full of the greatest consequences, for good or ill,
+for the World, the British Empire, Canada, and
+our own Province of Quebec.</p>
+
+<p>So far, Mr. Bourassa, having gone back on
+the admiration he was wont to profess for England,
+in his early youth, had reserved all his assaults
+for the English people. But the heart of
+man, once under the sway of an unlimited and
+unsatisfied ambition, is bound to drop to the lowest
+depths of the extremist's aberration. In the
+above quotation, he fires his battery of <i>Kruppic</i>
+dimensions&mdash;loaded with poisonous invectives, at
+the <span class="smcap">three great British races, English, Scotch
+and Irish</span>, living in Canada.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Had his charge been intended for the English
+race alone, he would have been very particular in
+so saying. But, let there be no mistake about it,
+he deliberately wrote <i>our countrymen of the British
+races</i>. Wanting, I suppose, to prove his impartiality,
+he remembered that the United Kingdom
+is peopled by three illustrious races represented
+all over the globe by many millions of
+worthy sons, everywhere to be found hard at work
+for the intelligent development of the resources of
+the countries they live in and are rearing their
+children. More than four millions of them are
+Canadians by birth or born in Great Britain.
+Many more numerous they are in the United States
+where they form the solid stock upon which the
+future of the Republic is firmly grounded.</p>
+
+<p>With the same thrust, Mr. Bourassa strikes
+at the Yankees who, we may hope, have not trembled
+too much at the blow. He charges them with
+having infested his poor <i>countrymen of the British
+races</i> with <i>many of the vices natural to the worst
+category of</i> "<span class="smcap">Yankeeism</span>." Kind, cordial, courteous,
+indeed he was in such a mood of tender sympathies
+for the Canadian British races and their
+contagious cousins the Yankees of the most corrupted
+class!</p>
+
+<p>However, the finest flower of the whole
+<i>bouquet&mdash;the rose par excellence</i>&mdash;is the one he
+has gallantly presented to his French-Canadian
+compatriots. He tells them with the sweetest
+tones of his charming voice that they are pleased<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
+and happy to rot in "<i>colonialism</i>." But, evidently
+wishing to speak to them a few encouraging words,
+he mildly reminds them <i>that they are less rotten
+with "mercantilism" than their countrymen of the
+British races</i>.</p>
+
+<p>A man can be suffering less than his more
+sickly brother without, for all that, being in very
+good health. It is a poor consolation for the
+French Canadians to hear from the Nationalist
+leader that they are less infested with the mercantile
+virus than their brothers of the British
+races.</p>
+
+<p>All those who have followed with some attention
+Mr. Bourassa's course for the last twenty
+years, know that he is an equilibrist of the first
+class. Having favoured the French Canadians
+with the flattering compliment as above, he turns
+about and lashes them with the sweeping slap that,
+contrary to the stand the Canadians of the British
+races cling to with an obstination which he deigns
+to approve, they, the degenerated French Canadians
+whom he pities so much, "<i>have totally abdicated
+their proud character</i> of old <i>and the primordial
+rights of British subjects</i>."</p>
+
+<p>So, in Mr. Bourassa's opinion, his French
+Canadian compatriots are infested to a high degree
+both with the <i>colonialist</i> and <i>mercantile</i> corruptions.
+Hence, his fear that they are threatened
+with a premature national death if they do not at
+once listen to his brotherly warnings.</p>
+
+<p>I have already answered the Nationalist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
+leader's charge that the French Canadians are
+stupidly rotting in "<span class="smcap">COLONIAL ABJECTION</span>." The same
+reasons refute his assumption that "<span class="smcap">COLONIALISM</span>"
+is an abject status for a people.</p>
+
+<p>A people, a race, who would enjoy living under
+the German autocratic colonial rule&mdash;for which
+the Nationalist leader has so little dislike&mdash;would
+indeed prove some disposition to <i>rot stupidly in
+abjection</i>. But the divers peoples, the different
+races, who appreciate all the beneficent advantages
+of the present British colonial rule, are of very
+superior stock. They know, from the clearest conception,
+that Monarchical democratic institutions
+are as much different from Imperial autocratic
+tyranny, as true broad patriotism is far above
+narrow and fanatical "Nationalism."</p>
+
+<p>I have only to say a few words about the
+"<span class="smcap">ROTTENNESS OF MERCANTILISM</span>" against which, according
+to Mr. Bourassa, the French Canadian
+are not sufficiently protected.</p>
+
+<p>Going back to my recollections of the last
+sixty years, if there is a complaint which through
+all my life I have heard almost daily, with deep
+regret, it is that the French Canadians were not
+striving with sufficient energy and perseverance
+to achieve a better and larger position in the business
+world. Their leaders, religious, political and
+civil, to induce them to increased exertions, have
+always pointed to the example given them by their
+countrymen of the British races: by the clear
+headed and far-seeing English business man, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
+sturdy and hard working Scotch, the enterprising
+and witty Irish. Thank God, I have well enough
+understood my duty to do my humble but patriotic
+share to favour this progressive movement. Never,
+in so wisely advising the French Canadians, any
+one supposed for a minute that he was leading
+them to the infested pond of <i>mercantile corruption</i>.
+The change wished by all was becoming more urgent.
+All were looking for the best means to
+carry it out. Our leaders, having at their head,
+by right and merit, our religious chiefs under the
+authority of a prince of our Church, his Eminence
+the Cardinal-Archbishop of Quebec, took the initiative
+with an ever increasing interest in the
+success they considered so important.</p>
+
+<p>The establishment of a permanent school of
+high commercial education and of several technical
+schools was most favourably approved. Political
+economy is even, in a certain measure, taught
+in several of our classical colleges for secondary
+education. The necessity for our young men of
+knowing the English language, to succeed in commercial,
+industrial and financial pursuits in Canada
+and in the neighbouring Republic, is more and
+more generally admitted. The French Canadians,
+fully enjoying the undoubted right to do so, aspire
+to achieve an advantageous and honourable position
+in commerce, in industry, in finance, in transportation,
+in mine working. The more we realize
+this goal of our legitimate ambition, the more we
+are also intensifying our efforts to promote agricultural<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
+progress and the improvement of our
+country roads.</p>
+
+<p>If, in all the branches of our national activity,
+we obtain the success we hope for, one single man
+alone amongst us shudders at the idea that the
+French Canadians will blindly destroy their race
+with a mortal dose of the cursed "<span class="smcap">MERCANTILISM</span>"
+so dishonourable to the British races.</p>
+
+<p>And Mr. Bourassa, instead of heartily joining
+with all the leaders of his race&mdash;Cardinal, Archbishops,
+Bishops, priests, statesmen, political
+men, judges, professional men, merchants, manufacturers,
+financiers,&mdash;to favour, as much as possible,
+the commercial and technical training of his
+compatriots, sneers at such efforts which, in his
+candid opinion, are only plunging them in the irremediable
+depths of "<span class="smcap">MERCANTILE CORRUPTION</span>"!</p>
+
+<p>Are not such abominable teachings a curse to
+all those of the race to which they are addressed
+with an unsurpassed cynicism?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">How Mr. Bourassa Paid His Compliments To
+The Canadian Army</span>.</h3>
+
+
+<p>With a most admirable unanimity&mdash;<i>nemine
+contradicente</i>, as Parliamentary procedure says&mdash;the
+Canadian Parliament decided at once, at the
+very outbreak of the hostilities, to organize a great
+army to go and defend the Empire of which the
+Dominion is an important component part, and
+Civilization in peril from the Teutonic crushing
+wave of barbarism, let loose over Belgium and
+France. In the most evidently constitutional
+ways, the Canadian people, as a whole, as they
+had the right and the bounden duty to do, approved
+the decision of Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Bourassa issued the pamphlets referred
+to, some four hundred thousands volunteers
+had already enlisted. A large number of them&mdash;over
+one hundred and sixty thousands had reached
+the western front&mdash;some the eastern&mdash;where they
+fought valiantly, heroically, on French soil,
+against the German hordes. Thousands of them
+had fallen on the field of honour, resting with imperishable
+glory, for them and for us all, in that
+ancestral land which we, and ever will, cherish.</p>
+
+<p>More than one hundred and twenty-five thousands<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
+were on British soil, being trained for the
+military operations of the following spring.</p>
+
+<p>The rest of the army, in numerous thousands,
+was still with us, getting organized for the noble
+task, and waiting to cross over the Atlantic to go
+on the field of battle.</p>
+
+<p>The Canadian army had in every way merited
+the respect and the admiration of all their countrymen
+who were very happy to so testify.</p>
+
+<p>However, in this admirable concert of praise
+and grateful congratulations, a very discordant
+note was one day heard resounding from the lowest
+inspiration of the human heart vibrating with
+feelings of shameful contempt. It is found at
+page 105 of the pamphlet previously quoted,
+and reads as follows in its naked outrageous
+language:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>In Canada, a militarism is being forged unparalleled
+in any civilized country, a depraved and
+undisciplined soldiery, an armed scoundrelism,
+without faith nor law, as refractory to the call of
+individual honour as to the authority of its parading
+or patronage officers.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>For all the treasures of the world, I would not
+agree to bear before my countrymen the responsibility
+of such injurious words addressed to the
+Canadian army whose valour is doing so much for
+our national honour.</p>
+
+<p>In one single masterly stroke of his poisoned
+pen the Nationalist leader decrees that the Canadian
+army is far below the worst type of German<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
+and Turkish soldiery, that no other civilized country
+is cursed with such a degraded, undisciplined,
+dishonoured militarism.</p>
+
+<p>For God's sake, whence and where has such
+an outrageous outburst originated? From what
+dark corner has the electric current been poured
+out with such infernal fury?</p>
+
+<p>I shall not pretend that all our volunteers,
+from first to last, had reached the saintly state of
+soul of their inexorable judge. As a rule poor
+mortals do not jump, by a single effort, up to that
+degree of Christian perfection shining with the
+great virtues of humility, charity, justice&mdash;by
+words and deeds. We must not suppose that many
+of our heroic volunteers had deserved, like their
+trusted friend and admirer, Mr. Bourassa, to be
+canonized during their life time. That some of
+them, whose past was perhaps not a very strong
+recommendation, have enlisted with the laudable
+purpose to rehabilitate themselves in their own
+self-estimation and in that of their countrymen, it
+is very likely. Far from blaming them for so doing,
+we must congratulate them and encourage them to
+persevere in the glorious task which will entitle
+them to the everlasting gratitude of their country.
+Such has been the case in the armies of all nations
+for many centuries past.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, far better and much more authorized
+judges of the devotion, courage and patriotism
+of the volunteers of the great Canadian army, as
+well as of the cause for the triumph of which they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
+have offered, and in so many cases, given their
+lives, were easily found. They wrote and spoke
+with no uncertain voice.</p>
+
+<p>In a letter approving the publication of a very
+interesting pamphlet, entitled:&mdash;"<i>War controversy
+between Catholics</i>"&mdash;"<i>La controverse de guerre
+entre Catholiques</i>,"&mdash;His Eminence Cardinal
+Begin, Archbishop of Quebec, said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Attentively read, as it deserves to be, this
+work will help to understand and to love to the
+limit of devotion, (jusqu'au dévouement) the
+beauty and the sovereign importance of the great
+cause&mdash;the protection of the world threatened by
+Germanism&mdash;for which our soldiers are so valiantly
+fighting together with those of England, France
+and Belgium.</i></p>
+
+<p>"<i>I pray God to bless those brave warriors and
+to grant peace to the Christian world by the reestablishment
+of Justice and Right.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>What an encouraging contrast! On the one
+hand, a publicist, with the fury of its resounding
+organs, so widely used, vowing to eternal damnation,
+<i>the armed scoundrelism which Canada is</i>
+forging, with conditions inferior to Teutonic and
+Turkish barbarism, considering that it has reached
+the lowest depth of "<i>a degradation unparalleled
+in any civilized country</i>."</p>
+
+<p>On the other, the Head of the Catholic Church
+in Canada, Cardinal Begin, blessing in the name of
+God Almighty <i>our brave warriors who fight so
+valiantly with those of England, France and Belgium</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
+because <i>they love with true devotion the
+beauty and the sovereign importance of the great
+cause</i> to the triumph of which they sacrifice <i>their
+lives&mdash;the protection of the world threatened by
+Germanism</i>.</p>
+
+<p>On Thursday, October 26, 1916, Archbishop
+Bruchesi, of Montreal, present at a funeral service,
+in Notre-Dame Church, attended by many
+thousands, for the glorious victims of the sacred
+duty of defending the cause of the Allies, eloquently
+said in part:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>They (our heroes) had voluntarily enlisted.
+Two years ago, they organized their Battalion, the
+glorious 22nd. They enlisted, conscious that they
+were defending the most just of all causes, that of
+Civilization, of Right, of Humanity. They enlisted
+with the conviction that they would serve the
+interests of their country, for, when oversea, they
+knew that they were defending Canada. They were
+young and strong; one could not see them without
+admiration.</i></p>
+
+<p>"<i>They have made their country's name and
+their own grand. They have for all times immortalized
+themselves in History, and, by them, Canada
+has been immortalized.</i></p>
+
+<p>"<i>The war is not over; it goes on horribly,
+but our hearts are hopeful. It is impossible that
+they should triumph the men who, during forty
+years, have prepared for the greatest war and
+who, during two years, have torn the world
+asunder and flooded the earth with blood. Impossible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
+that they should triumph the men who
+have declared this war without a right to avenge,
+without a grievance to redress, without being menaced
+in any way. Impossible that they should triumph
+those who have torn, like a scrap of paper, a
+pact upon which the nations relied, having faith in
+the pledged word. Impossible that they should
+triumph those who have invaded the territory of
+valiant Belgium, whose only fault was</i>: <span class="smcap">TO REMAIN
+TRUE TO HER HONOUR</span>. <i>They shall not triumph
+those who, on account of their military service,
+have made this war a carnage and a butchery without
+precedent in History. I believe in God of all
+Justice. Humanity wanted a suffering which purifies,
+but when mothers shall have wept long
+enough, God will have His Divine word heard.</i></p>
+
+<p>"<i>When this great work is accomplished, and
+when we shall sing the</i> <span class="smcap">Te Deum</span> <i>of thanksgiving,
+we will be able to say that Canada, that all the
+Provinces of Canada, that our Province of Quebec,
+have deserved their share of glory</i>."</p>
+
+<p>On Tuesday, November 28, 1916, at a funeral
+service in the Quebec Basilica, addressing the large
+audience rallied to pray for the dead heroes, Reverend
+Mr. Camille Roy, one of the most distinguished
+professors of the Quebec Seminary, said
+in part:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>They went, our officers and soldiers, to serve
+a great cause. Several reasons, perhaps intermingled
+in their conscience, have inspired their
+courageous decision....</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"<i>But dominating, penetrating them all, purifying
+what in them was too personal and restricted,
+was the thought that in doing all this they were
+going to fight with heroic brothers and employ
+their strength to defend what is most venerable on
+earth: outraged justice.</i></p>
+
+<p>"<i>Perhaps they ignored historical secrets and
+diplomatic complications, but they knew the war
+brutally declared, the treaties torn away, Belgium
+violated, and agonizing, France mutilated and invaded,
+England, herself, chased over the moving
+frontier of her oceans invaded; they knew the destroyed
+homes, the profanated Cathedrals, the
+brutally murdered old men, women and children,
+and the flood of barbarians rushing in tumultuous
+waves over the fields of the sweetest country.
+They knew that, over there, two nations to whom
+we are attached by our political, or by our national,
+life, wanted the support of their sons far away,
+that they had to battle for sacred interests in a war
+requiring an endurance commanding an incessant
+renewal of our energies; and then, without halting
+to consider if they were obliged to it by laws, they
+have answered the most pressing call of their
+souls, and have freely made the devoted sacrifice.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>What other edifying contrast between the appreciation
+of the part played by the Canadian
+army by three intellects, one overpowered by an
+inexplicable hostile passion, the two others, inspired
+by the noblest sentiments, rising to the sublime
+conception of the great sacrifice accepted by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
+our brave volunteers, which they express by eloquent
+words who moved the hearts and brought
+<i>abundant and warm tears to the eyes of those who</i>
+heard or read them.</p>
+
+<p>Where one only sees <i>depraved</i> beings more
+contemptible <i>than all those which any other
+country</i> could produce or <i>forge</i>, the two others, so
+much superior in every way, admire, the first,
+<span class="smcap">those who went to defend the most just of all
+causes, that of Civilization, of Right, of Humanity</span>;
+the second, <span class="smcap">the supernatural beauty of
+sacrifice that their brothers in arms have
+made of their lives to the justice of God</span>.</p>
+
+<p>The pamphleteer cruelly attacks those who,
+to-morrow, will face with unfaltering courage the
+guns of the enemy to defend Civilization and
+avenge the martyrs of barbarity.</p>
+
+<p>The sacred orator blesses the mortal remains
+of our sons who have fallen on the field of honour,
+on the soil of France, where our forefathers were
+born and bred, with the fervent prayer of their
+grateful country that knows they died heroically
+<span class="smcap">"for a great cause" to defend what is most
+venerable on earth: "outraged Justice."</span></p>
+
+<p>The following pages from a very eloquent
+Pastoral Letter by Bishop Emard, of the diocese
+of Valleyfield, will, I am sure, be read with most
+respectful interest by all. They are as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Dear Brethren, we certainly have the right, and we even
+consider that it is for us all, citizens of Canada, loyal subjects of
+England, a duty to demand from God the success of the arms of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>our Mother-country and of her Allies in the present war. If we
+are not called upon, as a matter of faith, to pass judgment on the
+true causes of the war, and to divide the responsibilities respecting
+the calamity which covers Europe with blood, we are surely allowed
+to think and to say that all the circumstances actually known
+sufficiently prove that right is on the side of the peoples who have
+checked the invasion, and discouraged the overflowing of the
+enemy from his territory, in order that the sentiment of justice
+may serve to support the devotion of our soldiers, in this great
+conflict, called the struggle of Civilization against barbarism.</p>
+
+<p>"The Church of Christ, always the same by her doctrine, has
+been marvellously constituted by the Divine Wisdom, to adapt her
+externally everywhere and always, to the infinitely varied circumstances
+consequent on the diversity of peoples, of governments,
+of social relations. She has never ceased to practice, by Her
+Pastors and her faithful children, the great lesson given by Christ:
+"<b>Render therefore to Cæsar the things that are Cæsar's and to God
+the things that are God's</b>," and to claim with the Apostle all the
+rights as well as accept all the duties of citizens and subjects."</p></div>
+
+<p>After recalling that from the day <i>Divine
+Providence, in Her mysterious designs</i>, allowed
+Canada to pass from the French to the English
+Sovereignty, <i>the Church, by Her Bishops, has declared
+that, henceforth, it was the duty of the
+French Canadians to transfer to the British
+Crown, without reserve, the cordial allegiance
+which the King of France had hitherto received
+from them</i>, and that since then until the present
+days, the Canadian Episcopate has remained true
+to his course, Bishop Emard proceeds as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"We are then, very dear Brethren, in perfect communion of
+sentiments, action and language, with our venerable predecessors
+of the Canadian Episcopate, in asking you to-day to address to
+Heaven fervent prayers for the complete and final success of England
+and her Allies in the frightful war which is covering the earth
+with such unheard of horrors."</p>
+
+<p>The Clergy, never forgetting Peter's word respecting the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>submission all are in duty bound to practice towards Kings as
+well as towards all those holding civil power, was always faithful
+in obeying the Episcopal directions never ceasing to deserve the
+eulogium which the Bishops expressed to the Pope in their favour.</p>
+
+<p>"The French-Canadian people, so taught by words and examples,
+have given in all our history the admirable spectacle of a
+constant fidelity which circumstances more than once rendered
+highly meritorious. Such are the true religious and national traditions
+of our country. They have in our own days, as in the past,
+found the exact expression suggested by the situation.</p>
+
+<p>"On the other hand, it appears to us a well established
+fact, and the most serious minds so proclaim everywhere, that the
+British Empire, together with France, martyred Belgium and
+their Allies are actually struggling for the defence of the peoples'
+Rights and true Liberty. (Card. Begin.) Therefore, very dear
+Brethren, it must be acknowledged that Canada, herself threatened
+by the possibilities of a war fought with conditions heretofore
+unknown, has acted both wisely and loyally in giving, in a manner
+as generous as it was spontaneous, all the support in her power to
+the mother-country, England.</p>
+
+<p>"The Catholics, and especially those of French origin, have
+not remained behind in this manifestation of true patriotism. If it
+was well to make a comparison between the other groups, from the
+standpoint of the free and generous participation of all to the
+European war, it would be necessary, in the respective figures
+obtainable, to take into account several elements which are perhaps
+not sufficiently considered.</p>
+
+<p>"But this is not the real question. It is sufficient to show
+and to note for historical authenticity that, with the encouragement
+and the blessings of their Pastors, and true to their constant tradition,
+the Canadian Catholics, as a whole, have, in this frightful
+conflict proved the perfect loyalty which is the sound expression of
+true patriotism, and which is blessed by the Church and by God.</p>
+
+<p>"Thousands and thousands of our young men, for a large
+number of them at the cost of particular and most painful sacrifices,
+and in many cases, without being able to give to their race
+the benefit of their chivalrous devotion, have gone, oversea, to fight
+and die for the cause which was proved to them noble and urgent.</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, all over the country, the courage of our soldiers
+was echoed and answered by many active and important works
+characterized by charitable solidarity, and this universal co-operative
+and sympathetic movement must be supported by the sentiments
+of faith and piety.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span></p>
+<p>"Since we are, at all costs, engaged in a disastrous war, the
+causes of which we have not to discuss and judge, but the consequences
+of which will necessarily reach our country, and since our
+Canadian soldiers are battling under the British flag, with the clear
+conscience of an honourable duty loyally and freely accepted, it is
+just, it is legitimate that our prayers do accompany them on the
+very fields of battles to support their courage, and that these prayers
+ascend to Heaven to implore victory for our armies."</p></div>
+
+<p>Evidently the venerable Bishop of Valleyfield
+is far from believing, like the publicist whose
+errors we must all deplore, that in organizing a
+powerful army "<i>to go overseas to fight and die for
+the noble and urgent cause so proved to them</i>," the
+Canadian Parliament "<i>were forging for us a militarism
+without parallel in any other civilized
+country, a depraved and undisciplined soldiery, an
+armed scoundrelism, without faith nor law</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The blessings of the Head of the Canadian
+Church and those of the whole Episcopate have
+consolated our brave volunteers for the outrages
+thrust at them, and have inspired them with the
+great Christian courage to forgive their author.
+The only revenge they have taken against their
+accuser has been to defend himself and his own
+against the barbarous Germans.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXX.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Rash Denunciation of Public Men.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>A long experience of public life, whether by
+daily observation, begun in my early youth, when
+the Union of the Provinces was finally discussed,
+carried and established, or, subsequently, during
+many years of active political life as a journalist
+and member of the Quebec and Ottawa representative
+Houses, has taught me to judge the actions of
+responsible men, whether ministerialists or oppositionists,
+with great fairness and respectful regard.
+At all times the government of a large progressive
+country peopled by several races, of
+different religious creeds, is a difficult problem.
+It should not be necessary to say that in days of
+warlike crisis, of previously unknown proportions,
+like the present one, the task becomes almost
+superhuman. Anyone taking into serious consideration
+the very trying ordeal through which, for
+instance, the rulers of Great Britain and France
+have been, and are still passing, since early in
+1914, cannot help being indulgent for those who
+have the weighty and often crushing burden of the
+cares of State. Let so much be said without in
+the least contesting the right of free men to their
+own opinion about what is best to be done. But it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
+was never more opportune to remember that the
+honourable privilege of constitutional criticism
+must have for its only superior object the good of
+the country by improved methods.</p>
+
+<p>We have reason to congratulate ourselves that
+this sound view has widely prevailed rallying almost
+as units great nations,&mdash;our own one of them&mdash;previously
+much divided in political thoughts
+and aspirations, for the noble and patriotic purpose
+of winning a disastrous war they were forced
+to wage, in spite of their most determined efforts
+to prevent it.</p>
+
+<p>Public men, nations rulers, like all others are
+human and liable to fail or to be found wanting.
+Unconscious inefficiency, however desirable to remove,
+cannot be fairly classed on the same footing
+as guilty failures. The first may, more or less,
+injure the bright prospects of a country; the second
+stains her honour which an exemplary punishment
+can alone redeem.</p>
+
+<p>But it is said with much truth that there are
+always exceptions to a general rule. That of the
+human heart to be fallible in public life, as well
+as in other callings, has met with only one solitary
+exception in Canada: the saintly Nationalist leader
+who will never have his equal, "nature having
+destroyed the mould when she cast him."</p>
+
+<p>Considering the outrageous language he
+thrusted at the Canadians of the three British
+races and at our heroic volunteers, it is not to be
+supposed that he was so tender-hearted as to spare<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
+the public men, not only of Canada, but of all the
+Allied Nations.</p>
+
+<p>When he affirmed that the real and only cause
+of the war had been, and was still, the voracious
+greed of capitalist speculators, especially of the
+two leading belligerents, Great Britain and Germany,
+united together to profit to the tune of
+hundreds of millions out of the production of warship
+building and materials of all sorts, was he not
+charging all the statesmen and leading politicians
+of all the peoples at war, of having bowed either
+consciously to the dictates of traitors to their countries,
+or of having been stupidly blind to the guilty
+manipulations of financial banditti?</p>
+
+<p>It would take many pages only to make a
+summary of the injurious words he has addressed
+to the Canadian public men of all shades of opinion&mdash;with
+the only exception of the Nationalist&mdash;on
+account of the support they have given, in one
+way or another, to the Dominion's participation in
+the war. He qualified as a <i>Revolution</i> the policy
+by which we willingly decided to take part in the
+wars of the Empire whenever we came to the conclusion
+that England was fighting for a just cause.</p>
+
+<p>On the 23rd of April, 1917, he wrote as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Very often we have shown the evident revolutionary
+character of the Canadian intervention in
+the European conflict.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>After repeating his absolutely absurd pretention,
+according to the sound principles of Constitutional<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
+Law, that Canada could have intervened in
+the war as a "<i>nation</i>" he found fault with all and
+every one because "<i>we are fighting to defend the
+Empire</i>." He went on and said with his natural
+sweetness of language:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>The politicians of the two parties and the
+whole servile and mercenary press have applied
+themselves to this revolutionary work....
+For a long time past the party leaders are the
+tools of British Imperialism and of</i> <span class="smcap">British high
+finance</span>."</p>
+
+<p>And not satisfied with having thus slashed
+all the party leaders, all the chiefs of the State,
+he turns round, in an access of passionate indignation,
+and charges not only all the leading
+social classes, but even the Bishops, the worthy
+leaders of the Church, as the accomplices of the
+Imperialist revolution. He thrusts the terrible
+blow as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>But what the war has produced of entirely
+new and most disconcerting, is the moral support
+and complicity which the</i> "<span class="smcap">Imperialist revolution</span>"
+<i>has found in all the leading social classes</i>.
+<span class="smcap">Bishops</span>, <i>financiers, publicists and professionals
+went into the movement with a unity, an ardour, a
+zeal which reveal the effective strength of the
+laborious propaganda of which Lord Grey has been
+the most powerful worker prior to the war</i>."</p>
+
+<p>So that there should be no mistake about its
+true meaning, he favoured his readers with a very
+clear explanation indeed of what, in his opinion,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
+has transformed our meritorious and loyal intervention
+in the war into a guilty revolutionary
+movement. He wrote as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>But what the Imperialists wanted, and what
+they have succeeded in obtaining, was to bind
+Canada to the fate of England, in the name of the
+principle of Imperial solidarity and&mdash;as we shall
+see in a moment&mdash;to the cause of</i> '<span class="smcap">UNIVERSAL
+DEMOCRACY</span>'."</p>
+
+<p>Thus, in the Nationalist leader's opinion, it
+is a great crime to help England and her
+Allies to win a war the loss of which would most
+likely have destroyed the British Empire, involving
+our own ruin in the downfall of the mighty
+political edifice to be replaced, in the glorious
+shelter it gives to human freedom, by the triumphant
+German autocratic rule and its universal
+domination. It is, to say the least, an extravagant
+notion to pretend that the war has afforded the
+Imperialists the opportunity&mdash;eagerly seized&mdash;"<i>to
+tie Canada</i>" hand and foot, "<i>to the fate of
+England</i>."</p>
+
+<p>If I am not mistaken&mdash;and I am positively
+sure I am right in so saying&mdash;Canada was bound
+to the fate of England the very day when&mdash;by
+Providential decree, in that instance as well as
+with regard to everything earthly&mdash;she passed
+under British Sovereignty. The worthy leaders of
+our Church so considered&mdash;and have since unanimously
+considered&mdash;at once taking the sound
+Christian stand that the French Canadians were,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
+in duty bound, to accept their new political status
+in good faith, and to loyally support their new
+mother country whenever circumstances would
+require their devoted help, whilst revering the old
+as every child must do, if he is blessed with a good
+heart, when separated by unforeseen events from
+the home of his happy youth.</p>
+
+<p>I must acknowledge that with some of our
+French Canadians of the first class and standing,
+the word "Democracy" savours with soreness.
+Well read in all that pertains to the great epoch
+of the first French tremendous Revolution, they
+abhor, with much reason, the extravagant and
+false principles of the <span class="smcap">BOLSHEVIKISM</span> of those days,
+which culminated in the frightful period of the
+"terrorism" which, for three long years and more,
+kept its strong knee on France's throat, her fair
+soil flooded with the innocent blood of her children.
+They are apt to be laid to the confusion that democratic
+government is in almost every case, if
+not always, synonymous of revolutionary institutions,
+in as much as it cannot, they believe and say,
+be otherwise than destructive of the principle of
+"Authority," certainly as essential as that of
+"Liberty," both as the necessary fundamental
+basis of all good governments.</p>
+
+<p>Knowing this, the Nationalist leader, who has
+evidently abjured his liberalism of former days,
+which he was wont to parade in such resounding
+sentences, multiplies his efforts to capture the support
+of the few members of our most venerable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
+Clergy whom he supposes labouring under the
+aforesaid delusion. He would not lose the chance
+of trading on their feelings and sincere conviction,
+in boldly declaring that his good friends, the
+cursed Imperialists, had managed to drag the
+Dominion through the mire of the European war
+by blandishing before the eyes of the Canadian
+people, so enamoured of their constitutional
+liberties, the supposed dangerous spectre of
+"<i>universal democracy</i>."</p>
+
+<p>If, in reality, democratic government could
+not help being either the "French revolutionary
+terrorism," of 1792-95,&mdash;which even frightened
+such a staunch friend of Political Liberty as Burke&mdash;or
+the Russian criminal bolshevikism of our own
+trying days, we would be forced, in dire sadness,
+to despair of the world's future, as Humanity
+would be forever doomed to ebb and flow between
+the sanguinary "absolutism" either of "autocratic"
+or "terrorist" tyrants.</p>
+
+<p>Happily, we can, in all sincerity, affirm that
+such is not the case. Is it not sufficient, as a most
+reassuring proof, to point at the wonderful
+achievements of free institutions, first, under the
+monarchical democratic system of Great Britain
+and her autonomous Dominions; second, under
+the republican regime of the United States.</p>
+
+<p>After many long years of earnest study and
+serious thinking, I cannot draw the very depressing
+conclusion that the two basic principles of
+sound government&mdash;Authority and Liberty&mdash;cannot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
+be brought to work harmoniously together for
+the happiness and prosperity of nations, as far as
+they can be achieved in this world of sufferings and
+sacrifices. Such a conclusion would also be contrary
+to true Christian teachings, the Almighty
+having created man a free being with a responsible
+and immortal soul.</p>
+
+<p>Nations who, forgetful of the obligations of
+moral laws, indulge in guilty abuse of their liberties,
+are, sooner or later, as individuals doing
+alike, sure to meet with the due Providential
+punishment they have deserved. But, also like
+individuals, they can redeem themselves in repenting
+for their past errors, due to uncontrolled passions,
+and by resolutely and "<span class="smcap">FREELY</span>" returning to
+the path of their sacred duty.</p>
+
+<p>The Nationalist leader also deplores, as one
+of their guilty achievements, the fact that the
+"<i>war had ended all equivocals and consummated
+the complete alliance of the two parties</i>," to
+favour, as he asserts, of course, the enterprises of
+the dreaded Imperialism.</p>
+
+<p>True to the kind appreciation he has pledged
+himself to make of the inspiring dark motives
+actuating the conduct of public men, he sweetly
+added:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>The truce arrived at in 1914 could not, it
+is true, resist the thirst for power. "Blues" and
+"Reds" have recommenced tearing themselves
+about patronage, places, planturous contracts and
+"boodle." But with regard to the substantial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
+question itself, and to the Imperialist revolution
+brought on and sanctioned by the war, they have
+remained in accord.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>It could not strike such a prejudiced mind as
+that of the Nationalist leader, that political chieftains,
+and their respective supporters, could conscientiously
+unite to save their country, their
+Empire and the world from an impending terrible
+disaster, and yet freely and conscientiously differ
+as to the best means to achieve the sacred object
+to the success of which they have pledged, and they
+continue to make, their best and most patriotic
+efforts.</p>
+
+<p>The public men, and even the private citizens,
+who, not believing that he speaks and writes with
+Divine inspiration, dare to differ from the Nationalist
+leader, cannot, in his opinion, do so unless
+influenced by unworthy corrupt motives. And he
+further draws the awful conclusion "<i>that it is his
+duty to note the ever increasing revolutionary
+character that the European war, as a whole, is
+assuming on the side of the Allies</i>."</p>
+
+<p>To support this last and absolutely unfounded
+charge, he positively asserts that the joint "<i>policy
+of the statesmen, politicians and journalists, has
+much less for its object to liberate oppressed nations
+like Belgium, Servia</i>, <span class="smcap">Ireland</span>, <i>Poland and
+Finland, from a foreign yoke, than to overthrow
+in all the countries, allies or enemies, the monarchical
+form of government</i>."</p>
+
+<p>And then follows a most virulent diatribe by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
+which he points, in support of his wild conclusion
+aforesaid, to the Russian revolution, charging "<i>the
+officious and reptile press of the Allied countries
+to have joined in spreading the legend that it had
+been precipitated by German intrigues at the
+Court of the Czar, and to have accused the ill-fated
+Emperor to have been the spy and the accomplice
+of the enemies of his country</i>."</p>
+
+<p>At this hour of the day, in the turmoil of
+flashing events perhaps never before equalled in
+suddenness, pregnant with such alarming, or comforting,
+prospective consequences, it is much too
+early to attempt passing a reliable judgment on the
+true causes which produced the Moscovite revolution
+so soon and so dastardly developed into criminal
+"bolshevikism." The question must be left
+for History to settle when peace is restored and
+the sources of truth are wide opened to the impartial
+investigations of high class historians.</p>
+
+<p>However, enough is known to prove that Mr.
+Bourassa's charge is altogether unfounded. Anyone
+conversant with Russian history for the two
+last centuries, is aware that German influences
+and intrigues have always played a great part in
+the Capital of that fallen Empire. From the very
+beginning of the war, it became evident that they
+were actively at work at the Petrograd Court,
+thwarting the Emperor's efforts and those of his
+advisers, military and civil, he could trust, to be
+true to the cause he had sworn to defend with
+France and England.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Nationalist leader, I hope, is the only man
+still to wonder at this, after all that has been discovered
+proving what Germany has tried to bribe
+the political leaders and the press of the Allies,
+with too much success in France, England and the
+United States.</p>
+
+<p>Russia has been for too many years the favourite
+soil where Germany was sowing her corrupt
+intrigues, to let any sensible man suppose that she
+would kindly withdraw from the preferred field
+of her infamous operations, at the very time she
+was exerting herself with such energy, and at the
+cost of so many millions, to extend her vast spy
+system almost all over the earth,&mdash;Canada included&mdash;debauching
+consciences right and left.</p>
+
+<p>Is it unfair to say, for instance, after the
+event as it developed, that Roumania was prematurely
+brought into the war in consequence of
+the dark German machinations at Petrograd, with
+the evident understanding that the military operations,
+both on the Teutonic and Moscovite sides,
+were to be so conducted as to rush poor Roumania
+into a most disastrous defeat, in order to feed the
+Central Empires with the products of the fertile
+Roumanian soil?</p>
+
+<p>No representative man of any consequence has
+pretended that the unfortunate Czar was himself
+a party to that treason of the Allied cause. He
+has likely been the victim of his own weakness in
+not using what was left to him of his personal
+autocratic power to silence the sympathies of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
+friends of Germany at his Imperial Court, and
+even in his most intimate circle, rather than exhausting
+it in a supreme, but doomed, attempt at
+checking the rising tide of popular aspirations
+sure, as always, to overflow to frightful excesses,
+if unwisely compressed.</p>
+
+<p>Almost daily witnessing the successive miscarriages
+of so many of the Russian military operations,
+too often by the failure of the ammunitions,
+supplied to such a large extent by the Allies, to
+reach the Russian soldiers, or by other inexplicable
+causes, it is not surprising that the people at
+large became suspicious of their government which
+they soon believed to be under German tutorage.</p>
+
+<p>The rapid, almost sudden, overthrow of the
+Russian autocratic Empire can be accepted as evidence
+that the movement in favour of a change
+which would more efficiently conduct Russia's
+share of the conflict, was widespread. The goal it
+aimed at, once reached, and Russia proclaimed a
+Republic, with a regular <i>de facto</i> government under
+the leadership of abler men, whose patriotism
+was proved by their words, but more surely by
+their deeds, France, England, Italy and the United
+States cannot be reasonably reproached with having
+unduly opened diplomatic relations with the
+new Moscovite authorities.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, once successful in her intrigues
+at the Petrograd Court, soon to fall under
+the weight of popular exasperation, Germany tried
+her hand in a triumphant, but shameful, way with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
+the fiery sanguinary and treasonable element always
+to be found operating in the darkest corners
+for their own criminal purposes. The calamitous
+outcome has been "bolchevikism" betraying their
+country in the light of day, without blushing,
+without hiding their faces in eternal shame, and
+signing, with their hands stained with the blood of
+their own kin, the infamous treaty of Brest-Litovsk
+dismembering poor Russia, scattering to
+the winds her fond hopes of a grand future at the
+very dawn of the better days promised by a free
+constitution, and plunging her in the throes of
+German autocratic domination.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the Nationalist leader's
+rash denunciation of public men, I have only a
+few more words to say. My personal recollections
+going back to the early sixties of the last century,
+for several years free from all party affiliations,
+unbiassed by any sympathies or prejudices, I consider
+it my duty to say that, on the whole, Canadian
+public life, as well as British public life, is
+honourable and entitled to the respect of public
+opinion. Out of hundreds and thousands of politicians,
+both in the Motherland and in our own
+Dominion, there may have been failings. It would
+be useless, even pernicious, to point at them. The
+revulsion of public feeling towards the fallen for
+cause, and the severe judgment of misdeeds by the
+impartial historian, has been the deserved punishment
+of the few who have prevaricated. I prefer
+by far to take my lofty inspiration from the galaxy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
+of faithful public servants who, from all parties,
+and from various standpoints, have given the
+fruits of their intelligence, of their learning, of
+their hard work&mdash;and in many cases&mdash;of their
+private wealth, for the good of their country. In
+the course of the last fifty-five years, I have known
+hundreds of our public men who lived through,
+and came out of, a long political life getting poorer
+every day without being disheartened and retiring
+from the public service to which they were devoted
+to the last. Need I point, as examples, to the cases
+of several men who, departed for a better world,
+Parliament, irrespective of all party considerations,
+united to a man to vote a yearly allowance
+of a few hundred dollars to save their surviving
+widows and children from actual want and
+destitution!</p>
+
+<p>Just as well as the Canadians of the three
+British races, and the gallant volunteers of our
+heroic army, Canadian and British public men
+can rest assured that from the high position they
+occupy in the world's estimation, they are far
+above the fanatical aspersions of the Nationalist
+leader blinded by the wild suggestions of an inexhaustible
+thirst of rash condemnation.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXI.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Mr. Bourassa's Dangerous Pacifism.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Two historical truths, undeniable, bright as
+the shining light of the finest summer day, which
+have triumphantly challenged the innumerable
+falsehoods to the contrary constantly circulated by
+Germany, even prior to the outbreak of the
+hostilities, are:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>First, that all the countries united under the
+title&mdash;the Allies, have been energetically in favour
+of <span class="smcap">MAINTAINING THE PEACE OF THE WORLD</span>, when it
+became evident, for all sensible people, that Germany
+was eagerly watching her opportunity to
+strike the blow she had prepared for the previous
+forty years on such a gigantic scale.</p>
+
+<p>Second, that, once engaged in the conflict
+against their deliberate will, and in spite of their
+noble efforts to prevent the war which they clearly
+foresaw would be most calamitous, they have always
+remained the staunch supporters of the
+<span class="smcap">RESTORATION OF PEACE</span> upon the two <i>sine qua non</i>
+conditions of <span class="smcap">Justice</span> and <span class="smcap">DURABILITY</span>.</p>
+
+<p>To achieve these two objectives, they have
+been fighting for now more than four years, at
+tremendous cost of men and treasures, and they
+are determined to fight until victorious.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>They would all lay down their arms to-morrow,
+if the results so important for the future
+of Humanity could be secured with certainty.</p>
+
+<p>Like all great causes, <span class="smcap">Peace with Justice and
+Durability</span> has had its <span class="smcap">TRUE</span> and its <span class="smcap">FALSE</span> friends.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">TRUE</span> friends of <span class="smcap">Peace</span> were those who
+realized from the very beginning of the frightful
+struggle that it was perfectly useless to expect it,
+if the disastrous Prussian Militarism was to be
+maintained and allowed to continue threatening
+Civilization.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">TRUE</span> friends of <span class="smcap">Peace</span> were those who
+pledged their honour not to sheathe the sword
+they had been forced to draw before Germany
+would acknowledge that she had no right to violate
+solemn treaties, and would agree to redeem
+the crime she had committed in invading the neutral
+territory of Belgium which she trampled
+under her ironed heels and crucified.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">TRUE</span> friends of <span class="smcap">Peace</span> were those who
+determined to bring Germany to renounce the
+abominable principles she has professed, training
+the mind of her peoples to believe and proclaim
+that <span class="smcap">Might</span> is <span class="smcap">Right</span> and the only sound basis of
+<span class="smcap">International Law</span>.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">TRUE</span> friends of <span class="smcap">Peace</span> were those who,
+however anxious they were to have it restored as
+soon as possible&mdash;fervently praying the Almighty
+to that purpose&mdash;, knowing what are the principles
+of International Law recognized by all truly civilized
+nations, could not forgive Germany, <span class="smcap">UNLESS<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span></span>
+<span class="smcap">SHE SINCERELY REPENTED</span>, the barbarism she displayed
+in her murderous submarine campaign, and
+practised in Belgium, Northern France and in
+every piece of belligerent territory her armies
+occupied.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">TRUE</span> friends of <span class="smcap">Peace</span> were those who
+clearly understood that to meet the two essential
+conditions of <span class="smcap">Justice</span> and <span class="smcap">Durability</span>, it was
+<span class="smcap">PRACTICALLY IMPOSSIBLE</span> to secure it by a compromise
+which could not, by any means, protect
+the world against further German attempts at
+universal military domination.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">FALSE</span> friends of <span class="smcap">Peace</span> were those who
+said and wrote, in sheer defiance of truth, that the
+Allies, more especially England and Russia, were
+as much responsible for the war as Germany
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">FALSE</span> friends of <span class="smcap">Peace</span> were those who
+falsely alleged that the Allies were preventing it
+by their repeated declarations that their principal
+war aim was to destroy, not only the German Empire,
+but also the German race, thus wilfully and
+maliciously pretending that to battle for the abolition
+of Teutonic militarism, weighing so heavily
+on all the nations, was equal, in guilty knowledge,
+to fighting for an enemy's race destruction.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">FALSE</span> friends of <span class="smcap">Peace</span> were those who
+were ready to sanction, at any time, a compromise
+between <span class="smcap">HEROIC</span> and criminal war aims, which
+would leave future generations to the tender mercies
+of a Sovereign Power straining every nerve to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
+dominate the world by the foulest means ever
+devised.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">FALSE</span> friends of <span class="smcap">Peace</span> were those whose
+daily effort was to dishearten their countrymen
+from the noble and patriotic task they had bravely
+undertaken with the strong will to accomplish it
+at all costs, knowing, as they did, that it was a
+question of life or death for human Civilization.</p>
+
+<p>"Defeatists," as they are called, to mean the
+shameless supporters of <span class="smcap">Peace</span> negotiations to be
+opened by the Allies acknowledging their defeat
+and the victory of Germany, there were, and there
+are, in all the "Allied" belligerent nations. No
+one need be too much surprised at the hideous fact.
+In all countries, at all times, under the direst circumstances,
+when it is most important, in very
+distressing hours, that all be of one mind, of one
+heart, to save the nation's existence, are to be
+found heartless, low minded, cowardly beings,
+ready to betray their countrymen rather than
+stand the strain of their due share of sacrifices, or,
+which is still far worse, for corrupt motives, to
+deliver them over to the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>"Defeatists" we have had, we have yet, in
+Canada, in the Province of Quebec. Most happily,
+they are few and far between.</p>
+
+<p>Imbued with the false notions he has so tenaciously
+ventilated respecting Canada's participation
+in the war, it is no wonder that the Nationalist
+leader was sure to be found at the head of the
+small group of <span class="smcap">pacifists</span>, at almost any cost, mustered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
+amongst the French Canadians. A sower of
+prejudices, he was bound to watch with eagerness
+the growing crop of ill-feelings he was fostering.</p>
+
+<p>Those of us who oppose all, and any, participation
+by the Dominion in the wars of the Empire,
+be they even so just, so honourable, so necessary,
+under Mr. Bourassa's deplorable leadership, were
+naturally supporters of any kind of "<span class="smcap">PACIFISM</span>."</p>
+
+<p>I will not classify the Nationalist leader and
+his dupes as "<i>defeatists</i>," who were ready to accept
+peace as the consequence of defeat. The real
+"<i>pacifists</i>," so far as it is possible to ascertain
+their views, unable, consciously or not, to see any
+difference in the respective responsibilities of the
+belligerents in opening the war, consider that they
+are equally guilty in not closing it.</p>
+
+<p>Most happily, such a disordered opinion is
+shared only by a small minority. It can be positively
+affirmed that public opinion, the world over,
+outside the Central Empires and their swayed
+allies, is almost unanimous that Germany,
+through her military party and the junkers element,
+is responsible for the dire calamity she has
+brought on Humanity. The question of the restoration
+of "<span class="smcap">Peace</span>" must be viewed from this starting
+point&mdash;the only true one.</p>
+
+<p>The standpoints of the <span class="smcap">TRUE</span> and the <span class="smcap">FALSE</span>
+friends of <span class="smcap">Peace</span> being so far apart, the conclusions
+they draw are naturally widely different.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">A Most Reprehensible Abuse of Sacred Appeals
+To The Belligerent Nations.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>I cannot qualify in milder words the use Mr.
+Bourassa has made of the solemn appeals His
+Holiness the Pope of Rome has, at different dates,
+addressed to the belligerent nations in favour of
+the restoration of peace. I bear to the Head of
+the Church I am so happy to belong such a profound
+respect and devotion that I will scrupulously
+abstain from any comment of the Sovereign
+Pontiff's writings and addresses. I have read
+them several times over with the greatest attention
+and veneration, so sure I was that, emanating
+from the highest spiritual Authority in the world,
+they were exclusively inspired by the ardent desire
+to promote a recurrence to good-will amongst men,
+in obedience to the Divine precept.</p>
+
+<p>Having to reproach the Nationalist leader
+with having abused of the weighty words of His
+Holiness, to support his own misconceptions of
+duty as a loyal British subject and a Christian
+publicist, I will refrain with great care from writing
+a sentence which might be construed as the
+shadow of an attempt to do the same.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I will take from Mr. Bourassa's own comments
+of the Sovereign Pontiff's appeals, the two
+conclusions upon which he lays great stress, and
+which clearly summarize the convictions of His
+Holiness Pope Benedict XV.</p>
+
+<p>Praying with all the powers of His heart and
+soul for the orderly future of the world, the
+Sovereign Pontiff implored, in the most touching
+terms, the belligerent nations to agree to a "<span class="smcap">Just
+and Durable Peace</span>."</p>
+
+<p>As it was certain, even if He had not said so
+with such pathetic expressions, His Holiness drew
+the saddest possible picture of the untold misfortunes
+war, carried on in such vast proportions,
+was inflicting upon the peoples waging the
+struggle.</p>
+
+<p>I will only quote the few following words from
+the first letter of His Holiness, dated July 28,
+1915:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>It cannot be said that the immense conflict
+cannot be terminated without armed violence.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>No one can take exception to this truism,
+authoritatively expressed under circumstances
+greatly adding to its importance and to its solemn
+announcement. It is just as true to-day as it was,&mdash;and
+has been ever since,&mdash;when the whole world
+was passing through the crucial ordeal of the days
+during which England and France were almost imploring
+Germany not to plunge the earth into the
+horrors of the war she was determined to bring on.</p>
+
+<p>The questions at stake could then have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
+easily settled without "<span class="smcap">ARMED VIOLENCE</span>," if the
+Imperial Government of Berlin had listened to the
+pressing demand of Great Britain in favour of the
+maintenance of peace.</p>
+
+<p>It is scarcely believable that the Nationalist
+leader has abused of those weighty words to the
+point of attempting to persuade the French-Canadians
+that the Allies, even more than the
+Rulers of the Central Empires, have refused to
+listen to the prayers of the Pope. In January last,
+he published a new pamphlet, entitled "<span class="smcap">The Pope,
+Arbiter of Peace</span>," in which he reproduced from
+"Le Devoir" his numerous articles, from August
+1914, on the intervention of the Sovereign Pontiff
+in favour of the cessation of the hostilities, and on
+the current events of the times.</p>
+
+<p>The oft-repeated diatribes of Mr. Bourassa
+against England were bound to be once more edited
+in the above pamphlet. Their author, in a true
+fatherly way, not willing to allow them to die
+under the contempt they deserve, would not lose
+the chance to have them to survive in tackling them
+with his comments on His Holiness' letters.</p>
+
+<p>This pamphlet, the worthy sequel of its predecessors
+which, for the good of Mr. Bourassa's
+compatriots, should never have seen the light of
+day, would call for many more refutable quotations
+than I can undertake to make in this work.
+A few will suffice to show the deplorable purport
+of the whole book.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In his letter dated, July 28, 1915, the Pope
+wrote:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>In presence of Divine Providence, we conjure
+the belligerent nations, to henceforth put an end to
+the horrible carnage which, for a year, dishonours
+Europe.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Positively informed about the horrible crimes
+committed by command of the German military
+authorities in Belgium, and Northern France, and
+by the ferocious Turks in Armenia, well might His
+Holiness say that Europe was being dishonoured
+by such barbarous deeds. If the military operations
+had been conducted by the nations of the Alliance
+in conformity with the principles of International
+Law, most likely the Pope would not have used the
+same language. For, however much to be regretted
+are the sufferings inseparable from a military conflict
+carried on with the utmost regards for the
+fair claims of human feelings and justice, it could
+not have been pretended that such a war was a
+dishonour for the belligerents on both sides, especially
+when fighting with an equally sincere conviction
+that they are defending a just cause.</p>
+
+<p>Referring to recent history, none asserted, for
+instance, that the Russo-Japanese war was a dishonour
+to Europe and Asia. It was fought out
+honourably on both sides. Peace was restored
+without leaving bitter and burning recollections in
+the minds of either peoples. And when Germany
+dishonoured herself and stained Humanity with
+blushing shame, both Russia and Japan joined
+together to avenge Civilization.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Let us now see how Mr. Bourassa distorted
+the words of the Pope so as to use them for his own
+purpose of misrepresenting the true stand of the
+Allies, and more especially of England.</p>
+
+<p>The first sentence of his article dated, August
+3, 1915, to be found at page 11 of the pamphlet,
+under the title: "<i>The Pope's Appeal</i>," reads
+thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>The anniversary of the hurling of the sanguinary
+fury which makes of Europe the shame of
+Humanity has inspired the Rulers of peoples with
+resounding words.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>And after eulogizing the Pope's intervention,
+he adds:&mdash;"<i>that men will not hear his voice, drunk
+as they are with pride, revenge and blood</i>."</p>
+
+<p>This may be cunningly worded, but it should
+deceive nobody.</p>
+
+<p>One cannot help being indignant at the contemptible
+attempt to place the Allies on the same
+footing as the Central Empires with regard to the
+responsibility <i>in hurling the sanguinary fury in
+1914</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The plain, incontrovertible, truth is that the
+outbreak of the war was a shame, not for Humanity,
+the victim of Teutonic treachery, but for Germany
+herself; whilst the sacred union of Belgium,
+France, England and their allies to resist the
+barbarous onslaught hurled at them all, was an
+honour for Civilization and the promise of an
+heroic redemption.</p>
+
+<p>At page 12 of the pamphlet, he closes the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
+paragraph with the following words:&mdash;"<i>since the
+fatal days when peoples supposed to be Christian
+hurled themselves at one another in a foolish rage
+of destruction, of revenge and hatred</i>." In French,
+it reads thus:&mdash;"<i>depuis le jour fatal ou les peuples
+soi-disant chrétiens se sont rués les uns contre
+les autres, dans une rage folle de destruction, de
+vengeance et de haine</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Read as a whole, with the full meaning they
+were intended to convey, those words constitute a
+daring falsehood. Historical events of the highest
+importance cannot be construed at will. There are
+facts so positively true, and known to be such, that
+they should preclude any possibility of deceit.</p>
+
+<p>It is absolutely false that, <i>on a fatal day</i> of
+mid-summer, 1914, <i>peoples hurled themselves at
+one another</i>. What really took place, in the glaring
+light of day, was that Germany, fully prepared
+for the fray, <i>hurled</i> herself at weak Belgium,
+throwing to the waste basket the scraps of the
+solemn treaties by which she was in honour bound
+to respect Belgian neutrality. She had first opened
+the disastrous game by <i>hurling</i> her vassal, Austria,
+at weak Servia.</p>
+
+<p>Rushing her innumerable victorious armies
+over Belgian trodden soil, she <i>hurled</i> herself at
+France with the ultimate design to <i>hurl</i> herself
+at England.</p>
+
+<p>That in so doing, Germany was <i>raging</i> with
+a <i>foolish</i> thirst of <i>destruction, of revenge and
+hatred</i>, is certainly true. But Mr. Bourassa's guilt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
+is in his assertion that the victims of Germany's
+<i>sanguinary fury</i> were actuated by the same criminal
+motives in heroically defending their homes,
+their wives, their children, their all, against the
+barbarians once more bursting out of Central
+Europe, this time bent on overthrowing human
+freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Is the respectable citizen who bravely defends
+himself against the ruffian who <i>hurls</i> himself at
+his throat, to be compared with his murderous
+assailant?</p>
+
+<p>But England was not alone in <i>hurling</i> herself
+at Germany, as Mr. Bourassa so cordially says.
+Without a word, even a sign, by the only momentum
+of her <i>furious outburst of foolish destruction</i>,
+she was followed by the whole of her Empire. How
+much we, Canadians, were, for instance, deluded,
+the Nationalist leader is kind enough to tell us in
+his ever sweet language.</p>
+
+<p>When the Parliament of Ottawa unanimously
+decided that it was the duty of the British
+Dominion of Canada to participate in the war;
+when Canadian public opinion throughout the
+length and breadth of the land, almost unanimously
+approved of this loyal and patriotic decision,
+we, poor unfortunate Canadians, thought that we
+were heartily and nobly joining with the mother-country
+to avenge "<span class="smcap">outraged Justice</span>," to rush to
+the rescue of violated Belgium, of France, once
+more threatened with agony under the brutal
+Teutonic ironed heels, of the whole world&mdash;Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
+Bourassa's commanding personality included&mdash;menaced
+with the <span class="smcap">HUNS' DOMINATION</span>.</p>
+
+<p>How sadly mistaken we were, Mr. Bourassa
+tells us. According to this infallible judge of the
+righteousness or criminality of historical events,
+we were labouring under a paroxysm of passion&mdash;<i>of
+a rage of foolish destruction, of vengeance and
+hatred</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Once overpowered by this vituperative mood
+of calumnious accusations, the Nationalist leader
+slashes England, as follows,&mdash;page 18&mdash;:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>England has violently destroyed more national
+rights than all the other European countries
+united together. By force or deceit, she has swallowed
+up a fourth of the earthly globe; by conquest,
+and more especially by corruption and the purchase
+of consciences, she has subjugated more
+peoples than there were, in the whole human
+history, ever brought under the same sceptre.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Thus, in Mr. Bourassa's impartial estimation,
+the depredations and slaughters of the hordes commanded
+by Attila, the savagery of the Turks of old
+and present days, the crimes of Germany in this
+great war, are only insignificant trifles compared
+with the horrors of British history. Shame on
+such outrageous misrepresentation of historical
+truth.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa accuses England to have <i>by
+force or deceit swallowed up a fourth of the earthly
+globe</i>. Considering the happy and flourishing
+condition of the vast British Empire, the Nationalist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
+leader, as every one else, must admit that
+England is endowed with great digestive powers,
+as she does not show the least sign that she suffers
+from national dyspepsia from having swallowed
+up a fourth of the universe. Her national digestion
+is evidently sound and healthy, for instead of
+weakening and decaying, she grows every day in
+strength, in stature, in freedom, in prestige, and,
+above all, in <span class="smcap">WISDOM</span>.</p>
+
+<p>The Nationalist leader has thought proper to
+express his formal hatred of militarism. One
+would naturally suppose that, in so doing, he
+should have pointed at the worst kind of militarism
+ever devised&mdash;the German type of our own
+days. Let no one be mistaken about it. At page
+58 of his pamphlet, Mr. Bourassa bursts out as
+follows in the top paragraph:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>As a matter of fact, of all kinds of militarism,
+of all the instruments of brutal domination, the
+naval supremacy of England is the most redoubtable,
+the most execrable for the whole world; for it
+rules over all the continents, hindering the free
+relations of all the peoples.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Was I really deluded when I felt sure that in
+peaceful times, British naval supremacy on the
+seas was not interfering in the least with the
+freest commercial intercourse of all the nations,
+whose mercantile ships can, by British laws, enter
+freely into all the ports of Great Britain? Mr.
+Bourassa's assertion to the contrary, I shall not,
+by the least shadow, alter my opinion which is
+positively sound.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>From the above last quotation, I have the
+right to infer that Mr. Bourassa is very sorry that,
+in war times like those we have seen since July
+1914, British naval supremacy is sufficiently paramount
+to protect the United Kingdom from starvation,
+to keep the coasts of France opened to the
+mercantile ships of the Allies and of all the neutral
+nations, to "rule the waves" against both the
+German military and mercantile fleets, chased
+away from the oceans by the British guns thundering
+at the Teutonic pirates on land and sea. If he
+is, he can be sure that he is alone to cry and weep
+at a fact which rejoices all the true and loyal
+friends of freedom and justice.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa cherishes a wish that will
+certainly not be granted. He will not be happy
+unless England agrees to give up her naval supremacy
+to please Germany. Let him rest quietly on
+his two ears; the dawn of such a calamitous day is
+yet very far distant.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of page 12, Mr. Bourassa asserts
+that <i>the Germans proclaim their</i> <span class="smcap">RIGHT</span> <i>to "Germanize"
+Europe and the world, and that the
+English imperiously affirm their</i> <span class="smcap">RIGHT</span> <i>to maintain
+their Imperial power over the seas and to oppose
+"Anglo-Saxonism" to "pan-Germanism."</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>I have already refuted the Nationalist leader's
+pretention, and informed him that England, no
+more than any other country, has no "Sovereign
+rights" on the seas outside the coastal limits as
+prescribed by International Law. He appears<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
+totally unable to understand the simple truth that
+Great Britain's sea supremacy is nothing more nor
+less than the superiority of her naval strength
+created, at an immense cost, out of sheer necessity,
+to protect the United Kingdom from the domination
+of a great continental power.</p>
+
+<p>Does he not know that, in the days prior to
+England's creation of her mighty fleet, she has
+been easily conquered by invaders? Is he aware
+of the great British historical fact called the
+Norman Conquest? Has he never heard that before
+starting on his triumphant march across
+Europe, culminating at Austerlitz, the great
+Napoleon had planned an invasion of England,
+with every prospects of success, if he had not been
+deterred from carrying it out by the continental
+coalition which, calling into play the resources of
+his mighty genius, he so victoriously crushed and
+dispersed? Has he never read anything about
+panic stricken England until she was relieved from
+the dangers of the projected invasion?</p>
+
+<p>Does he not realize that, unless they were
+madmen, no British ministers will ever consent to
+renounce their "<span class="smcap">UNDOUBTED RIGHT</span>" to be ever ready
+for any emergency, to save their country from enslavement
+by would-be dashing invaders? It is the
+height of political nonsense to suppose that responsible
+public men ever could be so blind, or so recreant
+to their most sacred duty, as to follow the
+wild course recommended by extravagantly prejudiced
+"Nationalists."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The man who would throw away his weapons
+of defense would have nothing else to do but to
+kneel down and implore the tender mercy of his
+criminal aggressor. Truly loyal subjects of the
+Empire cannot clamour to bring England down to
+such an humiliating position. They know too well
+that if ever matters came to so disastrous a pass,
+Great Britain could easily be starved into irremediable
+submission with the consequent and immediate
+destruction of the whole fabric of the
+Empire. A Nationalist, yawning for such an end,
+may suggest the best way to reach it. But no
+loyal man, sincerely wishing the maintenance of
+the great British Commonwealth, will ever do so.</p>
+
+<p>No wonder that he who came out openly in
+favour of Imperial Federation for the express
+purpose of ruining the Empire, endeavours to
+achieve his most cherished object in first destroying
+British naval supremacy on the seas. Imperial
+Federation would then no longer be necessary for
+the consummation of his longing wishes.</p>
+
+<p>Freedom of the seas and British naval supremacy
+are not antagonistic by any means, as I have
+previously well explained. It is an unanswerable
+proposition&mdash;a truism&mdash;to say that supremacy on
+the ocean will always exist, held by one nation or
+another. The Power commanding the superior
+naval fleet will for ever be supreme on the seas. It
+is mere common sense to say so. Mr. Bourassa
+would vainly work his wind-mill for centuries without
+changing this eternal rule of sound sense.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>If, by whichever cause, England was to lose
+her sea supremacy, it would at once, as a matter
+of course, pass on to the next superior naval Power.</p>
+
+<p>In a subsequent chapter on the after-the-war
+military problem, I shall explain the way or ways,
+by which, in my opinion, the question of the freedom
+of the seas, so much misunderstood, could be
+settled to the satisfaction of all concerned.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to the supposed conflict of "anglo-saxonism"
+and "pan-germanism" I will merely say
+that it is only another sample of Mr. Bourassa's
+wily dreams.</p>
+
+<p>As I have already said, this last pamphlet of
+the Nationalist leader is, for a large part of it, but
+the repetition of his diatribes so often <i>hurled</i> at
+England. I will close this chapter by quoting
+from page 57, the following paragraph which summarizes,
+in a striking way, the charges Mr.
+Bourassa is so fond to <i>hurl</i> at the mother-country.
+It reads thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>What has allowed England to bring Portugal
+into vassalage? to dominate Spain and keep Gibraltar,
+Spanish land? to deprive Greece of the
+Ionians and Cyprus Islands? to steal Malta? to
+foment Revolution in the Kingdom of Naples and
+the Papal States? to run, during thirty years, the
+foreign policy of Italy and to throw her in Austria's
+execrated arms? to take possession of Suez
+and to make her own thing of it? to chase France
+from the Upper Nile, and subsequently from the
+whole of Egypt, to intervene in the Berlin treaty to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
+deprive Russia of the profits of her victory, to galvanize
+dying Turkey, to delay for thirty years the
+revival of the Balkan States and to make of Germany
+the main spring of continental Europe? In
+a word, what has permitted England to rule the
+roost in Europe and to accumulate the frightful
+storm let loose in 1914? Who? What? if it is not
+the "naval domination" of England ever since the
+destruction of the French and Spanish fleets at
+Trafalgar.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>It would be most difficult to condense more
+erroneous historical appreciations and political
+absurdities in so few lines.</p>
+
+<p>Many will be quite surprised to learn, from
+Mr. Bourassa's resounding trumpet, that England
+had been for many years gathering the storm
+which broke out in 1914. So far all fairminded
+men were convinced that this rascally work had
+been done by Germany, in spite of England's exhortations
+to reduce military armaments.</p>
+
+<p>In all sincerity, I am unable to understand
+how Mr. Bourassa can expect to successfully give
+the lie to such incontrovertible truths as the guilt
+of Germany in preparing the war she finally
+brought on more than four years ago, and as the
+unceasing determination of England to maintain
+peace.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">A Case For True Statesmanship.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Whatever the <span class="smcap">TRUE</span> and the <span class="smcap">FALSE</span> friends of
+<span class="smcap">Peace</span> may hope and say, it is perfectly useless to
+close our eyes to the glaring fact that its restoration
+can only be the result of military effort combined
+with the highest practical statesmanship.
+After all what has happened, and the oft-repeated
+declaration of the Rulers of the belligerent
+nations, it would be a complete loss of a very valuable
+time to indulge any longer in the expression
+of views all acknowledge in principle, but which
+no one, however well disposed he may be, is actually
+able to traduce in practical form.</p>
+
+<p>When writing my French book, in the fall of
+1916, reviewing the situation as it had so far
+developed, I said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"All are most anxious for peace. However it is infinitely
+better to look at matters such as they are. It is evident that the
+military situation does not offer the least hope that the war can
+be immediately brought to an end. Successes have been achieved
+on both sides. But nothing decisive has yet happened. The armies
+are facing one another in defiant attitude. The belligerent nations,
+on both sides, have yet, and for a long time, great resources in
+man-power and money."</p>
+
+<p>"If Germany, which should first give up the fight in acknowledging
+her crime, is obdurate to final exhaustion, how can it
+be possibly expected that the Allies who were forced to fight,
+will submit to the humiliation and shame of soliciting from their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>cruel enemy a peace the conditions of which, they know, would be
+utterly unacceptable. Consequently they must with an indomitable
+courage and an invincible perseverance go on struggling to solve,
+for a long time, the redoubtable problem to which they are pledged,
+in honour bound, to give the only settlement which can reassure
+the world."</p></div>
+
+<p>I am still and absolutely of the same opinion.
+The present military situation has certainly much
+improved in favour of the Allies since 1916.
+However, looking at the question, first, from the
+standpoint of the developing military operations,
+there is no actual, and there will not be for many
+months yet&mdash;more or less&mdash;practical possibility of
+a satisfactory peace settlement.</p>
+
+<p>Secondly, looking at the question from the
+standpoint of true statesmanship, it is very easy
+to draw the inexorable conclusion that, again,
+there is not actually the least chance of an immediate
+restoration of peace.</p>
+
+<p>Statesmen, responsible, not only for the
+future of their respective countries, but, actually,
+for that of the whole world, are not to be supposed
+liable to be carried away by a hasty desire to put
+an end to the war and to their own arduous task
+in carrying it to the only possible solution:&mdash;<span class="smcap">A
+JUST AND DURABLE PEACE</span>.</p>
+
+<p>A broad and certain fact, staring every one,
+is that the Berlin Government will not accept the
+only settlement to which the Allies can possibly
+agree as long as her armies occupy French and
+Belgian territories. If Mr. Bourassa and his
+"pacifists" friends&mdash;or dupes&mdash;have really entertained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
+a faint hope to the contrary, they were
+utterly mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>Present military events, however proportionately
+enlarged by the increased resources, in man-power
+and money, of the belligerents, are not
+without many appropriate precedents. History is
+always repeating itself. Great Powers having
+risked their all in a drawn battle, do not give in as
+long as they can stand the strain, considering the
+importance of the interests they have at stake.</p>
+
+<p>For the same reason above stated, but reversed,
+the Allies will not negotiate for peace
+before they have thrown the German armies out
+of French and Belgian soil, and repulsed them over
+Teutonic territory. I do not mean to say that
+peace must necessarily be proclaimed either from
+Berlin or from Paris. But it will only be signed
+as the inevitable result of a final triumphant
+march on the way either to Berlin or to Paris.
+There is no possible escape from the alternative.
+In such matters, there is no halfway station.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIV.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">After-the-War Military Problem.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Two of the most important propositions of
+His Holiness the Pope more especially deserve
+earnest consideration. They are indeed supported
+by the Allies who are purposely fighting for their
+adoption.</p>
+
+<p>In his note of the first of August, 1917, addressed
+to the Rulers of the belligerent nations,
+the Pope says in part:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">At first, the fundamental point must be
+to substitute the moral force of Right to the
+material force of arms.</span>"</p>
+
+<p>No truer proposition could be enounced. If
+Germany had put this principle into practice, she
+never would have violated Belgian territory.</p>
+
+<p>When England protested against the proposed
+invasion of Belgium, she did so in obedience to the
+sacred principle enunciated by the Sovereign
+Pontiff. She strongly insisted to the last minute
+that <i>the moral force</i> of solemn treaties should
+prevail upon <i>the material force of arms</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In a letter dated October 7, 1917, His Eminence
+Cardinal Gasparri, Secretary of State to His
+Holiness, addressing the Archbishop of Lens,
+wrote as follows respecting conscription:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"The Holy See, in his Appeal of the first of August, did not
+consider, out of deference for the leaders of the belligerent peoples,
+that he should mention it, preferring to leave to themselves the
+care of determining it, but for him, the only practical system and,
+moreover, easy to apply with some good will on both sides, would
+be the following: to suppress, with one accord between civilized
+nations, military obligatory service; to constitute an arbitration
+tribunal, as already said in the Pontifical Appeal, to settle international
+questions; finally, to prevent infractions, to establish universal
+"boycottage" against any nation attempting to reestablish
+military obligatory service, on refusing either to lay an international
+question before the arbitration tribunal, or to abide by its
+decision."</p></div>
+
+<p>Cardinal Gasparri then points to the ante-war
+British and American systems of military "voluntarism",
+in the following terms:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"As a matter of fact, omitting other considerations, the recent
+example of England and America testifies in favour of the
+adoption of this system. England and America had, in effect,
+voluntary service, and, to take an efficient part in the present war,
+they were obliged to adopt conscription. It proves that voluntary
+service well supplies the necessary contingent to maintain public
+order (and is public order not maintained in England and America
+just as well, if not better, than in the other nations?) but it does
+not supply the enormous armies required for modern warfare.
+Consequently in suppressing, with one accord between civilized
+nations, obligatory service to replace it by voluntary service, disarmament
+with all the happy consequences above indicated would
+be automatically obtained without any perturbation of public
+order."</p>
+
+<p>"For the last century, conscription has been the true cause
+of calamities which have afflicted society: to reach a simultaneous
+and reciprocal suppression will be the true remedy. In fact, once
+suppressed, conscription could be reestablished only by a law; and
+for such a law, even with the present constitution of the Central
+Empires, Parliamentary approbation would be required (which approbation
+would be most improbable for many reasons and above
+all on account of the sad experience of the present war); in this
+way, what is so much desired, for the maintenance of agreements,
+would be obtained: the peoples' guarantee. If, on the other hand,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>the right to make peace or war was given to the people by way of
+<b>referendum</b>, or at least to Parliament, peace between nations would
+be assured, as much at least as it is possible in this world."</p></div>
+
+<p>It should be very gratifying indeed to all the
+loyal subjects of the British Empire to ascertain,
+from the declarations of Cardinal Gasparri, that
+the Pope is in so complete accord with England on
+this the most important question to be settled by
+the future peace treaty.</p>
+
+<p>As proved in one of the first chapters of this
+work, the Government of Great Britain, supported
+in this course by almost the unanimous opinion of
+the peoples of the United Kingdom, was the first
+to suggest the holding of the Hague conferences
+to consider the best means to adopt to favour the
+world with the blessings of permanent peace.
+Their own view, which they forcibly expressed,
+was that the surest way to reach that much desired
+result was to limit the military armaments, both
+on land and sea. For more than twenty years
+previous to the war, they pressed, and even implored,
+for the adoption of their program.</p>
+
+<p>I have also proved how obdurate Germany
+was in resisting England's propositions, and her
+successful intrigues to thwart Great Britain's
+efforts to have them adopted and put into practice.</p>
+
+<p>England's policy has not changed. On the
+contrary, it is more than ever favourable to the
+limitation, and even to the complete abolition, of
+armaments, if one or the other can be achieved.
+It is the principal war aim of Great Britain, only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
+coming next after her determination to avenge
+Belgium.</p>
+
+<p>The future peace of the world could no doubt
+be well guaranteed by a large measure of disarmament.
+But it would certainly be much more
+so, if complete abolition could be obtained by an
+international agreement binding on all nations,
+with, of course, the allowance of the necessary
+forces required for the maintenance of interior
+public order.</p>
+
+<p>The whole world can safely depend on the
+strenuous support of England for either the
+limitation or the abolition of armaments whenever
+the question is seriously taken up for
+consideration.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently the problem will be difficult to
+solve. However, it should not be beyond the
+resources of statesmanship which, assuredly, ought
+to rise superior to all prejudiced aspirations after
+the terrible ordeal Humanity will have experienced
+during the present war.</p>
+
+<p>The maintenance of internal public order, and
+permanent preparedness for foreign wars, are two
+very different questions to examine. The first can
+safely be left to the care of every nation sure to
+attend to it if willing to maintain her authority.
+The second has a much wider scope and will tax
+the ability of statesmanship to the utmost limit.</p>
+
+<p>Will the great civilized nations decide, when
+the war is over, to completely abolish conscription
+to return to voluntary military service within a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
+very limited organization, thus doing away by a
+bold and single stroke with a system which, for
+more than a hundred years, has been the curse of
+continental Europe?</p>
+
+<p>Or will they, at least as an initial attempt,
+come to the conclusion to only limit armaments,
+maintaining compulsory service for the reduced
+strength of the armies?</p>
+
+<p>If armaments are either abolished, or merely
+reduced, will they be so on sea as well as on land?
+I would answer at once:&mdash;of course, they should.</p>
+
+<p>Looking at the question from the British
+stand-point&mdash;and I can also say from that of the
+United States&mdash;it should be easily solved.</p>
+
+<p>Public opinion in Great Britain and all over
+the British Empire, as well as in the United
+States, has always been against conscription in
+peace times, until the present war.</p>
+
+<p>Not exactly foreseeing the full extent of the
+effort she would be called upon to make, England
+entered into the conflict determined to meet the
+requirements of her military situation out of the
+resources of voluntary enlistment. Canada, joining
+in the struggle, did the same. Both have done
+wonderfully well during the three first years of
+the prolonged war.</p>
+
+<p>I can, without the slightest hesitation, positively
+assert that public opinion, in the whole
+British Empire, and, not only in the United States,
+but in the whole of the two American continents,
+is, as a matter of principle, as much hostile to compulsory<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
+military service as it was before the present
+war, and would exult at its complete abolition
+as one of the happiest results of the gigantic
+contest still going on.</p>
+
+<p>It is to be deplored, but still it is a fact, that
+great questions of public interest too often cannot
+be settled solely in conformity with the principles
+they imply.</p>
+
+<p>If Great Britain, if the United States, if
+Canada, could consider the question of conscription
+exclusively from their own stand-point, they
+would most surely decide at once, and with great
+enthusiasm, to abolish the obligatory military
+service they have adopted only as a last resort
+under the stress of imperious necessity.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, I have no hesitation to express my
+own opinion that whatever will be the military
+system of continental Europe after the war, the
+British Empire and the United States will certainly
+not be cursed with permanent conscription.
+They are both so happily situated that, in peace
+times, they cannot be called upon to go very
+extensively into the costly preparedness which the
+European continental nations will have again to
+submit themselves to, if they are not wise enough
+to put an end forever to the barbarous militarism
+they have too long endured for fear of Teutonic
+domination.</p>
+
+<p>Under the worst European situation, England,
+with a territorial army of a million of men ready
+to be called to the Colours, or actually flying them,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
+backed by her mighty fleet maintained to its highest
+state of efficiency, could always face any continental
+enemy. And such an army of a ready
+million of well trained officers and men, voluntary
+service would easily produce.</p>
+
+<p>If future conditions would require it, Canada
+herself could do her share to prepare for any
+emergency by reverting to voluntary enlistment,
+but in improving the service so as to produce more
+immediate efficiency.</p>
+
+<p>Very apparently, the United States will come
+out of the present conflict with flying Colours and
+will dispense with compulsory service under any
+circumstances in the peace days to follow.</p>
+
+<p>What then will the continental powers do?
+Blessed they will be, if they make up their mind
+to do away, once for all, with a system which has
+crushed the peoples so unmercifully.</p>
+
+<p>To speak in all frankness, I believe it would
+be almost vain, however much desirable it is, to
+indulge in fond hopes of the complete abolition of
+militarism on the European continent. The canker
+is too deep in the flesh and blood of nations to be
+extirpated as if by magic. Such a reversal of
+conditions grown to extravagant proportions, during
+more than a century, will not likely be accomplished
+at the first stroke. Let us all hope that, at
+least, a good start will be made by a large limitation
+of armaments which may, with time, lead to
+the final achievement for which the whole world
+would be forever grateful to the Almighty.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
+I have positively stated that extravagant
+militarism should be discontinued on sea as well
+as on land. Such has been the policy of England
+for many years past. I have proved it by the
+diplomatic correspondence between Great Britain
+and Germany, and the solemn declarations of all
+the leading British statesmen for the last quarter
+of a century. How persistingly England has implored
+Germany to agree with her in stopping that
+ruinous race in the building of war vessels, we
+have seen.</p>
+
+<p>So, the assent, nay more, the determination of
+England to adhere to her old and noble policy, is a
+foregone conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>The closing sentence of the last quoted paragraph
+of Cardinal Gasparri's letter expresses the
+opinion that "<i>the right to make peace or war
+should be given to the people by way of referendum,
+or at least to Parliament</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The system preconized by the Eminent
+Cardinal has been in existence in England for a
+number of years; ever since the day when complete
+ministerial responsibility was adopted as the
+fundamental principle of the British constitution.
+That system was carried to the letter by Great
+Britain with regard to her intervention in the
+present war.</p>
+
+<p>The right to declare war and to make peace is
+one of the most important prerogatives of the
+British Crown. This prerogative of the Crown,
+like all the others, is held in trust by the Sovereign<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
+for the benefit of the people and exercised by Him
+<span class="smcap">ONLY UPON THE ADVICE AND RESPONSIBILITY OF HIS
+MINISTERS</span>.</p>
+
+<p>In conformity with this great British constitutional
+principle, what happened in London, in
+August, 1914? The then Prime Minister, Mr.
+Asquith, in his own name and in those of his
+colleagues, advised His Majesty King George V.
+to declare war against Germany because she had
+invaded Belgian territory in violation of the
+treaties by which these two countries were, in honour
+bound, to protect Belgium's neutrality. They
+were constitutionally responsible to the Imperial
+Parliament and to the people of the United
+Kingdom for their advice to their Sovereign.</p>
+
+<p>In his admirable statement to the British
+House of Commons, Sir Edward Grey, Secretary
+of State for Foreign Affairs, said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I have assured the House&mdash;and the Prime
+Minister has assured the House more than once&mdash;that
+if any crisis such as this arose, we should
+come before the House of Commons and be able to
+say to the House that it was free to decide what
+the British attitude should be, that we would have
+no secret engagement which we should spring upon
+the House, and tell the House that, because we had
+entered into that engagement, there was an obligation
+of honour upon the country.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The British House of Commons, had they
+considered it to be their duty, had the right to disapprove
+the foreign policy of the Cabinet and to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
+censure the ministers for the advice they had given,
+or had decided to give, to the Sovereign. On the
+other hand, the House of Commons had the right
+to approve the stand taken by the Government.
+They did so unanimously, and were most admirably
+supported by the people.</p>
+
+<p>I must say that I consider it would be very
+difficult, if not absolutely impracticable, to have
+questions of war or peace dealt with by way of
+"<i>Referendum</i>." Crises suddenly created lead almost
+instantly to declarations of war. But this
+outcome could hardly be so rapidly produced that
+Parliament could not be called to deal with the
+emergency.</p>
+
+<p>How could France have been able to oppose
+the crushing German invasion, in 1914, if her
+Government and her representative Houses had
+been obliged to wait for the result of a "<i>Referendum</i>"
+whether she would fight or kneel down?</p>
+
+<p>But the whole world&mdash;outside the Central
+Empires and their Allies&mdash;witnessed with unbounded
+delight the spontaneous and unanimous
+decision of the heroic French nation to fight to the
+last. She threw herself with the most admirable
+courage against the invading waves of Teutonic
+barbarism, and succeeded by the great and
+glorious Marne victory in forcing them to ebb, thus
+giving England and the other Allies the time
+necessary to organize and train their armies which,
+by their united efforts will save Civilization from
+destruction and the world from the threatened
+German domination.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXV.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Intervention of the United States in the
+War.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>The hostilities, once opened as the direct consequence
+of Germany's obduracy, many of the most
+influential leaders of public opinion in the United
+States foresaw that the conflict taking such a wide
+range, the great American Republic was most
+likely to be, sooner or later, involved in the
+European struggle. They were of two classes.
+Those out of office, holding for the time no official
+position, were, of course, not bound to the same
+careful discretion in judging the daily developments
+of the military operations, and their far
+reaching consequences, as those who were at the
+helm of State.</p>
+
+<p>In appreciating the course followed by the
+United States since the war commenced, it must
+never be forgotten that if an autocratic Empire,
+trampled upon by a domineering military party,
+can be thrown in a minute into a great conflict, a
+Republic like that of our powerful neighbours
+cannot be dragooned into any hasty action. In a
+free country, under a responsible government,
+public opinion is the basis of the success of any
+important official decision.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The political men and the numerous publicists
+who incessantly called the attention of our neighbours
+to what was going on in Europe and on the
+seas, have rendered a great service in moulding
+public opinion for the grand duty the Republic
+would eventually be obliged to accomplish.</p>
+
+<p>Having ourselves decided to participate in the
+war at once after its outbreak, and deeply engaged
+in the task, we, Canadians, felt somewhat uneasy
+about the apparent determination of our neighbours
+to stand aside, and let the European Powers
+settle the ugly question. As a rule, we were all
+wishing to see the United States joining with the
+Allies in the fray.</p>
+
+<p>Once again, we had some black sheep with us.
+Whilst all the loyal Canadians were anxiously
+waiting for the day when they would applaud the
+American Republic's declaration of war against
+Germany, our Nationalists were getting more
+nervous at the increasing signs of the growth of
+public opinion amongst our neighbours against the
+criminal German cause and the crimes by which
+the Teutons were supporting it. Their leader, Mr.
+Bourassa, was doing his best to persuade the
+Americans that they had much better to remain
+out of the struggle. He expected he would succeed,
+as he had done in the Province of Quebec, in influencing,
+by his erroneous theories, many of the
+French Canadian element in the United States.</p>
+
+<p>The wish being always father to the thought,
+Mr. Bourassa easily came to the conclusion that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
+Mr. Wilson, the president of the United States,
+was decidedly opposed to any intervention of the
+Republic in the war, and would prevent it at all
+hazards. How prodigal he was of his eulogiums,
+of his advices, to the American "pacifists," with
+the President as their leader, to know one has only
+to read his newspaper "<i>Le Devoir</i>."</p>
+
+<p>How disappointed, how crest-fallen, he was
+when he discovered how much mistaken he had
+been!</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Wilson, who had long been waiting
+for the right hour to strike the blow at the Teutonic
+autocratic attempt at domination, rising grandly
+to the rank of a great statesman, supported by
+the splendid strength of the public opinion he
+had wisely and skilfully rallied in favour of the
+decision he had taken, was a sad day for our
+Nationalists and their heart-broken leader. Blind,
+prejudiced, as they were, meekly pandering to
+pan-Germanism which they considered as the
+best antidote to the Anglo-Saxonism they abhor,
+they could not understand that the Lusitania
+horror, the slaughtering of hundreds of American
+citizens in violation of all the principles of
+International Law, the crimes of the Teutonic
+submarine campaign more than justified the
+intervention of the United States in the war.</p>
+
+<p>What our neighbours have done since they
+have joined with the Allies, what they are doing
+and promise to do, is worthy of all admiration.
+Like the British Empire, like France, the United<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
+States have given the inspiring example of a most
+enlightened patriotism, of a splendid unity of
+purpose, of a boundless confidence in the triumph
+of the cause of Justice and Right.</p>
+
+<p>Such a grand spectacle of true national unity
+offered a striking contrast with the sad exhibition
+of the narrow Nationalism Canada has had to
+endure without, however, hindering to any appreciable
+extent our loyal and patriotic effort to help
+winning the war.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa, who had been out of his natural
+vituperative tune in complimenting Mr. Wilson on
+his supposed peace proclivities, was sure to turn
+his guns against the President of the Republic the
+moment he boldly and energetically took his stand
+against German barbarism as exhibited since the
+beginning of the war. Mr. Wilson had especially
+protested against such outrages as were perpetrated
+on the seas by Teutonic orders. He had repeatedly
+warned the Berlin Government what the
+inevitable consequences of such proceedings would
+be, and going to the full length of what friendly
+relations between two Sovereign States could permit,
+had demanded that an end be put to a kind of
+warfare most formally condemned by International
+Law, contrary to all justice, to all human
+notions of civilization.</p>
+
+<p>When the cup of German iniquities overflowed
+with new crimes, American reprobation was also
+raised to the high water mark. Indignation was
+at the height of its exasperation. Public opinion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
+had rapidly rallied and ripened at the horrible
+sight of so many American citizens, women and
+children, murdered in mid-ocean, their dead bodies
+floating over the waves, and their souls from above
+crying for vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>Then the President, Congress, statesmen, politicians,
+publicists, loyal Americans numbering
+almost a hundred million, all of one mind, of one
+heart, pledged their national honour to avenge the
+foul deeds of Teutonic barbarity, and to do their
+mighty share in rescuing Freedom and Civilization
+from the threatening sanguinary cataclysm
+which was cruelly saddening our times and darkening
+the prospects of our children.</p>
+
+<p>How powerfully, how grandly, how admirably
+they have kept their word, all know. The laws
+necessary to prosecute the war with the utmost
+vigour were unanimously passed by Congress. The
+organization of the man-power of our neighbours
+has been made on a grand scale. The calls to the
+financial resources of the Republic have been
+patriotically answered by the people who poured
+out billions and billions of their hard earned and
+prudently saved money to support the national
+cause so closely identified with that of the Allies.
+Besides spending innumerable millions for their
+own gigantic military effort, the United States are
+lending billions of dollars to their associates in the
+great struggle to curb down German autocratic
+criminal ambition.</p>
+
+<p>The universe, as a whole, gratefully applauded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
+the magnificent effort of the leading nation of
+the New-World in defending the old continents of
+Europe, Asia and Africa against the new invasion
+of the Huns.</p>
+
+<p>The only shadow to this ennobling picture is
+that which our Nationalists, from this side of the
+boundary line, try to breathe on it, expecting that
+their treacherous whisper will find some echo
+amongst the French Canadian and the German
+elements of the Republic.</p>
+
+<p>The following lines are a sample of the kind
+words Mr. Bourassa has addressed to Mr. Wilson&mdash;the
+warrior&mdash;not the pacifist. On August 30,
+1917, respecting the answer of the President of the
+United States to the Pope's appeal in favour of
+peace, he wrote in a gentle mood:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Truth and falsehood, sincerity and deceit,
+logic and sophism are sporting with gracefulness
+in this singularly astonishing document. One would
+imagine that the President, persuaded that the
+European Governments are playing an immense
+game of "poker" having the life of the peoples at
+stake, wanted to go further and to prove to them
+that at such a game the great American democracy
+is their master. Perhaps did he believe that the
+"bluff" outbidding would succeed in tearing to
+pieces the mask of falsehoods, of ambiguities and
+hypocrisy, by which the national Rulers are blinding
+the peoples in order to lead them more readily
+to be slaughtered.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>On perusing such outrageous writing, one
+cannot help being convinced that Mr. Bourassa<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
+considers all the distinguished and most patriotic
+political leaders who, for the last four years, have
+guided with so much talent and devotion France,
+the British Empire, and their Allies through the
+unprecedented crisis they have had to face, are a
+criminal gang of murderers.</p>
+
+<p>So, in Mr. Bourassa's kind opinion, when Mr.
+Wilson and all the members of the two Houses
+of Congress, with a most admirable unanimity of
+thought and aspirations, called upon the American
+nation to avenge their countrymen, countrywomen
+and children, murdered on the broad sea, they
+were criminally joining with European Rulers
+in a game of "bluff", going further than all of them
+in order to tear to pieces the falsehoods and hypocrisy
+they were using to blind their peoples to the
+facile acceptance of the slaughtering process. A
+very strange way, indeed, of unmasking others'
+hypocrisy by being more hypocritical than them
+all.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, in a second article on the same
+subject, the Nationalist leader said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Since the outbreak of the war, more especially
+since the exhausted peoples have commenced to
+ask themselves what will be the result of this
+frightful slaughter, the supporters of war to the
+utmost have tried hard to create the legend that
+Germany wants to impose her political, military
+and economical domination over the whole universe.
+To this first falsehood, they add another
+one, still more complete: the only way to assure
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
+peace, they say, is to democratize Germany,
+Austria and all the nations of the Globe.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Two falsehoods no doubt there are, but they
+are not asserted by those who affirm Germany's aspiration
+at universal domination, and who believe
+that if true free democratic institutions were to
+replace autocratic rule in many countries, peace
+could be much more easily maintained. They are
+circulated by those who deny that such are the two
+cases.</p>
+
+<p>Whose fault is it if the almost universal opinion,
+outside the Central Empires and their few
+allies, is that Teutonic ambition, for many years
+past, has been to dominate the world?</p>
+
+<p>Whose fault is it if, for the last forty years,
+autocratic rule has once more proved to be the
+curse of the nations which it governs, and of the
+peoples it subjugates?</p>
+
+<p>Has not Germany only herself to blame? If
+she had respected the eternal principles of Divine
+Morals; if she had been contented of her lot and
+mindful of the rights of other nations; if she had
+been guided by the true law that Right is above
+Might; if she had followed the ever glorious path
+of Justice, she would not be presently under the
+ban of the civilized world rising in a mighty effort
+to crush her threatening tyranny out of existence.</p>
+
+<p>So much the worse for her, if she falls a victim
+to her insane ambitious dreams and to the atrocious
+crimes they have inspired her to commit. In
+her calamity, the Nationalists' sympathies will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
+avail her very little, as they will everywhere meet
+with the contempt they fully deserve.</p>
+
+<p>At page 116, in a virulent charge, Mr. Bourassa
+says that Mr. Wilson <i>though a passionate and
+obstinate pedantic of democracy, is as much of an
+autocrat as William of Prussia</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Blinded by his fanatical antipathies towards
+every one and every thing, directly or indirectly,
+favouring England, the Nationalist leader fails to
+see any difference between the man who blasphemously
+claims by Divine Right the power to hurl his
+whole Empire at the throat of staggering Humanity,
+to satisfy his frenzied lust of domination,
+denying to his subjects any say whatever in the
+matter, and the responsible chief of State who,
+holding his temporary functions from the expressed
+will of the people who trusted him, calls
+upon that same nation to avenge the murder of a
+large number of her citizens, of her women and
+children, and the barbarous crimes committed in
+violation of her Sovereign Rights.</p>
+
+<p>If Mr. Bourassa is conscious of the enormity
+of the stand he has taken, and of the views he has
+expressed, he is indeed much to be blamed; if he is
+not, he is greatly to be pitied.</p>
+
+<p>At page 109 of his pamphlet&mdash;entitled:&mdash;"<i>The
+Pope, arbiter of peace</i>," Mr. Bourassa has written
+the following monstrous proposition, after having
+said that peace must be restored "<i>without victory</i>":&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>The more the results of the war are null, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
+both sides, the more chances there are for the
+peoples, astounded at the frightful uselessness of
+those monstrous slaughters, to protect themselves
+against a new fit of furious folly. To become
+odious to men, war must be barren.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>So Mr. Bourassa has emphatically proclaimed
+that the war must be barren of any practical results,
+that the extraordinary sacrifices of lives, of
+resources of wealth, must be without reward of
+any kind; that the world must return to the ante-war
+conditions. And this, he asserts, would be
+the best means of preventing a renewal of the
+monstrous slaughters which have been the outcome
+of Germany's horrible attempt at dominating
+an enslaved Humanity.</p>
+
+<p>In all sincerity, it is very difficult to suppose
+that the exponent of such outrageously abominable
+views is conscious of what he says.</p>
+
+<p>A red hot "pacifist," Mr. Bourassa clamoured
+as best he could for "<span class="smcap">PEACE WITHOUT VICTORY</span>,"
+claiming that it was <i>the only kind of peace that
+could be "just and durable."</i> The time was when
+he pretended&mdash;surely without any show of reason&mdash;that
+such was the sort of peace Mr. Wilson
+wanted and suggested.</p>
+
+<p>Even as far back as December 31, 1915, Mr.
+Bourassa, no doubt desirous of giving full vent to
+his new year's wishes to all, had written:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>In spite of the lies, of the impudent "bluff,"
+of the sanguinary appeals and of the false promises
+of victory of the partisans of war to excess, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
+all the warring countries, popular good sense
+commences to discern truth....
+The more victory</i> (the issue) <i>will be materially
+null and sterile for all the nations at war, the more
+chances there will be that peace will be lasting and
+that the peoples will be convinced that war is not
+only an abominable crime but an incommensurable
+folly</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Evidently it had already become a hobby on
+the brain of the Nationalist leader. He dogmatically
+proclaims that war between peoples&mdash;not the
+wars formerly fought by mercenary armies,&mdash;is a
+<i>crime</i>,&mdash;<i>abominable</i>,&mdash;and a <i>folly</i>,&mdash;<i>incommensurable</i>.</p>
+
+<p>True it is on the part of a State tramping upon
+all the principles of Justice and of International
+Law to gratify her guilty ambition.</p>
+
+<p>But honourable, glorious, is war on the part
+of peoples rising in their patriotic might to resist
+a sanguinary enemy, to defend their countries,
+their homes, their mothers, their wives and their
+children from oppression, to stem the conquering
+efforts of barbarous invaders.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt it was a crime on the part of Germany
+to break her pledged honour by solemn
+treaties, and to violate Belgium's territory.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt it was a crime for Germany&mdash;and
+one abominable&mdash;to overrun Belgium, spreading
+everywhere desolation, devastation, incendiarism,
+murder.</p>
+
+<p>But can it be said that the admirable and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
+heroic resistance Belgium has opposed to her
+tyrannical invaders was a dastardly crime?</p>
+
+<p>No doubt it was a crime&mdash;and one most
+abominable&mdash;for Germany to order the sinking of
+the Lusitania and hundreds of merchant ships,
+without the warning required by the Law of
+Nations, murdering by hundreds non-combatants,
+children, women, and old men.</p>
+
+<p>But can any one be justified in asserting that,
+after exhausting, for the redress of such abominable
+wrongs, all the resources of diplomacy, the
+United States were committing a crime when they
+accepted the criminal teutonic challenge and decided
+to join with the British Empire, with France,
+Italy and their Allies, to rescue human Freedom
+and Civilization from the impending destruction?</p>
+
+<p>It is an aberration of mind&mdash;incommensurable
+in depth&mdash;for a publicist, or any one else, to be so
+blinded by prejudices, so lost to all sense of justice,
+as to place on the same footing, on the same level,
+the assailant and he who defends his all, the
+murderer and the victim.</p>
+
+<p>I positively affirm that I am not actuated by
+the least ill-will or ill-feeling against the Nationalist
+leader, in judging his course and his views as I
+do. Thank God, I know enough of the teachings
+of Christianity to wish good to all men. But I
+cannot help being deeply sorry and deploring that
+one of my French Canadian compatriots is buried
+in such mental darkness as to be unable to perceive
+the difference&mdash;incommensurable&mdash;there is in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
+present war between the hideous Teutonic guilt,
+and the commendable and meritorious defence by
+the Allied nations of the most sacred cause on
+earth:&mdash;outraged Justice.</p>
+
+<p>And with all sincerity, I express the profound
+wish that during the prolonged recess the timely
+war measure adopted to censure and prevent all
+utterances detrimental to the best Canadian effort
+in the conflict, the Nationalist leader has the pleasure
+to enjoy, he will reconsider the whole situation
+and his opinions&mdash;too much widely circulated. Is
+it yet possible to hope that, at last, he will see the
+dawn which will lead him to the full light with
+which the great and noble cause of his country and
+of the world is shining?</p>
+
+<p>It is no surprise that such opinions utterly
+failed to have any echo amongst the liberty loving
+people of the neighbouring Republic. They died
+their merited shameful death before crossing over
+the boundary line, buried deep under the heap of
+the profound feelings of reprobation they provoked.</p>
+
+<p>The Nationalist leader even missed the mark
+where he felt sure his shot would strike. We can
+rest assured that the large majority of the United
+States Germans, by birth or origin, would not
+change the responsible President of their new
+country for the autocrat Kaiser from whose absolutist
+power so many of them fled to breathe freely
+in the new land of promise it was their happy lot
+to enter.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bourassa met with a complete failure in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
+his expectation to arouse the feelings of his compatriots
+over the frontier against the intervention
+of the Republic in the war.</p>
+
+<p>It has been a profound satisfaction for us,
+French Canadians, to learn that from the very
+moment war was declared by the Republic against
+Germany, the French Canadian element in the
+United States has been to the forefront of the most
+loyal of our friendly neighbours in fighting the
+common enemy.</p>
+
+<p>The French Canadians of the United States,
+either by birth or origin, have wisely turned a deaf
+ear to the Nationalist leader's seductive but prejudiced
+theories, to the wild charges he was wont
+to level at all the national rulers of the Allies, and,
+as a final attempt, at those of the American
+Republic. They have rallied to their Colours with
+enthusiastic patriotism.</p>
+
+<p>They have nobly done their duty. They are
+doing it, and will continue to do so to the last: to
+the final victory for which they are fighting with
+the patriotic desire to share in the glory of the
+triumph of their country.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXVI.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Allies&mdash;Russia&mdash;Japan.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Since its outbreak the great war has, and, before
+it is over, will have, played havoc in many
+ways in the wide world. Criminal aspirations
+have been quashed, extravagant hopes shattered,
+an ancient throne overthrown almost without a
+clash, an autocrat sovereign murdered, another
+forced to abdicate and go into exile.</p>
+
+<p>In the open airs, on land, over the waves,
+under sea, the fighting demon has been most actively
+at work, ordering one of the belligerent, eager to
+obey, to spare no one, young, weak or old. Death
+has been dropped from the skies on sleeping non-combatants,
+assassinating right and left. On the
+soil Providentially provided with the resources necessary
+to human life, homes have been ruined,
+their so far happy owners brutally murdered. On
+the ocean the treacherous and barbarous submariner,
+operating in the broad light of the day, or
+in the darkness of the night, has sent, without remorse,
+to the fathomless bottom, thousands and
+thousands of innocent victims, children, women,
+old men, wounded soldiers spared on land but
+drowned at sea.</p>
+
+<p>Viewed from the height of a much nobler standpoint,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
+the war has developed a superior degree of
+heroism perhaps never equalled. Belgians, Serbians,
+Poles, Armenians have endured, and are
+still suffering, their prolonged martyrdom with a
+fortitude deserving the greatest admiration.</p>
+
+<p>The nations united to withstand the torrent
+of German cruel and depraved ambition are writing,
+with the purest of their blood, pages of history
+which, for all times to come, will offer to posterity
+unrivalled examples of the sound and unswerving
+patriotism which has elevated them all to the indomitable
+determination to bear patiently, perseveringly,
+all the sacrifices, in lives courageously
+given, in resources profusely spent, in taxation
+willingly accepted and paid, in works of all kinds
+cheerfully performed, which the salvation of
+human Liberty and Civilization shall require.</p>
+
+<p>The collapse of the ancient and hitherto
+mighty Empire of Russia will undoubtedly be one
+of the most startling events of the "Great War."
+For the present, I shall not comment, on the causes
+of this momentous episode, incidental to the wonderful
+drama being played on the worldly stage,
+more than I have done in a previous chapter.
+Still the important change it has made in the respective
+situation of the belligerents, with the prospective
+consequences likely to follow, one way or
+the other, calls for some timely consideration.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently, the downfall, first, of the Imperial
+regime, second, of the <i>de facto</i> Republican government
+by which it was replaced, throwing the great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
+Eastern ally of Great Britain, France and Italy
+under the tyrannical sway of the "bolchevikis" terrorists,
+most considerably altered the relative
+strength of the fighting power of the belligerents.
+Very detrimental to the Allies, it was largely
+favourable to the Central Empires. The "Triple
+Entente" as first constituted, was much weakened
+by the desertion of one of the great partners in the
+heavy task they had undertaken, whilst the "Triple
+Alliance" was strengthened in a relative proportion,
+at least for the time being and the very near
+future.</p>
+
+<p>Evidence, incontrovertible, is coming to light,
+proving what had been soundly presumed, that
+"bolchevikism" was not merely the result, as in
+other instances, of the violence of sanguinary
+revolutionists overpowering a regular progressive
+movement of political freedom and reform, but that
+it has been the outcome of German intrigue easily
+succeeding in corrupting into shameless treason
+the "bolchevikis" leaders.</p>
+
+<p>As a Sovereign State, as an independent nation,
+Russia was, in honour bound, pledged not to
+consent to a separate peace, and to make peace
+with Germany only with conditions to which all
+the Allies would agree. Acceptance of, and concurrence
+in, all peace agreements, were the essential
+clause of the pledge Great Britain, France and
+Russia had reciprocally taken in going to war with
+the Central Empires. With this sacred pledge
+Italy concurred fully on joining the Allies.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>To that solemn pledge, the American Republic
+has emphatically assented when she threw her
+weighty sword in the balance against blood stained
+and murderous Germany.</p>
+
+<p>The "bolchevikis'" treacherous government
+repudiated the solemn engagement of their country,
+threw her honour to the winds, sold her dearest
+national interests by the infamous Brest-Litovsk
+treaty. Betrayed Russia was out of the
+war, leaving her Allies to their fate.</p>
+
+<p>From a military point of view, the consequences
+were easily foreseen. Freed from the
+danger of further attacks on the eastern front,
+both Germany and Austria could send their eastern
+armies, the first, on the western front in
+France, the second, on the Italian front. Germany,
+only requiring a sufficient force to keep down
+trodden Russia under the yoke treacherously
+fastened on her neck by the traitors who had
+ignominiously sold their country to her enemy, and
+anxious to profit to the utmost by her success in
+coercing the Russians to agree to dishonourable
+peace conditions, hurried more than a million men
+over to the western front. Austria did likewise,
+sending a large force with the hope of smashing the
+Italians out of the fight.</p>
+
+<p>Those were no doubt very anxious days. All
+remember how the Italian army lost in a very short
+time all the ground they had so stubbornly
+conquered.</p>
+
+<p>Germany made formidable preparations to
+strike, in the very early spring of the present year,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
+a decisive blow by which she fully expected to
+reach and take Paris. We shall never forget the
+feverish hours we lived when came the successive
+reports of the crushing advance of the Teutonic
+hordes so close to the illustrious capital of France.</p>
+
+<p>For a while, it seemed to be&mdash;and really it
+was&mdash;a renewal of the first terrific invasion of
+northern France, in 1914. Fortunately, it was
+Providentially decreed that the second onslaught
+was to meet with a second Marne disaster. The
+Huns were forced to retire after a tremendous loss
+of men and war materials, the allied armies, brilliantly
+led and fighting heroically, redeeming all
+the lost territory and, at the moment I am writing,
+moving steadily towards the German frontier.</p>
+
+<p>The great good luck of the Allies, treasonably
+sacrificed by the Russian bolchevikis terrorist government,
+was the solemn entry of the United States
+into the European conflict.</p>
+
+<p>Preparing for the grand effort which she confidently
+expected would be final, Germany rashly
+decided to resume her barbarous submarine campaign,
+positively determined to criminally violate
+all the principles of International Law regulating
+warfare on the seas. That outrageous decision
+was her fatal doom.</p>
+
+<p>Its direct result was to bring the American
+Republic into the war. And then the whole world
+was called upon to witness, with unbounded delight,
+the very impressive spectacle of millions of
+fighting free men being successfully transported
+over the sea, and landed on the French soil, to join<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
+the grand army which, for the last four years, had
+been resisting the full might of the autocratic
+forces.</p>
+
+<p>However difficult it is to foretell what the
+political developments of the present deplorable
+Russian situation will be, still it is not illusory to
+believe that, history once more repeating itself, the
+present sanguinary Russian regime will hasten its
+well deserved ignominious downfall by the very
+brutal excesses it multiplies in its delirious tyranny.
+There are too many elements of the immense
+population of Russia favourable to an
+orderly and sensible government, to suppose that
+they will long fail to gather their strength in order
+to redeem their country's honour, and to remove
+from power the traitors who are the shame of their
+fair land. When the infallible reaction sets in,
+it will increase the more in momentum that it will
+have been longer repressed by foul means.</p>
+
+<p>The most important point of the present
+Russian situation to consider is that of the best
+initiative the Allies could, and ought to, take respecting
+the military question.</p>
+
+<p>Many are of opinion that it would be possible,
+for the Allies, to help Russia out of the present
+difficulties by an armed support. Such views have
+been more especially expressed in the United
+States. Could they, or can they be carried out?
+I must say that in a large measure I share the
+opinion of those who would give an affirmative
+answer to the question.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is well known that the matter has been
+most seriously considered by the Allies, and a
+favourable solution seems on the way of a
+satisfactory realization.</p>
+
+<p>To the armed intervention of the Allies in
+Russia, following closely upon the infamous Brest-Litovsk
+peace treaty, there was a very serious
+obstacle of German creation.</p>
+
+<p>It was evident, at the very start, that if intervention
+there was to be, the one Ally to play the
+most important part in the great undertaking
+would be Japan.</p>
+
+<p>The British statesmen who, several years ago,
+brought about the treaty of alliance between Great
+Britain and Japan have deserved much from the
+Empire and from the world generally. Surely
+they had a clear insight of the future. True to her
+treaty obligations Japan at once sided with Great
+Britain in the war. All those who have closely
+followed the trend of events since the outbreak of
+the hostilities, know how much Japan has done to
+assist in chasing the German military and mercantile
+fleets from the high seas, more especially
+from the Pacific ocean. Canada owes her a debt of
+gratitude for the protection she has afforded our
+western British Columbia coast from the raids of
+German war ships.</p>
+
+<p>Foreseeing that the proximity of Japan to
+eastern Russia was an inducement for the Allies to
+decide upon an armed intervention which, starting
+from Siberia, might roll westward over the
+broad lands leading back to the European eastern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
+war front, Germany lost no time in trying to poison
+Russian public opinion against the Japanese.
+Her numerous representatives and agents told the
+Russians that if they allowed Japan to send her
+army on Russian territory, they would be doomed
+to fall under Japanese sway. They recalled the
+still recent Russo-Japanese war, amplifying the
+supposed aims of Japan so as to stir up the national
+feelings of the Russians. Such a cry, assiduously
+and widely spread, was no doubt a dangerous
+one.</p>
+
+<p>Under those circumstances, Japan wisely decided
+to remain in the expectation of further developments
+before moving. She took the safe stand
+that she would intervene only upon the request of
+the Russians themselves, pledging her word of
+honour that her only purpose would be to free
+Russia from German domination, and that she
+would withdraw from Russian territory as soon as
+complete Russian independence would have been
+restored and the treacherous Teutonic aims foiled.</p>
+
+<p>Evidences are increasing in number and importance
+that the Huns' propaganda in Russia
+against Japan is being successfully counteracted
+by the good sense of the people, realizing how much
+their vital national interests have been trampled
+upon by Germany in imposing her peace conditions
+on their country betrayed by the bolchevikis rulers.</p>
+
+<p>An armed Allied force has been sent to, and
+has been, for some weeks, operating, in Siberia so
+far with commendable results.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>For one, I have most at heart an expectation
+which I would be most happy to see realized. It
+seems to me that there ought to be a chance, nay
+more, a possibility, for the Allies to organize,
+between this day and next spring, a strongly supported
+intervention in Russia. In that event,
+Japan of course, would take the lead. She could
+rapidly send to help the Russians to resume their
+part in the war against Germany at least a million
+of men; two millions if they were needed. As a
+guarantee of Japan's good faith, the Allies, more
+especially the United States, could send over
+contingents to Siberia.</p>
+
+<p>There is no doubt whatever that so supported,
+the revulsion of Russian public feeling, once set in
+motion, would soon overwhelm the bolchevikis.
+A sensible and patriotic government, once at the
+helm of the state, could easily and rapidly reorganize
+a powerful army out of the numerous available
+millions. The financial aspect of the question
+would certainly be the most difficult for Russia to
+meet, after the exhaustive strain she has had to
+bear. But however great their moneyed effort,
+the United States could yet do a great deal to help
+Russia financially.</p>
+
+<p>Will the hopes of so many be realized, and will
+Russia, resuming her place of honour in the glorious
+ranks of the Allies, be found battling once
+more with them when together they will finally
+crush the German tyrannical militarism? God
+only knows, and time will tell.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXVII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Last Peace Proposals.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>I was writing the last pages of this work when
+the surprising news was flashed over the cable that
+Austria-Hungary had taken the initiative of suggesting
+peace discussion, which proposition she
+had communicated to all the belligerents, to the
+neutral governments and even to the Holy See.
+Without delay the rumour proved to be true. The
+very next day the full text of Austria's communication
+was published all over the world.</p>
+
+<p>I have read it with great care and, I confess,
+with profound amazement.</p>
+
+<p>From several stand-points, this document is
+astonishing and weighty: astonishing as it reveals
+more than ever before the astuteness of the inspiration
+which dictated it; weighty because it
+derives its importance from one of the most serious
+situation of the world's affairs ever recorded
+in History.</p>
+
+<p>It is difficult to suppose that the Austrian
+Government really expected that their move would
+be considered as the outcome of their own initiative.
+Not the hand, but the sword&mdash;the dominating
+sword&mdash;behind the Throne is clearly visible.</p>
+
+<p>The carefully drafted document, issued from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
+Vienna, was evidently dictated from Berlin. It is
+stamped with the Teutonic seal.</p>
+
+<p>After the experience of the last four years&mdash;I
+can safely say of the last half century as well&mdash;over
+credulous is he who believes that, swayed as
+she has been by her overpowering northern neighbour,
+Austria would have dared to address such a
+proposition to the Allies if she had not been asked
+by Germany to do so.</p>
+
+<p>It is rather amusing to read the news cabled
+from Amsterdam, Holland, on the 20th of September,
+that an official communication issued in
+Berlin said that the German Ambassador in
+Vienna that day presented Germany's reply to the
+recent Austro-Hungarian peace note. The purport
+of the note was that Germany agreed to participate
+in the proposed exchange of views. This is
+indeed high class cynicism.</p>
+
+<p>The document would certainly call for somewhat
+lengthy and strong comments, but they can
+be dispensed with after the curt, sharp and decisive
+reply it has elicited from those it was intended to
+seduce and deceive.</p>
+
+<p>President Wilson was the first to answer a
+positive, a formidable NO, which, thundered out
+from Washington, was echoed with equal force in
+London, Paris and Rome. So that the astute attempt
+to deter the Allies from the glorious course
+they were forced to adopt by Germany, and by
+Austria herself, was doomed to failure, and bound
+to meet with the contempt it deserved.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But a few remarks expressing the retort that
+strikes one's mind on reading the Austrian communication,
+are in order and had better be made.
+The whole stress of the document is that peace
+should be restored as soon as possible on account
+of the sacrifices and sufferings war nowadays entail,
+and in conformity with the unanimous wishes
+of the peoples engaged in the conflict.</p>
+
+<p>Did Austria ever suppose that, when she addressed
+that sadly famous and outrageous ultimatum
+to Servia, dated the 23rd of July, 1914, which
+she well knew would bring about the cataclysm
+she now feigns to deplore&mdash;and which Germany
+and herself were longing for&mdash;the war would be
+only a child's play, a game of golf, or something of
+the kind? Was Austria at that time cherishing
+the kind feelings of the German Kronprinz
+who, on being asked by an American lady, in a
+social event, at Berlin, why he was so desirous of
+seeing a great war, replied that "<i>it was only for
+the fun of the thing</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>That war, when once declared, would have
+terrible consequences, would cost millions of dear
+lives, would cripple many more millions for the
+rest of their earthly days, would cost innumerable
+millions&mdash;even billions&mdash;of hard earned money,
+would destroy an immense amount of accumulated
+wealth, would delay for years the onward march of
+Humanity towards more and more prosperous
+destinies, was not only long foreseen before it
+broke out, but was positively known to be pregnant
+with all such disasters.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But what was not foreseen, not known, nor
+imagined as at all possible, after nearly twenty
+centuries of Christianity, was that, war being on,
+Germany, the Power responsible for it, guilty of
+the crime of having let loose the frightful hurricane,
+would multiply the horrors inseparable from
+military operations, with unconceivable barbarous
+acts condemned by all international, moral and
+Divine laws.</p>
+
+<p>It was not foreseen, nor supposed possible,
+that heroism would be challenged by murder, that
+the glorious defenders of their country's rights
+would have to fight against sanguinary savages
+obeying the barbarian orders of a modern Attila.</p>
+
+<p>It was not foreseen that hundreds of children,
+women, old men, wounded soldiers, would be assassinated
+on the open sea and sent to their eternal
+watery graves.</p>
+
+<p>So far as the horrors of regular warfare were
+concerned, they were, as I have just said, very well
+known. And was it not on account of this knowledge
+that Great Britain and France had exhausted
+all their efforts in favour of the maintenance of
+peace?</p>
+
+<p>Was it not out of this knowledge that England
+had, for more than twenty years, implored the
+Berlin Government to agree at least to partial
+disarmament, to discontinue, or, at the least, to
+reduce war ship building operations?</p>
+
+<p>When Austria, bowing herself down to the
+ground under the German tyrannical lash, unjustly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
+and cruelly declared war against weak
+Servia, she knew what the horrors of the conflict
+could not fail to be. How is it that at that
+time she was not moved by the sympathetic
+feelings expressed in her recent appeal for peace
+negotiations?</p>
+
+<p>How is it that Austria, and her inspiring
+angel, Germany, are getting so nervous about the
+misfortunes of war, just at the time when they
+are forced to admit that they are utterly unable
+to realize the aims for which they brought on the
+frightful struggle?</p>
+
+<p>How is it that those who could order with
+clear conscience and fiendish delight the violation
+of Belgium guaranteed neutrality, the sinking of
+the Lusitania and so many other ships carrying
+non-combatants, children, women and old men, the
+murder of so many innocent victims, the Belgian
+deportations, the destruction of the monuments of
+art&mdash;the work of human genius&mdash;are suddenly
+moved to pity just as they see the hand writing on
+the wall warning them that their days of foul
+enjoyments are at end?</p>
+
+<p>How is it that the voice who dictated the following
+sentence was not silenced and choked by
+the abominable lie it contains? How is it that the
+hand that wrote it was not instantly dried up at
+the impudent falsehood it expresses?</p>
+
+<p>Austria's official communication says in
+part:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>The Central Powers leave it in no doubt that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span>
+they are only waging a war of defence for the
+integrity and the security of their territories.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>But why is it that the Central Empires
+are now only waging a defensive war, if it is not
+because after having opened the game with the
+certainty of crushing their opponents by the tremendous
+power of their formidable military organization,
+they are getting beaten and overpowered
+by the unrivalled heroism called forth by
+their criminal attempt at destroying weak nations
+and enslaving Humanity?</p>
+
+<p>The Austrian and German Governments wilfully
+forget that the important point is not to
+consider who are the belligerents that are <span class="smcap">NOW</span>
+forced by the fortune of arms to wage a defensive
+struggle. It is to ascertain who started the conflict
+of an <span class="smcap">OFFENSIVE</span> war.</p>
+
+<p>To that question, the voice of the truly civilized
+world has answered with no uncertain sound.
+It was given, and ever since most energetically
+emphasized, the very day the first Austrian shot
+was fired at Belgrade, the first thundering German
+gun and the first German soldier ordered to cross
+over the Belgian frontier.</p>
+
+<p>The Austrian tentative peace document pretends
+"<i>that all peoples, on whatever side they may
+be fighting, long for a speedy end to the bloody
+struggle</i>."</p>
+
+<p>This is so evidently true that the writer of the
+communication might very properly have dispensed
+with asserting it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But have the Austrian and the German Governments
+forgotten that the peoples were equally
+longing for the maintenance of peace during the
+many years of intense war preparation prior to the
+outbreak of the hostilities in 1914?</p>
+
+<p>If they are not yet aware of it, the Central
+Empires must be taught that the Allied nations
+have another longing than that for peace, to which
+they have given precedence and for which they will
+continue to fight strenuously until it is fully gratified.
+They long for an honourable, a just and
+lasting peace. They long to see once more the old
+landmarks of Civilization and Political Liberty
+emerging safe and radiant from the waves of
+Teutonic Barbarism. They long, and most earnestly,
+for peace restored under such conditions as
+will put an end to extravagant, ruinous and autocratic
+militarism, which will henceforth relieve
+the peoples from the drastic obligation of maintaining,
+at a cost more and more crushing, an ever
+increasing military organization for fear of being
+suddenly subjugated by an ambitious foe bent on
+dominating the world.</p>
+
+<p>Using the very words of the most admirable
+speech addressed by President Wilson to the
+United States Congress, on the 11th of February
+last, the Allied Nations long for a peace which
+will provide "<i>that peoples and provinces are no
+longer to be bartered about from sovereignty to
+sovereignty as if they were mere chattels and
+pawns in a game, even the great game now for ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
+discredited of the balance of power; but that every
+territorial settlement involved in this war must be
+made in the interest and for the benefit of the
+populations concerned and not as a part of any
+mere adjustment or compromise of claims amongst
+rival states</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The Allied peoples are longing for a peace by
+which "<i>all well defined national aspirations shall
+be accorded the utmost satisfaction that can be accorded
+them without introducing new or perpetuating
+old elements of discord, and antagonism
+that would be likely in time to break the peace of
+Europe and consequently of the world</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The <i>pacifists</i> of the Allied nations who have,
+like the Nationalist leader and his henchmen in
+the Province of Quebec, clamoured for peace by
+compromise, must have had a few hours of delightful
+enjoyment after reading Austria's communication.
+It is evidently the echo of their oft repeated
+views and has been carefully drafted to stir them
+to further exertions in favour of a settlement
+which will gratify their ill disguised Teutonic
+sympathies.</p>
+
+<p>Austria's document is a plea intended to be
+strong for peace by negotiations irrespective of the
+war situation and its probable result.</p>
+
+<p>This is the kind of peace dear to the heart of
+the Nationalist leader and his friends. The newspaper
+"<i>Le Devoir</i>" is their daily organ in
+Montreal. A Sunday paper called "<i>Le Nationaliste</i>"
+is the weekly edition of the daily organ.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>By what mysterious inspiration was "<i>Le
+Nationaliste</i>" able to forestall the publication of
+the Austrian peace document by an article in its
+issue of Sunday, the 13th of August, which summarizes
+the leading reasons given by the Government
+of Vienna to induce the Allied Governments
+to agree "<i>to a confidential and unbinding discussion</i>"
+of the conditions of peace, "<i>at a neutral
+meeting place</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Since the official publication of the document,
+our Nationalists, who had been subdued by the
+Order-in-Council tightening the censure of disloyal
+writings and speaking, and reduced to the necessity
+of merely whispering their fond hopes of an
+early peace which would relieve the Central Empires,
+Turkey and Bulgaria from the deserved
+chastisement of their crimes, are getting again
+more outspoken in the expression of their views
+and of their Teutonic proclivities. The street
+corner propaganda is being resumed with more
+discreet vigour than formerly when loud talk was
+considered safe. New efforts, better guarded
+against a compromising responsibility, to instil the
+virus in the body politic, are tried over again.
+They creep in a few newspapers well known for
+their hardly disguised hostility to the cause of the
+Allies and to the participation of Canada to its
+defence. All this under the hypocritical cover of a
+longing for the restoration of peace and the cessation
+of the sacrifices the country is still making
+for the victory for which all loyal British subjects
+are praying and doing their best to secure.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Germany has prudently&mdash;cowardly is the more
+proper word&mdash;remained behind, satisfied, for the
+time being, to play the part of prompter to her
+vassal, Austria. But, however desirous of remaining
+free to repudiate publicly, if considered more
+advisable, Austria's move, she could not help
+showing her hand. She betrayed herself by the
+peace offer she has had the outrageous audacity to
+make to Belgium she has barbarously crucified.</p>
+
+<p>And what are the terms of this astonishing
+proposal? I will mention only two of them.</p>
+
+<p>First: "<span class="smcap">That Belgium shall remain neutral
+until the end of the war</span>."</p>
+
+<p>That Germany should have decided to address
+such a demand to Belgium is truly inconceivable.
+Has she forgotten the days when Belgium was
+neutral, and determined to remain so, under the
+joint protection of England, France and Germany,
+bound by solemn treaty to uphold Belgian independence?
+Does she not realize that if Belgium
+has not been neutral up to this day, she has been
+the cause of it in tearing to pieces the <i>scrap of
+paper</i> which should have been the sacred shield of
+the nation she criminally martyred? After having
+violated Belgium's frontier, overrun her territory,
+destroyed her happy homes, murdered by
+thousands her children, her women, her mothers,
+her old men, ransomed her to the tune of hundreds
+of millions, without granting her liberty, shattered
+her monuments of arts, she has the impudence to
+ask her to betray those who hastened to her defence,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
+and who are pledged to require the restoration of
+her complete independence with due reparation as
+one of the essential conditions of peace. A more
+brazen outrage cannot be imagined. It is on a par
+with that addressed to England whose neutrality
+Germany wanted to secure at the cost of her honour
+in betraying France.</p>
+
+<p>What was the true object of Germany in making
+such a proposition? Was it not to protect
+herself against the increasing likelihood that the
+Allied army would soon be able to enter on German
+soil by passing through Belgium. But in that
+event, so much to be hoped for, there would be that
+difference that whilst Germany invaded Belgium
+in sheer violation of her solemn treaty obligations,
+France, England and the United States would
+honour themselves in turning the guilty invaders
+out of the soil they have sullied by their hideous
+presence and their horrible savageness.</p>
+
+<p>The second German peace proposition to Belgium
+reads as follows:&mdash;"<i>That Belgium shall use
+her good offices to secure the return of the German
+colonies</i>."</p>
+
+<p>And such a request is made by the Power that,
+in spite of the treaties it was in honour bound to
+respect, ordered the German army to conquer
+Belgium in a dastardly rush, in order to reach
+France at once and crush her out of the conflict
+before she could be helped by Great Britain and
+her Colonies! Incredible indeed!</p>
+
+<p>Germany and Austria knew very well that
+their proposals would be indignantly and contemptuously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
+rejected. But they had a twofold
+object in making them. First, they wanted to stir
+up their own peoples to further efforts in carrying
+on the struggle by throwing upon the Allies the
+apparent responsibility of refusing even a confidential
+and unbinding discussion of the question of
+the restoration of peace.</p>
+
+<p>Second, they were anxious to make a strong
+bid for the support of the <i>pacifists</i> of the Allied
+countries.</p>
+
+<p>How much will they succeed in galvanizing
+the enthusiasm of their peoples for another grand
+effort, remains to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>So far as their attempt to move our <i>pacifists</i>
+to exert themselves in favour of a peace by compromise,
+it has already met with a complete failure.
+Our Nationalist <i>pacifists</i> are getting so few
+and so far between, that they will most likely once
+more disappear and give up the street propaganda.</p>
+
+<p>On completing the reading of the official communication
+of Austria, President Wilson at once
+gave his reply, authorizing the Secretary of State
+to issue the following statement, dated the 16th of
+September and published broadcast on the next
+day:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I am authorized by the President to state
+that the following will be the reply of this Government
+to the Austro-Hungarian note proposing an
+unofficial conference of belligerents</i>:</p>
+
+<p>"'<i>The Government of the United States feels
+that there is only one reply which it can make to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
+the suggestion of the Imperial Austro-Hungarian
+Government. It has repeatedly and with entire
+candor stated the terms upon which the United
+States would consider peace and can and will entertain
+no proposal for a conference upon a matter
+concerning which it has made its position and
+purpose so plain.'</i>"</p>
+
+<p>On the eleventh day of February, 1918, President
+Wilson, instead of addressing as usual a
+message to the two Houses, went personally to
+meet the Senate and the House of Representatives,
+in Congress assembled, and, in a most admirable
+speech, replied to the then recent peace utterances
+of Count von Hertling, the German Chancellor,
+and Count Czernin, the Austro-Hungarian Foreign
+Minister, fully explaining the only principles by
+which the Government of the United States would
+be guided when peace negotiations do take place.
+This most important statement is published as an
+appendix to this book. It is worthy of the great
+statesman who made it, and deserves the most
+attentive reading on account of the lofty views and
+noble principles it expresses, of the large issues it
+involves and of the ardent patriotism it inspires.</p>
+
+<p>The prime ministers of Great Britain and
+France have signified their entire assent to the energetic
+stand taken by President Wilson in the
+above quoted reply to Austria's peace communication.</p>
+
+<p>The whole British Empire, France, the United
+States and Italy are a unit in refusing to consider
+for a moment Austria's cynical peace proposals.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Belgium, from the cross of martyrdom to
+which the Huns' barbarity has nailed her, has
+summoned all her wonderful courage, in her long
+and cruel agony, to repudiate with scorn the infamous
+German proposition to betray those who
+are pledged to be her saviours.</p>
+
+<p>Consequently, the peace offensive, so cleverly
+planned by Germany and opened by her contemptible
+Austrian satellite, has met with as dismal a
+failure as the military offensive launched on the
+twenty-first day of March last, with such superior
+numerical forces, and unbounded confidence that
+this gigantic effort would at last smash the Allies'
+resistance.</p>
+
+<p>Just as the Teutonic hordes are hurled back
+by the matchless strategy of the Chief Commander
+of the Allied armies and their incomparable heroism,
+the Austrian peace offensive communication
+is returned to their authors a miserable "<i>scrap of
+paper</i>".</p>
+
+<p>And the grand and noble fight will go on until
+Germany is brought to her knees and forced to
+recognize that "<span class="smcap">the resources of Civilization are
+not yet exhausted</span>."</p>
+
+<p>The modern Huns are doomed to a very sad
+awakening from their dream of universal domination.</p>
+
+<p>Germany has challenged the world to a deadly
+struggle. She must bear the consequences, however
+sad they may be. Four years ago, anticipating a
+crushing victory, she exulted over the early fall of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
+her enemies, madly certain that in a few weeks
+they would kneel down crying for mercy. She
+trusted her all to the fortunes of war. They will
+at last go against her. She would have been
+cruelly triumphant. Will she be cowardly in
+defeat?</p>
+
+<p>Austria has blindly served Germany's criminal
+ambition. She must abide by the result of her
+blindness.</p>
+
+<p>Both carried away by passion, they forgot that
+there would be a terrible reckoning day for their
+atrocious crime. It is near at hand, and they cannot
+avoid being called to a severe account for their
+foul deeds.</p>
+
+<p>Kaiser Wilhelm II will soon find out that
+Divine Justice is very different from what he fondly
+believed. He will receive the proper answer to
+his blasphemous appeals to the Almighty to bless
+with success his guilty ambition to dominate the
+world. He will learn that from above the innocent
+victims whom he has mercilessly sacrificed to
+his lust of autocratic power, have cried for vengeance
+and have been heard. He bears the guilt
+of blood and sacrilegious war. He shall receive
+his deserts in due time.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXVIII.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Necessary Peace Conditions.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>It can be positively affirmed that, taking no
+account whatever of the treasonable views of the
+<i>defeatists</i>, and no more of the disloyal opinions of
+the <i>pacifists</i>&mdash;because they only deserve absolute
+contempt and reprobation&mdash;the peoples called the
+Allies have been long ago, are now, and will remain
+to the last, unanimous on the essential <span class="smcap">Peace
+Conditions</span> without which all the sacrifices they
+have made and are making would be a total
+irreparable loss.</p>
+
+<p>It has been proclaimed with the highest authority,
+and universally approved, that henceforth
+<span class="smcap">Peace must be just and durable</span>. Such it should
+always have been.</p>
+
+<p>The principle is no doubt very easily enunciated.
+It is applauded by all and every where,
+even by Germany and Austria. The great, the insuperable,
+difficulty is to agree upon <span class="smcap">SUCH CONDITIONS</span>
+as will <span class="smcap">PERMANENTLY</span>, and to the <span class="smcap">COMPLETE
+SATISFACTION OF ALL CONCERNED</span>, bless the world
+with the maintenance of a <span class="smcap">TRULY JUST AND DURABLE
+PEACE</span>.</p>
+
+<p>It is better to admit at once that the very
+moment the question is considered, the presently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
+contending belligerents are as far apart as the two
+poles of the earthly globe.</p>
+
+<p>It is extremely easy to prove it.</p>
+
+<p>No one now ignores&mdash;or at least should fail to
+realize&mdash;what kind of peace would be accepted by
+Germany as <span class="smcap">JUST AND DURABLE</span>.</p>
+
+<p>To be satisfied with a settlement of peace,
+Germany would require the sanction by her opponents
+of her right to maintain, develop and
+strengthen her <span class="smcap">MILITARISM</span> so threatening to the
+universe.</p>
+
+<p>At the time she was exulting over the great
+and crushing victory which she was sure to have
+within her powerful grasp, in debating with her
+vanquished enemies, the conditions of peace, Germany,
+elated as she would certainly have been by
+her triumph, would have positively claimed the
+annexation of Belgium and of all the northern part
+of France by right of conquest. She would not
+have been less exacting than she was, in 1870,
+when in the face of indignant but powerless Europe,
+she stripped France of her two fine and
+wealthy provinces, Alsace and Lorraine.</p>
+
+<p>She would have claimed the right to supersede
+England as mistress of the seas,&mdash;German
+supremacy replacing the British and henceforth
+ruling the waves.</p>
+
+<p>She would have claimed the annexation of
+Russian Poland, and that of Servia to Austria.</p>
+
+<p>She would have claimed the recognition of her
+imperial paramount power over the Balkans,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
+which she would have united under the direct
+sway of her ally and vassal, Bulgaria.</p>
+
+<p>Victorious over all continental Europe and
+equally over Great Britain, she would most likely
+have claimed the cession to her of the great British
+autonomous Colonies for the purpose of pouring
+over to Canada, Australia and South Africa
+her increasingly overflowing population. And to
+better achieve that most coveted result, she would
+have destroyed at once the free institutions they
+enjoy under the British Crown to replace them by
+her autocratic rule.</p>
+
+<p>In one of his illogical pamphlets, abounding
+in extravagant views, the Nationalist leader has
+denied with scorn that Germany had ever intended
+to acquire Canada by force of arms. He supported
+his assertion by the declaration made to the
+contrary by a German Minister. But he failed to
+explain that this German public man said so only
+when the Berlin Government had fully realized
+that they could not succeed in breaking asunder
+the mighty British Empire. The Teutonic declaration
+was hypocritical, intended to deceive, and to
+supply our Nationalist "<i>pacifists</i>" with what
+would seem a plausible argument to cover their
+sympathies for the gentle cause of the tender
+hearted Huns. It is very easy to disclaim any
+aspiration to possess what one is sure never to get.</p>
+
+<p>Triumphant Germany would have bargained
+very hard to lay her powerful hand on the great
+Indian Empire.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She would have dismembered Russia, as she
+has effectively done&mdash;at least temporarily&mdash;by the
+infamous Brest-Litovsk treaty.</p>
+
+<p>She would have strongly supported Austria
+in destroying for ever Italy's legitimate aspirations
+to round off her national territory by the
+annexation of that part of Austria's possessions
+called <i>The Trentino</i>, which is hers by nature.</p>
+
+<p>Following the precedent she had laid down, in
+1870, after her triumph over France, Germany
+would undoubtedly have exacted from her fallen
+enemies, billions and billions of dollars as
+indemnities of war.</p>
+
+<p>And Germany, with such a peace treaty imposed
+to her despairing enemies with her sanguinary
+sword at their throat ready to murder them&mdash;as
+she did at Brest-Litovsk&mdash;would have swayed
+the world with her <span class="smcap">UNIVERSAL DOMINATION</span>.</p>
+
+<p>But I hear&mdash;I must say without being the
+least frightened&mdash;the thundering clamour of the
+Nationalist leader crying that Germany does not
+NOW claim such peace conditions as above
+enumerated.</p>
+
+<p>Very true, and why?</p>
+
+<p>Only because she is no longer able to exact
+and impose them!</p>
+
+<p>In 1914, Germany being victorious over all
+Europe, England included, after a four months
+overpowering campaign, as she expected, would
+certainly not have been satisfied with less than the
+conditions just specified. They were the goal for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
+which she had been strenuously preparing for
+fifty years, her success, in 1870, being the preliminary
+opening of her conquests.</p>
+
+<p>To bring Germany to renounce&mdash;temporarily&mdash;to
+her fond hopes of domination, it has required
+the heroic efforts and the untold sacrifices, in men
+and money, which Great Britain, her Colonial Empire,
+France, Italy, Belgium, Japan, betrayed Russia,
+and, <span class="smcap">LAST BUT NOT LEAST</span>, the United States,
+have made during more than the last four years
+and which they are pledged to make until a
+successful issue.</p>
+
+<p>The kind of peace as above would have been
+what can be very properly called&mdash;Germany's
+<span class="smcap">"OFFENSIVE PEACE</span>." In Germany's opinion this
+would have been the just and durable peace dear to
+her so kind heart.</p>
+
+<p>But having failed to carry the tremendous
+victory for which she had so powerfully prepared,
+Germany would NOW likely agree to negotiate
+what can be as properly called a "<span class="smcap">DEFENSIVE
+PEACE</span>."</p>
+
+<p>By "<span class="smcap">DEFENSIVE PEACE</span>", I mean Germany negotiating
+NOW with her opponents with the determination
+to repulse, as much as possible, their
+just claims, to prevent them to the utmost limit to
+reap the legitimate fruits of their admirable
+endeavours, to thwart the realization of their
+noble aspirations to protect the world hereafter
+against her guilty and barbarous militarism.</p>
+
+<p>Germany&mdash;I mean, of course, the Teutonic Imperial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
+Government&mdash;has yet given no sign of a
+change of mind on the vital points at stake in the
+consideration of the restoration of peace. If the
+fortune of arms was once more to favour her
+armies, her blood stained for Colours, she would, to-morrow,
+be as mercilessly exacting as she would
+have been, in 1914, had she triumphantly entered
+Paris inside of two months after her challenge to
+the civilized world.</p>
+
+<p>Germany is surely not a convert to sound
+Christian principles. She will not repent for her
+crimes. She does not feel the tortures of remorse
+at her foul deeds. She would certainly be a relapser,
+in the near future, if the Allies, unwisely
+heeding the clamour of the "<i>pacifists</i>", imprudently
+gratified her ACTUAL wish for a peace
+compromise.</p>
+
+<p>And before long Humanity would be forced to
+go again, in much aggravated conditions, over the
+way of the cross she has been threading along for
+nearly five years, steeped to the knees in the blood
+of millions of her heroic sons, with a reorganized
+Germany this time straining all the Huns' accumulated
+power to lead Civilization to her Calvary.</p>
+
+<p>With God's grace, that shall not be. Five
+years of martyrdom have deserved and will receive
+<span class="smcap">JUSTICE</span>.</p>
+
+<p>After having explained what Germany, from
+her stand-point, considers a <span class="smcap">Just and Durable
+Peace</span>, let us see what such a peace means from
+the Allies' stand-point.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Every free man has a right to his own opinion.
+However, he must never forget that Liberty
+of opinion does not mean&mdash;never meant&mdash;absence
+of knowledge, ignorance of the basic principles of
+political society.</p>
+
+<p>I do not hesitate to expound what the real
+conditions of the coming peace MUST BE to make
+it JUST AND DURABLE.</p>
+
+<p>Let the inveterate opponents of Political
+Liberty say what they please, it is undeniable that
+the present war has rapidly developed into a deadly
+conflict between Autocratic Power and Political
+Freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Consequently a peace patched up to uphold
+Autocracy and destroy free institutions could not
+be <span class="smcap">Just</span> and <span class="smcap">Durable</span>.</p>
+
+<p>Under the dominating circumstances of the
+present struggle, to bring it to a satisfactory conclusion,
+peace, to be Just and Durable, must be
+restored with all the necessary guarantees that
+Political Liberty will hereafter be safe against
+the foul attempts of military despotism.</p>
+
+<p>This <i>sine qua non</i> condition is general in its
+nature and equally interests all the contending
+Allied nations.</p>
+
+<p>Let us now consider the peace conditions
+which, though of general importance so far as they
+are NECESSARY for its permanency, are essential
+from the particular stand-point of each one of
+the Allies separately.</p>
+
+<p>I shall begin the review by considering the
+particular case of Great Britain.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>To be <span class="smcap">Just</span> and <span class="smcap">Durable</span> for the British Empire,
+the future peace treaty must not be so drafted
+as to supersede British sea supremacy by that of
+Germany.</p>
+
+<p>The question of what is to be done with the
+great German African Colonies, conquered by the
+South African Dominion army, is next in importance
+to England's sea supremacy, from the British
+Empire stand-point.</p>
+
+<p>Germany, very far from foreseeing what was
+to happen, deliberately opened that question when
+she precipitated the present conflict by coercing
+Austria to crush weak Servia, herself challenging
+Russia and France, and thundering at Belgium
+in violation of her most sacred treaty obligations.</p>
+
+<p>Great Britain, as in honour bound, standing
+by Belgium, was forced to fight with Germany.
+The great autonomous Colonies nobly rallying to
+her support, the South African Dominion, Boers
+and British admirably united for the purpose,
+undertook for her share to conquer the German
+African Colonies. She has grandly succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>If, as we all hope, the Allies are finally victorious,
+would it be just to relinquish Great
+Britain's right over the German African Colonies,
+more especially if the South African Dominion is
+strongly opposed&mdash;as there is no doubt she will be&mdash;to
+their retrocession?</p>
+
+<p>And what about Belgium and France? No
+peace treaty could be called <span class="smcap">Just</span> nor could be
+<span class="smcap">Durable</span>, which would not completely restore Belgium's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
+independence; which would not oblige
+Germany to indemnify Belgium for the damages
+wrought upon her, more especially those which
+were inflicted to the Belgian weak but heroic
+nation out of sheer barbarous destruction.</p>
+
+<p>To France, the northern part of her presently
+occupied territory, together with Alsace and Lorraine,
+<span class="smcap">MUST</span> be restored.</p>
+
+<p>The Germans are loudly crying that in exacting
+the restoration to France of the provinces of
+Alsace and Lorraine, the Allies would be partly
+dismembering the German Empire.</p>
+
+<p>Quite so, and why not? Does the victim of
+the highway man lose the right to claim his property
+from the ruffian who has stolen it by brutal
+force?</p>
+
+<p>In 1870, under the circumstances all know,
+Prussia imposed upon France the cession of
+Alsace and Lorraine, rounding off the territory of
+the new German Empire.</p>
+
+<p>France naturally smarted under the cruelty
+of the condition which she could not help accepting.
+For many years she cherished the hope that
+the lost provinces would ultimately return to the
+parental home.</p>
+
+<p>But it is well known how <span class="smcap">TIME</span> is an efficient
+cure of many ills. France's yearning for the restoration
+of Alsace and Lorraine had gradually
+subsided. The general opinion was spreading that
+the Alsace-Lorraine matter was more and more
+becoming a finally settled question.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Before the war, no Power, European or American,
+would have countenanced France in any
+attempt to break peace to run her chance of reconquering
+Alsace and Lorraine. France knew it
+perfectly well and at last bowed to her fate.</p>
+
+<p>Who has reopened the closed question of
+Alsace and Lorraine? Is it not Germany herself?</p>
+
+<p>Great Britain, Russia, the United States and
+Italy, who would not have supported France in an
+<span class="smcap">OFFENSIVE WAR</span> with the objective of getting back
+her lost provinces, are now a most determined
+unit in favour of the restoration of Alsace and
+Lorraine to France as a result of the <span class="smcap">DEFENSIVE</span>
+war Germany forced her to wage.</p>
+
+<p>That would be <span class="smcap">Justice</span> pure and simple: the
+peace treaty <span class="smcap">MUST</span> do it.</p>
+
+<p>Germany having run the risk of reopening the
+Alsace-Lorraine acute question, the Allies <span class="smcap">MUST</span>
+close it anew but this time against the Huns.</p>
+
+<p>Germany <span class="smcap">MUST</span> also pay for the devastation
+she has savagely spread in France.</p>
+
+<p>I stand firm for a final settlement of the
+Austro-Italian too long pending question by giving
+to Italy the Trentino territory to which she has
+an evident national claim supported by the best of
+geographical conditions.</p>
+
+<p>Servia's independence <span class="smcap">MUST</span> be once more
+secured, and Poland <span class="smcap">SHOULD</span> be resuscitated.</p>
+
+<p>The United States part in the war is truly a
+grand, a noble one. They have no particular territorial
+interest to serve. Their only object is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
+general public good. They will be the benefactors
+of Humanity in claiming for their Allies the above
+enunciated conditions without which no <span class="smcap">JUST</span> and
+<span class="smcap">DURABLE</span> peace can be expected nor obtained.</p>
+
+<p>It is most important to caution the public
+against the insidious clamours of our <i>"pacifists"</i>,
+trying again to deceive the people by asserting that
+Germany is ready to negotiate for peace on fair
+terms.</p>
+
+<p>The Huns will acquiesce only to such peace
+terms as they will be forced to.</p>
+
+<p>The Allies are better to be guided in consequence
+in their unfaltering determination to
+realize a <span class="smcap">Just</span> and <span class="smcap">Durable</span> peace by a <span class="smcap">Glorious
+Victory</span>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIX.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">CONCLUSION.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>My ardent desire to speak the plain truth and
+only the truth, is just as strong to-day as it was
+when, in concluding my French work, I summarized
+the situation such as it was at the end of the
+year 1916, to show the hard duty incumbent on all
+the Allies, Canada included. It has been perhaps
+still more intensified by the outrageous efforts of
+those amongst us whose sole object has been, since
+the outbreak of the hostilities, to discourage our
+people from the herculean task they had bravely
+undertaken.</p>
+
+<p>Two years have since elapsed&mdash;years full of
+great events, and of untiring heroism on the part
+of the glorious defenders of Justice and Right&mdash;and
+I do not see the slightest reason to modify the
+conclusions I then arrived at as a matter of strict
+duty. Unworthy of public confidence is the man
+who, pandering to the supposed prejudices of his
+countrymen, refrains out of weakness, or of more
+guilty considerations, to tell them what they are
+bound to do for their own country, for their Empire,
+for the world, in the supreme crisis of our
+time.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>True every one is longing for the restoration of
+peace. But few are those who, even before being
+tired of the war, were ready to curb their heads
+under the German yoke, are now praying for a
+compromise between the Allies and their enemies.
+There are some left, it is sad to admit. Everywhere
+they are chased by the indignant public
+opinion daily growing more determined that millions
+of heroes shall not have given their lives in
+vain, that millions of others, wounded on the fields
+of battles, shall not, until the last of them is gone
+for ever, be the betrayed victims of Teutonic
+dastardly ambition.</p>
+
+<p>True, peace is sorely wanted, and would be
+welcomed by the thanksgivings to the Almighty of
+grateful peoples, who have borne with undaunted
+courage such untold and admirable sacrifices to
+uphold their Rights and their Honour. But it cannot
+be sued for by the nations whom Germany
+wanted to enslave by the might of her crushing
+militarism operating under the dictates of a new
+code of International Law of her own barbarous
+creation.</p>
+
+<p>Thank God, the flowing tide of unlimited
+Teutonic ambition let loose over the world, more
+than four years ago, has met with inaccessible summits
+where love of Justice, respect of Right, devotion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span>
+to human Civilization, obedience to Christian
+Law, heroism of sacrifices, were so deeply entrenched,
+that they could not be reached and conquered.
+From this commanding altitude, they
+not only continue to defy the tyrants bent on dominating
+the universe, but they are mightily smashing
+their power.</p>
+
+<p>From the overshadowing point of view which
+cannot be forgotten, or wilfully abandoned,
+nothing has changed since the German Empire, in
+her delirious aspirations, challenged the world to
+the almost superhuman conflict by which she felt
+certain to succeed in realizing her fond dream of
+universal domination.</p>
+
+<p>At the outbreak of the war, ever since, to-day,
+to-morrow, there were, there are and there will be
+but three alternatives to the restoration of
+peace:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1.&mdash;A victorious German peace imposed on
+beaten and cowed belligerents: the peace of the
+"<i>defeatists</i>."</p>
+
+<p>2.&mdash;A peace by compromise, patched up by
+disheartened "<i>pacifists</i>," lured by cunningness,
+winning where force would have failed to succeed,
+to agree to conditions pregnant with all the horrors
+of a new and still greater struggle in the
+near future.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>3.&mdash;A peace the result of the indomitable
+courage and perseverance of all the nations who
+have joined together to put an end to Germany's
+ambition to rule the world, and to destroy the
+instrument created for that iniquitous purpose:
+Prussian militarism.</p>
+
+<p>There could be a fourth alternative to peace,
+but it would be possible only by a miracle which,
+we can grant without hesitation, the world has
+perhaps not yet deserved.</p>
+
+<p>It would be peace restored by the sudden conversion
+of Germany to the practice of sound
+Christian principles, acknowledging how guilty
+she has been, repenting for her crimes, agreeing
+to atone for them as much as possible, and taking
+the unconditional pledge to henceforth behave like
+a civilized nation.</p>
+
+<p>All must admit that there is not the slightest
+hope of such a move from a nation whose autocratic
+Kaiser, answering, in February last, an address
+presented to him by the burgomaster of
+Hamburg, thundered out, in his usual blasting
+manner, that the neighbouring peoples, to enjoy
+the sweetness of Germany's friendship, "<span class="smcap">must
+first recognize the victory of German arms</span>."</p>
+
+<p>As an inducement to the Allies to bow to his
+wishes, he pointed to Germany's achievement in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
+Russia, where a beaten enemy, "<i>perceiving no
+reason for fighting longer</i>," clasped hands with the
+generous Huns. The world has since learned with
+appalling horror with what tender mercy the barbarous
+Teutons reciprocated the grasping of hands
+of defeated Russia, tendered to them by the
+"bolshevikis" traitors.</p>
+
+<p>The Allies had then to select one of the three
+above mentioned alternatives.</p>
+
+<p>They have made their choice and they will
+stick close to it until it is achieved by the victory
+of their arms.</p>
+
+<p>Knowing as they do that the future of their
+peoples, and that of the whole world, are at stake,
+they will not waver in their heroic determination
+to free Humanity from Germany's cruel yoke.</p>
+
+<p>Viewed from the commanding height it requires
+to be worthily appreciated, the joint military
+effort of the Allies offers a truly grand spectacle,
+daily enlarging and getting more gloriously
+magnificent.</p>
+
+<p>All the Allies&mdash;every one of them&mdash;are doing
+their duty and their respective share in the great
+crisis they are pledged to bring to a triumphant
+conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Belgium and Servia were the first to be martyred,
+but the hour of their resurrection is getting
+nearer every day.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>France, the British Empire, the United States,
+Italy, have done and are doing wonders. There
+can, there must be no question of appraising their
+respective merit with the intention of giving more
+credit either to the one or to the other. With the
+greatest possible sincerity, I affirm my humble, but
+positive, opinion that each one of the Allies has
+done and is doing, with overflowing measure, all
+that courage could and can earnestly perform, all
+that patriotism and the noblest national virtues
+can inspire.</p>
+
+<p>France has been heroic to the highest limit.</p>
+
+<p>The British Empire&mdash;Great Britain and her
+Colonies&mdash;has been grand in her unswerving determination
+to fight to a finish.</p>
+
+<p>The great American Republic is putting forth
+a wonderful exhibition of pluck, of strength, of
+boldness, of inexhaustible resources.</p>
+
+<p>Italy has stood nobly with her new friends
+ever since she broke away from the Triple Alliance,
+to escape the dishonour of remaining on good
+terms with the Central Empires in the shameful
+depth of their ignominious course. She has bravely
+gone through days of disaster which she has
+heroically redeemed.</p>
+
+<p>All the Allies, bound together by the most
+admirable unity of purpose, only rivalling in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span>
+might of their respective patriotic effort, having
+nobly <i>"chosen their course upon principle,"</i> can
+never turn back. They must move steadily forward
+until victorious. They are indomitable in their
+decision not to live, under any circumstances, "<i>in
+a world governed by intrigue and force</i>."</p>
+
+
+<p>Echoing the wise and inspiring words addressed
+by President Wilson to Congress, on the
+eleventh of February last, we can affirm that the
+"<i>desire of enlightened men everywhere is for a new
+international order under which reason, justice
+and the common interests of mankind shall prevail.
+Without that new order the world will be
+without peace, and human life will lack tolerable
+conditions of existence and development</i>."</p>
+
+<p>A most encouraging achievement was realized,
+a few months ago, emphasizing to the utmost the
+unity of purpose of the Allies. Every one of them
+have millions of men under arms and at the front.
+It is easily conceived how tremendous is the task
+of properly directing the military operations of
+such immense armies, unprecedented in the whole
+human history. Most patriotically putting aside
+all national susceptibilities, the statesmen governing
+the Allied nations acknowledged the necessity
+of supporting unity of purpose by unity of military
+command. Their decision was heartily approved
+and applauded by all and every where.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is important to note the great difference
+between the standing of the two groups of belligerents
+with regard to the leadership of the
+armies. Whilst the Powers dominated by Germany,
+and fighting with her, are coerced to endure
+the Teutonic military supremacy of command,
+those warring on the side of France have all most
+cordially agreed to the appointment of a Commander-in-Chief
+out of the profound conviction
+that unity of command was more and more becoming
+a necessity for the successful prosecution of
+the war.</p>
+
+<p>Since this most urgent decision has been taken,
+events have surely proved its wisdom and usefulness.
+Evidently, the same as unity of purpose, to
+bear all its fruits, must be wrought out by statesmanship
+of a high order, unity of military command,
+to produce its natural advantages, must be
+exercised with superiority of leadership.</p>
+
+<p>Great statesmen, in a free country, are successful
+in the management of State affairs, just as
+much as they inspire an increasing confidence in
+their political genius, developed by a wide experience,
+honesty of purpose, a constant patriotic
+devotion to the public weal.</p>
+
+<p>Great military leaders can do wonders when
+their achievements are such as to create unbounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span>
+reliance on their ability. Superiority of command,
+proved by victories won in very difficult
+circumstances, is always sure to be rewarded by
+an enlightened enthusiasm permeating the whole
+rank and file of an army, and trebling the strength
+and heroism of every combatant.</p>
+
+<p>Added to the widespread renewal of confidence
+produced by the timely decision of the Allies to
+rely on unity of military command, is the reassuring
+evidence that the Commander-in-Chief to whom
+has been imposed the grand task of leading the
+unified armies to a final and glorious triumph, is
+trusted by all, soldiers and others alike.</p>
+
+<p>The cause for which the Allied nations are
+fighting with so much tenacity and courage being
+that of the salvation of Civilization, threatened by
+a wave of barbarism equal at least to, if not surpassing,
+any to which Humanity has so far survived,
+all must admire the wonderful spectacle
+offered by those millions and millions of men,
+under arms, from so many different countries,
+united, under one command, into a military organization
+which can most properly be called the
+<span class="smcap">grand army of Human Freedom</span>.</p>
+
+<p>It has been said by one who has presided over
+the destinies of the American Republic, as the chief
+of State, that peace must be dictated from Berlin.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span>
+Can we really hope to behold the dawn of such a
+glorious day? It is hardly to be supposed that
+Germany would wait this last extremity to realize
+that she must abandon for ever her dream of
+universal domination, relieve the world from the
+enervating menace of her military terrorism, and
+redeem her past diabolical course by the repentant
+determination to join with her former enemies to
+deserve for Mankind long years of perpetual peace
+with all the Providential blessings of order,
+freedom, truly intellectual, moral and material
+progress.</p>
+
+<p>When the Kaiser ordered his hordes to violate
+Belgium's territory, to overrun France in order to
+crush her out of existence as a military and political
+Power, preparatory to their triumphant march
+to St. Petersburg, in his wild ambition, which he
+made blasphemous by pretending that it was
+divinely inspired, he felt sure that his really wonderful
+army, which he believed was, and would
+remain, matchless, would in a few weeks enter
+Paris.</p>
+
+<p>What a reverse of fortune, what a downfall
+from extravagant expectations, would be a return
+of the tide which, after flowing to the very gates
+of Paris, spreading devastation and crimes all over
+the fair lands it submerged, would ebb, broken and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span>
+powerless, to Berlin, bringing the haughty tyrant
+to his knees before his victors!</p>
+
+<p>If such a day of deliverance is Providentially
+granted the world, having deserved it by an indomitable
+courage in resisting oppression, history
+would again repeat itself but with a different
+result. The French <span class="smcap">"TRICOLORE"</span> would once more
+enter proud Berlin, but this time it would not be
+alone to be hoisted over the conquered capital of
+the modern Huns, scarcely less savage than their
+forefathers. It would be entwined with the <span class="smcap">"Union
+Jack"</span> of Great Britain and Ireland, the <span class="smcap">"Stars
+And Stripes"</span> of the United States, the Colours
+of Italy, and, I add with an inexpressible
+feeling of loyal and national pride, with the
+Dominion Colours so brilliantly glorified by the
+heroism of our Canadian soldiers who have proved
+themselves the equals of the bravest through the
+protracted but ever glorious campaign, unfolded
+with those of Australia and South Africa into the
+glorious flag of the British Empire.</p>
+
+<p>When after the glorious battle of Iena, the
+great Napoleon, who could have ruined for ever
+the rising Prussian monarchy, entered Berlin at
+the head of his victorious legions, the new Cæsar,
+then already the victim of his unlimited ambition,
+represented, though issued from a powerful popular
+movement, triumphant absolutism.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In our days, on entering Berlin, as the final
+act of this wonderful drama, the entwined Colours
+of the Allies would symbolize Human Freedom,
+delivering Germany herself and the whole world
+from autocratic rule.</p>
+
+<p>Such a memorable event taking place, and
+rank with the most remarkable in the world's
+history, the great satisfaction of all those who
+would have contributed to its achievement, would
+be that the joint Colours of the Allies would not be
+raised over Germany's capital to crush the defeated
+nation under despotic cæsarism, but to deliver
+her from autocratic tyrannical rule. Waving
+with dignity over the great Empire they would
+have freed from the thraldom of absolutist militarism,
+they could be welcomed as the promise of
+the renewal, for her as well as for her victorious
+rivals, of the reign of Justice, of Christian precepts,
+of Right, Order and Peace, of honest and
+productive Labour, of science applied to works
+creative of human happiness instead of diverting
+the marvellous resources of the great modern discoveries
+to criminal uses for the calamitous misfortune
+of the peoples.</p>
+
+<p>I will close this work with the expression of
+two of the wishes I have most at heart, cherishing
+the confident hope that they will be realized.</p>
+
+<p>England, France and the United States,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span>
+fighting as they do for the triumph of such a sacred
+cause, should emerge indissolubly united from the
+great struggle they have pledged themselves to
+carry to a successful issue. I cannot conceive that
+so many millions of their heroic defenders will
+have given their lives only for a temporary
+achievement, soon to be forgotten. They will be
+gone for ever. Their sacrifices will be eternal.
+They must bear permanent fruits. United in death,
+buried together in the soil of France flooded with
+their blood, from their glorious graves they will
+implore their surviving countrymen to remain
+shoulder to shoulder in peace as they are in war.
+Their holocaust should be the holy seed from
+which loyal amity ought to grow ever stronger
+between the future generations of their countrymen
+who could not testify in a more eloquent and
+noble way their everlasting gratitude for the
+glorious heritage of permanent freedom they will
+have derived from their heroism.</p>
+
+<p>A most enthusiastic daily witness of the immortal
+deeds of the millions of our brothers, sons
+and friends, fighting with such splendid courage
+in the land of my forefathers for our common
+cause, how often have I, for the last four years,
+ardently vowed to God from the very bottom of
+my heart, deeply moved by the reports of their
+noble achievements, that those who will rest for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span>
+ever in the ground over which they fell heroically,
+may enjoy from above the inspiring spectacle of
+the union for the permanent triumph of Liberty
+and Christian Civilization, of the great nations
+for whose grand future they gave their lives!</p>
+
+<p>I also most earnestly hope that the more fortunate
+of our defenders who will return either safe
+from the fields of battle, or proudly bearing the
+glorious wounds which will have crippled their
+bodies, but not their hearts, will enjoy from the
+sanctuary of their homes, made comfortable by
+their grateful compatriots, the profound satisfaction
+to see the holy union cemented on the thundering
+firing line perpetuated for the lasting prosperity
+and happiness of Mankind.</p>
+
+<p>The last shadow of the recollections of the
+feuds of past ages between England and France
+should be forever sunk in patriotic oblivion, buried
+deep beneath the glory both valorous nations will
+have jointly reaped in their mighty efforts to rescue
+the world from the frightful wave of barbarism
+which they will have forced to recede.</p>
+
+<p>All the well wishers of peaceful and happy
+days for future generations are very much gratified
+at knowing that in joining with the Allies in the
+mighty struggle they were carrying with such undaunted
+courage, the great American Republic
+was also inspired by a feeling of gratitude for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span>
+France in remembrance of what she has done to
+help her to achieve her independence. Let us behold
+anew the inscrutable designs of Providence.
+Nearly a century and a half has elapsed since
+France, England and her American Colonies
+seemed to be for all times irreconcilable opponents.
+What a change in Destiny! Years have rolled by.
+New and unforeseen conditions have been developed
+the world over. Gradually two great currents
+of thoughts and aspirations have been
+flowing with increased strength preparing a formidable
+clash which was to threaten Civilization with
+utter destruction.</p>
+
+<p>Autocratic ambition was for many long years
+challenging Political Liberty to a deadly conflict.
+At last from the cloudy sky came the flash of
+lightning, and the thunderbolt was on the earth
+shaking it to its depth by the tremendous shock.</p>
+
+<p>Germany, having fired the wonderful autocratic
+shot, fully expected that her rivals would be
+thunderstruck beyond possibility of resurrection.
+But to her great dismay, the friends of Political
+Liberty the world over rallied as one man to its
+defence. And Germany trembled at seeing England
+burying for ever all ill-feelings against
+France, her ancient foe, rushing to her support
+with millions of her brave sons, after having drawn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span>
+around her ally the protecting chain of her matchless
+fleet.</p>
+
+<p>Another very discomforting surprise was in
+store for the cruel Huns. The American Republic,
+grateful to France for past services, was also
+moved by renovated feelings of affection for the
+mother-country from whom she had parted without
+disowning her. Determined to be at the forefront
+of the battle for the triumph of human Freedom&mdash;after
+unsuccessfully exhausting every means
+of bringing Germany to her senses&mdash;she clasped
+hands with England and France and valiantly
+rallied to their sides to share the merit and the
+glory of saving Political Liberty from the terrible
+Teutonic onslaught.</p>
+
+<p>In my humble but sincere and profound opinion,
+the present spectacle offered to the world's
+admiration by the sacred and mighty union of the
+British Empire, France and the United States,
+every patriotic home of theirs thrilling with undiminished
+enthusiasm for the success of their
+heroic efforts, is a truly grand one inspiring unbounded
+faith in the future of Humanity. Let no
+one forget for a moment that the present war,
+certainly <span class="smcap">NATIONAL</span> so far as the existence of each
+one of the Allied States is concerned, is, above all
+preeminently a world's conflict which favourable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span>
+issue deeply concerns the destinies of all the
+peoples of the earthly globe.</p>
+
+<p>The whole question is whether autocratic
+tyranny will henceforth rule the world, or if
+Humanity will yet enjoy the blessings of Liberty,
+of free institutions!</p>
+
+<p>In all hearts must abide the supreme desire
+that when peace is restored with all and the only
+conditions to which they can agree, the British
+Empire, France and the American Republic will
+forever remain united to promote the prosperity
+and the welfare of all the nations of the earth,
+large, middle-sized or small. The duty of those of
+Imperialist proportions will be as hitherto performed
+by England and the United States in their
+democratic way, to protect the independence of the
+small States, never aspiring to any territorial acquisitions
+but those accruing to them with the full
+and free consent of the new populations asking
+the protection of their ægis and the advantages
+of their union.</p>
+
+<p>When I consider the grand and magnificent
+part the three above named leading nations can
+play for the happy future of Humanity, by working
+hand in hand, and shoulder to shoulder, for general
+peace, order and prosperity, my heart is full
+with the ardent desire to witness them accepting
+that glorious task with the stern determination to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span>
+accomplish it to its better end. In spite of the
+vicissitudes and the failings of their past, they
+have done a great deal for the general good. They
+can do still more in the future. Like everyman
+bearing with fortitude the trials of life with the
+worthy design of profiting by the experience thus
+acquired to elevate himself to a higher conception
+of his duty, the British Empire, France and the
+United States will undoubtedly emerge from behind
+the dark clouds of the present days with
+aspirations ennobled by the sacrifices they are
+making, purified by the sufferings and the holocaust
+of so many of their own, with a stronger will
+to help working out the world's destiny by maintaining
+permanent peace and good-will amongst
+men. If they pursue that dignified course of high
+ideals they will fully deserve the admiration and
+the gratitude of all those who will benefit by their
+examples, and reap the abundant fruits of their
+devoted and enlightened leadership.</p>
+
+<p>It is one of the blessings of true Political
+Liberty, when duly understood and intelligently
+practised, to produce a class of politicians and
+statesmen of wide experience, of commanding
+character, of high culture, of great attainments,
+with a superior training in the management of
+public affairs, who are readily acknowledged as
+national leaders by the people who confidently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span>
+trust them, reserving, of course, their constitutional
+right to call new men to office whenever
+they consider in the public interest to do so. Those
+trusted leaders do not claim, as the German autocratic
+Kaiser, the power, by Divine Right, to do
+anything they please, asserting that in every
+imaginable case they do the will of the Almighty.</p>
+
+<p>When charged with the Government of their
+country, they understand very well that their duty
+is to manage the national affairs under their
+responsibility, first, to the Divine Ruler, as any
+other man in any other calling; secondly, to those
+who, having required their services, have the constitutional
+right to call them to account for their
+stewardship.</p>
+
+<p>Just as confidence is the basis of sound national
+credit, trust, on the part of the people, and responsibility,
+on that of the national leaders, are
+the two cornerstones of free institutions.</p>
+
+<p>Great Britain,&mdash;and her great autonomous
+Colonies also&mdash;for many long years past, have
+been most fortunate in the choice of the national
+leaders whom they have successively entrusted
+with the affairs of State.</p>
+
+<p>In that momentous occurrence, more than four
+years ago, when the whole question whether Great
+Britain would go to war, or not, was laid before
+the Imperial Parliament supported by the strongest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span>
+possible reasons in favour of the decision to
+accept the challenge of Germany, and fight with the
+firm determination not to sheathe the sword before
+victory was won, no British public man would
+have dared, like the German Emperor, to claim, by
+Divine Authority, the right to violate the solemn
+treaties the provisions of which his country was
+in honour and duty bound to carry out to the very
+letter.</p>
+
+<p>The commanding parts national leaders play
+in a free country, in consequence of the public confidence
+they inspire and enjoy, can have their
+counterparts in the great society of nations.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever shall be the final settlement of all
+the difficult matters brought up for solution by
+the war, it is certain that the management of the
+world's affairs will be well served by the legitimate
+influence of great nations whose leadership
+will be beneficial just in proportion as it is itself
+directed by the true principles of political Freedom,
+and an uncompromising respect of the rights
+of weaker nations always entitled to the fairest
+dealings on the part of their stronger associates
+in the great commonwealth of Sovereign States.</p>
+
+<p>There cannot be the slightest doubt that the
+British Empire, France and the United States,
+until Providentially ordered otherwise, will hereafter
+be the three leading nations of the world.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span>
+Their union maintained sacred in peace, as it is
+in war, will be the safest guarantee that the days
+of autocratic domination have ended. Henceforth
+the tide of political Freedom will flow with increased
+rapidity and strength. The only danger
+ahead, against which it is always wise to provide
+with due care and foresight, is that which would
+be the result of abuse and wild expectations always
+sure to react in favour of absolutist principles.
+Political Liberty and Order, Governmental Authority
+and Freedom, both well directed, must
+work hand in hand for the national welfare.</p>
+
+<p>The British Empire, France and the American
+Republic are free countries. More and better than
+any others they should and must, by example and
+friendly advice, lead the peoples in the successful
+practice of self-government.</p>
+
+<p>Considering more especially the part the
+British Empire will be called upon to play in the
+reorganized world, freed from autocratic terrorism,
+we must not lose sight of the much larger
+place England's great autonomous Colonies will
+occupy in the broadened English Commonwealth.
+We, Canadians, together with our brethren from
+Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, will
+have done our glorious share to win the war. We
+shall have to perform with equal devotion the new
+duty of sharing the British Empire's task in gradually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span>
+elevating the nations to an enlightened
+practice of Political Liberty.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently to do so with the success this noble
+cause will deserve, we must first strive to utilize
+our admirable free institutions to the best advantage,
+for ourselves, for our own future, and for
+the grand destinies of our Empire.</p>
+
+<p>As an instrument of good government our
+constitutional charter is almost perfect, as much
+so as any thing worldly can be. Let us never forget
+that the best weapon for self-protection may
+become useless, or even dangerous for us, if not
+handled with the required intelligence, justice and
+skill. We would lose all claims to contribute
+guiding others in the enjoyment of free institutions
+if we, ourselves, were mistaken in the proper
+working of our own constitution from a misconception
+of its literal wording or of its largeness
+of spirit. We must never challenge the truth that
+"spirit giveth life."</p>
+
+<p>More than ever the supreme difficulties of
+governing numerous racial groups, issued from
+ancient stocks so long divided by endless feuds,&mdash;the
+result of the many sudden changes of territorial
+limits to be wrought by the restoration of
+peace&mdash;will be very hard to settle satisfactorily.
+The task will require the constant effort of statesmanship
+of a high order.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Many of those who will hereafter be trained
+to self-government will look to us for their guidance.
+We must give them the inspiring example
+of fair play, of justice for all, of unity of purpose
+and aspirations in the diversity of ethnical
+offsprings.</p>
+
+<p>Need I say that the most urgent duty of all
+fair minded Canadians is, and will ever be, to
+heartily join together, to bless our dear country
+with concord, good feeling, harmony and kindly
+dispositions to grant an overflowing measure of
+justice to all our countrymen of all origins and
+creeds.</p>
+
+<p>Writing this book with the express purpose
+of explaining and strongly disapproving the deplorable
+efforts of a few to deter my French
+Canadian compatriots from doing their bounden
+duty through the dire crisis we are all undergoing,
+I will close these pages by calling anew upon my
+English speaking countrymen not to judge them
+by the sayings and deeds of persons who can at
+times somewhat stir up dangerous prejudices, but
+who are utterly incompetent to lead them as they
+should and deserve to be. Silenced at last by a
+patriotic measure to censure any disloyal expression
+of sentiments, matters have easily resumed
+their regular and honourable course. All loyal
+citizens, throughout the length and breadth of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span>
+land, have, I am sure, much rejoiced at the loyalty
+with which the French Canadians, of all classes,
+religious, social, commercial, industrial, financial,
+agricultural, have united to obey a statute of military
+service to which many of them did not agree,
+as long as they had the constitutional right to differ
+from the opinion of the large majority of our
+people, but to the successful operation of which
+they rallied the moment it was the law of the land.
+The worthy leaders of our Church strongly
+recommended obedience to the decision of the
+constituted authority, firmly condemned any
+guilty attempt at disturbing public order, and
+ordered all the members of their flocks to fervously
+pray the Almighty for PEACE WITH VICTORY
+FOR THE ALLIES.</p>
+
+<p>Our "pacifists at all hazards" once more
+silenced, this time by the very religious leaders
+under whose ægis they had shamefully tried to
+shield themselves, the patriotic impulse was moved
+to most commendable action. Without waiting for
+the call of the law, hundreds of young men from
+the better classes, from the universities and other
+educational institutions, well educated, voluntarily
+enlisted and rallied to the Colours. At least as
+much as in the other provinces, the class of our
+young manhood called by law heartily responded,
+all the real leaders of public opinion uniting to
+give the only advice loyal men could express.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[407]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>For one, I was most happy to ascertain how
+favourably western public feeling was impressed
+by the new turn of thoughts and events in the
+Province of Quebec. The reaction of sentiments
+operating both ways,&mdash;in Ontario, the western
+Provinces and Quebec&mdash;augurs well for the final
+abatement of the excitement which for a time
+menaced our fair Dominion with regrettable racial
+strifes so much to be deprecated.</p>
+
+<p>It can be positively affirmed that the whole
+people of Canada, east to west, north to south,
+are now more than ever a unit in their patriotic
+determination to fight the war to its final victorious
+issue. To this end the two millions of French
+British subjects in Canada, in perfect communion
+of thoughts and aspirations with the two millions
+of the neighbouring Republic's subjects of French
+Canadian origin, are loyally doing, and will continue
+to do, their share. Their representatives at
+the front are gloriously fighting the common
+enemy. Their valour and their achievements during
+the Allies' offensive so masterly planned and
+carried out by the Commander-in-Chief, Foch,
+have been worthy of their victories at Ypres, Vimy,
+Courcelette, Passchandaele. Many have, during
+the last three months, given their lives for the
+cause they defend. Many more have been wounded
+and are anxiously waiting their cure, when possible,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[408]</a></span>
+to return to the field of honour. Daily reports
+from the front tell of their enthusiasm, of their
+bravery, of their heroism!</p>
+
+<p>The French Canadians&mdash;I have no hesitation
+whatever in vouching for it&mdash;will continue to bear
+stoically with the sacrifices of so many kinds the
+conflict imposes upon them. Though smarting,
+as all others, under the burden, yet they cheerfully
+pay the heavy taxes required from the country to
+meet our national obligations the outcome of the
+war.</p>
+
+<p>So all is for the best under the strenuous
+present conditions of our national existence.</p>
+
+<p>In closing, I pray leave to reiterate, from
+the Introduction to this work, the following
+lines expressing my most sincere and profound
+conviction:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>I hope,&mdash;and most ardently wish&mdash;that all my
+readers will agree with me that next to the necessity
+of winning the war&mdash;and may I say, even as
+of almost equal importance for the future grandeur
+of our beloved country&mdash;range that of promoting
+by all lawful means harmony and good will
+amongst all our countrymen, whatever may be
+their racial origin, their religious faith, their
+particular aspirations not conflicting with their
+devotion to Canada as a whole, nor with their loyalty
+to the British Empire, whose grandeur and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[409]</a></span>
+prestige they want to firmly help to uphold with
+the inspiring confidence that more and more they
+will be the unconquerable bulwark of Freedom,
+Justice, Civilization and Right.</p>
+
+<p>May I be allowed to conclude by saying that
+my most earnest desire is to do all in my power, in
+the rank and file of the great army of free men, to
+reach the goal which ought to be the most persevering
+and patriotic ambition of loyal Canadians
+of all origins and creeds.</p>
+
+<p>And I repeat, wishing my words to be reechoed
+throughout the length and breadth of the land I so
+heartily cherish:&mdash;I have always been, I am and
+will ever be, to my last breath, true to my oath of
+allegiance to my Sovereign and to my country.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[410]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[411]</a></span></p>
+<h2>APPENDIX&mdash;A.</h2>
+
+<h3>PRESIDENT WILSON'S SPEECH</h3>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">To The United States Congress&mdash;11th Day of
+February, 1918.</span></div>
+
+
+<p>On the above mentioned date, Mr. Wilson, the
+President of the great American Republic, delivered
+the following speech to the Congress, in
+Washington. This noble and statesmanlike utterance
+met with the unanimous and enthusiastic
+approval of the members of both Houses, and was
+highly applauded, not only in the United States,
+but over all the truly civilized world. It reads
+thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"On the eighth of January, I had the honor of
+addressing you on the objects of the war as our people
+conceive them. The Prime Minister of Great Britain
+had spoken in similar terms on the fifth of January. To
+these addresses the German Chancellor replied on the
+24th and Count Czernin for Austria on the same day.
+It is gratifying to have our desire so promptly realized
+that all exchanges of view on this great matter should be
+made in the hearing of all the world.</p>
+
+<p>"Count Czernin's reply, which is directed chiefly to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[412]</a></span>my own address, on the eighth of January, is uttered in
+a very friendly tone.</p>
+
+<p>"He finds in my statement a sufficiently encouraging
+approach to the views of his own government to justify
+him in believing that it furnishes a basis for a more detailed
+discussion of purposes by the two governments.
+He is represented to have intimated that the views he
+was expressing had been communicated to me beforehand
+and that I was aware of them at the time he was uttering
+them; but in this I am sure he was misunderstood. I had
+received no intimation of what he intended to say. There
+was, of course, no reason why he should communicate
+privately with me. I am quite content to be one of his
+public audiences.</p>
+
+<p>"Count von Hertling's reply is, I may say, very
+vague and very confusing. It is full of equivocal phrases
+and leads, it is not clear where. But it is certainly in a
+very different tone from that of Count Czernin and apparently
+of an opposite purpose. It confirms, I am sorry
+to say, rather than removes, the unfortunate impression
+made by what we had learned of the conferences at Brest-Litovsk.
+His discussion and acceptance of our general
+principles leads him to no practical conclusions. He refuses
+to apply them to the substantiate items which must
+constitute the body of any final settlement. He is jealous
+of international action and of international council. He
+accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he
+appears to insist that it be confined at any rate in this
+case, to generalities and that the several particular questions
+of territory and sovereignty, the several questions
+upon whose settlement must depend the acceptance of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[413]</a></span>peace by the twenty-three states now engaged in the war,
+must be discussed and settled, not in general council but
+severally by the nations most immediately concerned by
+interest of neighbourhood. He agrees that the seas should
+be free, but looks askance at any limitation to that freedom
+by international action in the interest of the common
+order. He would, without reserve, be glad to see economic
+barriers removed between nation and nation, for
+that could in no way impede the ambitions of the military
+party with whom he seems constrained to keep on terms.
+Neither does he raise objection to a limitation of armaments.
+That matter will be settled of itself, he thinks,
+by the economic conditions which must follow the war.
+But the German colonies, he demands, must be returned
+without debate. He will discuss with no one but the representatives
+of Russia what disposition shall be made of
+the peoples and the lands of the Baltic provinces; with no
+one but the Government of France the "conditions" under
+which French territory shall be evacuated and only with
+Austria what shall be done with Poland. In the determination
+of all questions affecting the Balkan states he defers,
+as I understand him, to Austria and Turkey and with regard
+to the agreements to be entered into concerning the
+non-Turkish peoples of the present Ottoman Empire, to
+the Turkish authorities themselves. After a settlement all
+around effected in this fashion, by individual barter and
+concession, he would have no objection, if I correctly interpret
+his statement, to a league of nations which would
+undertake to hold the balance of power steady against
+external disturbance.</p>
+
+<p>"It must be evident to everyone who understands
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</a></span>what this war has wrought in the opinion and temper of
+the world that no general peace, no peace worth the infinite
+sacrifices of these years of tragical suffering, can
+possibly be arrived at in any such fashion. The method
+the German Chancellor proposes is the method of the
+Congress of Vienna. We cannot and will not return to
+that. What is at stake now is the peace of the world.
+What we are striving for is a new international order
+based upon broad and universal principles of right and
+justice&mdash;no mere peace of shreds and patches. Is it possible
+that Count von Hertling does not see that, does not
+grasp it, is in fact living in his thought in a world dead
+and gone? Has he utterly forgotten the Reichstag resolutions
+of the 19th of July, or does he deliberately
+ignore them? They spoke of the conditions of a general
+peace, not of national aggrandizement or of arrangements
+between state and state. The peace of the world
+depends upon just settlement of each of the several problems
+to which I adverted in my recent address to Congress.
+I, of course, do not mean that the peace of the
+world depends upon the acceptance of any particular set
+of suggestions as to the way in which those problems are
+to be dealt with. I mean only that those problems, each
+and all, affect the whole world; that unless they are dealt
+with in a spirit of unselfish and unbiassed justice, with a
+view to the wishes, the natural connections, the racial
+aspirations, the security and peace of mind of the peoples
+involved, no permanent peace will have been attained.
+They cannot be discussed separately or in corners. None
+of them constitutes a private or separate interest from
+which the opinion of the world may be shut out. Whatever
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</a></span>affects the peace affects mankind, and nothing
+settled by military force, if settled wrong, is settled at all.
+It will presently have to be re-opened.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Count von Hertling not aware that he is speaking
+in the court of mankind, that all the awakened nations
+of the world now sit in judgment on what every public
+man, of whatever nation, may say on the issues of a conflict
+which has spread to every region of the world? The
+Reichstag resolutions of July 19 themselves frankly accepted
+the decisions of that court. There shall be no
+annexations, no contributions, no punitive damages.
+Peoples are not to be handed about from one sovereignty
+to another by an international conference or an understanding
+between rivals and antagonists. National aspirations
+must be respected; peoples may now be dominated
+and governed only by their own consent. "Self-determination,"
+is not a mere phrase. It is an imperative
+principle of action, which statesmen will henceforth
+ignore at their peril. We cannot have general peace for
+the asking, or by the mere arrangements of a peace conference.
+It cannot be pieced together out of individual
+understandings between powerful states. All the parties
+to this war must join in the settlement of every issue anywhere
+involved in it because what we are seeking is a
+peace that we can all unite to guarantee and maintain
+whether it be right and fair, an act of justice, rather than
+a bargain between sovereigns.</p>
+
+<p>"The United States has no desire to interfere in
+European affairs or to act as arbiter in European territorial
+disputes. We would disdain to take advantage of
+any internal weakness or disorder to impose her own will
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</a></span>upon another people. She is quite ready to be shown
+that the settlements she has suggested are not the best or
+the most enduring. They are only her own provisional
+sketch of principles, and of the way in which they should
+be applied. But she entered this war because she was
+made a partner, whether she would or not, in the sufferings
+and indignities inflicted by the military masters of
+Germany, against the peace and security of mankind; and
+the conditions of peace will touch her as nearly as they
+will touch any other nation to which is entrusted a leading
+part in the maintenance of civilization. She cannot see
+her way to peace until the causes of this war are removed,
+its renewal rendered, as nearly as may be, impossible.</p>
+
+<p>"This war had its roots in the disregard of the
+rights of small nations and of nationalities which lacked
+the union and the force to make good their claim to determine
+their own allegiances and their own forms of
+political life. Covenants must now be entered into which
+will render such things impossible for the future; and
+those covenants must be backed by the united force of all
+the nations that love justice and are willing to maintain it
+at any cost. If territorial settlements and the political
+relations of great populations which have not the organized
+power to resist are to be determined by the contracts
+of the powerful governments which consider themselves
+most directly affected, as Count von Hertling proposes,
+why may not economic questions also? It has come about
+in the altered world in which we now find ourselves that
+justice and the rights of peoples affect the whole field of
+international dealing as much as access to raw materials
+and fair and equal conditions of trade. Count von Hertling
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</a></span>wants the essential basis of commercial and industrial
+life to be safeguarded by common agreement and guarantee,
+but he cannot expect that to be conceded him if the
+other matters to be determined by the articles of peace
+are not handled in the same way as it was in the final
+accounting. He cannot ask the benefit of common agreement
+in the one field without according it in the other.
+I take it for granted that he sees that separate and selfish
+compacts with regard to trade and the essential materials
+of manufacture would afford no foundation for peace.
+Neither, he may rest assured, will separate and selfish
+compacts with regard to the provinces and peoples.</p>
+
+<p>"Count Czernin seems to see the fundamental elements
+of peace with clear eyes and does not seek to obscure
+them. He sees that an independent Poland, made
+up of all the indisputably Polish peoples who lie contiguous
+to one another, is a matter of European concern
+and must of course be conceded; that Belgium must be
+evacuated and restored, no matter what sacrifices and
+concessions that may involve; and that national aspirations
+must be satisfied, even within his own empire, in the
+common interest of Europe and mankind. If he is silent
+about questions which touch the interest and purpose of
+his Allies more nearly than they touch those of Austria
+only, it must, of course, be because he feels constrained,
+I suppose, to defer to Germany and Turkey in the circumstances.
+Seeing and conceding, as he does, the essential
+principles involved and the necessity of candidly
+applying them, he naturally feels that Austria can respond
+to the purpose of peace as expressed by the United States
+with less embarrassment than could Germany. He would
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</a></span>probably have gone much farther had it not been for
+the embarrassments of Austria's alliance and of her
+dependence upon Germany.</p>
+
+<p>"After all the test of whether it is possible for
+either Government to go any further in this comparison
+of views is simple and obvious. The principles to be
+applied are:</p>
+
+<p>"First, that each part of the final settlement must
+be based on the essential justice of the particular case,
+and upon such adjustments as are most likely to bring a
+peace that will be permanent.</p>
+
+<p>"Second, that peoples and provinces are not to be
+bartered about from sovereignty to sovereignty as if they
+were mere chattels and pawns in a game, even the great
+game, now for ever discredited, of the balance of power;
+but that,</p>
+
+<p>"Every territorial settlement involved in this war
+must be made in the interest and for the benefit of the
+populations concerned and not as a part of any mere
+adjustment of compromise of claims amongst rival states;
+and,</p>
+
+<p>"Fourth, that all well defined national aspirations
+shall be accorded the utmost satisfaction that can be accorded
+them without introducing new or perpetuating old
+elements of discord, and antagonism that would be likely
+in time to break the peace of Europe and consequently
+of the world.</p>
+
+<p>"A general peace entered upon such foundations can
+be discussed. Until such a peace can be secured we have
+no choice but to go on. So far as we can judge, these
+principles that we regard as fundamental are already
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</a></span>everywhere accepted as imperative except among the
+spokesmen of the military and annexationist party in
+Germany. If they have anywhere else been rejected, the
+objectors have not been sufficiently numerous or influential
+to make their voices audible. The tragic circumstance is
+that this one party in Germany is apparently willing and
+able to send millions of men to their death to prevent
+what all the world now sees to be just.</p>
+
+<p>"I would not be a true spokesman of the people of
+the United States if I did not say once more that we entered
+this war upon no small occasion, and that we can
+never turn back from a course chosen upon principle.
+Our resources are in part mobilized now, and we shall
+not pause until they are mobilized in their entirety. Our
+armies are rapidly going to the fighting front, and will
+go more rapidly. Our whole strength will be put into
+this state of emancipation&mdash;emancipation from the threat
+and attempted mastery of selfish groups of autocratic
+rulers&mdash;whatever the difficulties and present partial delays.
+We are indomitable in our power of independent
+action, and can in no circumstances consent to live in a
+world governed by intrigue and force. We believe that
+our own desire for a new international order under which
+reason and justice and the common interests of mankind
+shall prevail, is the desire of enlightened men everywhere.
+Without that new order the world will be without peace,
+and human life will lack tolerable conditions of existence
+and development. Having set our hand to the task
+of achieving it, we shall not turn back.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope that it is not necessary for me to add that no
+word of what I have said is intended as a threat. That
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[420]</a></span>is not the temper of our people. I have spoken thus only
+that the whole world may know the true spirit of America&mdash;that
+men everywhere may know that our passion for
+justice and for self-government is no mere passion of
+words, but a passion which, once set in act, must be satisfied.
+The power of the United States is a menace to
+no nation or people. It will be never used in aggression
+or for the aggrandizement of any selfish interest of our
+own. It springs out of freedom and is for the service
+of freedom."</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[421]</a></span></p>
+<h2>APPENDIX&mdash;B.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Text of United States Reply to Austria.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>On the 18th of September, 1918, the Secretary
+of State made public the official text of the letter
+he sent, to Mr. W. A. F. Ekengren, the Swedish
+Minister, in charge of Austro-Hungarian affairs,
+conveying President Wilson's rejection of the
+Austrian peace proposals. It reads as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Sir,&mdash;I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt
+of your note, dated September 16, communicating to me
+a note from the Imperial Government of Austria-Hungary,
+containing a proposal to the Government of
+all the belligerent States to send delegates to a confidential
+and unbinding discussion on the basic principles for the
+conclusion of peace. Furthermore, it is proposed that
+the delegates would be charged to make known to one
+another the conception of their Governments regarding
+these principles, and to receive analogous communications,
+as well as to request and give frank and candid explanations
+on all those points which need to be precisely
+defined.</p>
+
+<p>"In reply, I beg to say that the substance of your
+communication has been submitted to the President, who
+now directs me to inform you that the Government of
+the United States feels that there is only one reply which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[422]</a></span>
+it can make to the suggestion of the Imperial Austro-Hungarian
+Government. It has repeatedly, and with
+entire candor, stated the terms upon which the United
+States would consider peace, and can and will entertain
+no proposal for a conference upon the matter concerning
+which it has made its position and purpose so plain.</p>
+
+<p>"Accept, sir, the renewed assurances of my highest
+consideration.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="right">
+"(Signed), ROBERT LANSING,<br />
+<br />
+"Secretary of State."<br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="tnote">
+<div class="center">Transcriber's Notes</div>
+
+<p>Obvious punctuation errors repaired.</p>
+
+<p>Numerous obvious spelling errors have been corrected.</p>
+
+<p>Archaic or unusual words and spellings have not been changed:
+beneficient, coronated, consolated, conspiration, devotedness, divers,
+elogius, enflame, enounced, equilibrist, eulogium, fervously,
+injustifiable, irresistable, instil, Magna Charta, planturous,
+plebiscit, plebiscitary, preconized, profonated, Roumanian, Servia,
+subtilties, tragical, treasonably, troublous, tutorage, unbiassed,
+uncontrovertible, unsufficiently, woful.</p>
+
+<p>Both "bolshevik" and "bolchevik" appear and have not been changed.</p>
+
+<p>Both "standpoint(s)" and "stand-point(s)" appear and have
+not been changed.</p>
+
+<p>The following inconsistent usages appear and have not been changed:
+"Mother Country", "mother country", "mother-country", "Mother Land",
+"Mother land", "mother land", "Motherland".</p>
+
+<p>Page 34: Duplicate word "His" deleted (His Excellency had just).</p>
+
+<p>Page 96 (and elsewhere): "per cent" changed to "per cent."
+for consistency.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of England, Canada and the Great War, by
+Louis-Georges Desjardins
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/37792.txt b/37792.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of England, Canada and the Great War, by
+Louis-Georges Desjardins
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: England, Canada and the Great War
+
+Author: Louis-Georges Desjardins
+
+Release Date: October 18, 2011 [EBook #37792]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLAND, CANADA AND THE GREAT WAR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Moti Ben-Ari and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive.)
+
+
+
+
+
+[Chapter numbering is as in the original publication, omitting chapter
+numbers XXV and XXVI. (note of etext transcriber.)]
+
+
+
+ ENGLAND, CANADA AND THE GREAT WAR
+
+ BY
+
+ Lieutenant-Colonel L.-G. DESJARDINS
+
+ Ex-member of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Quebec
+ and of the House of Commons of Canada.
+
+ QUEBEC
+ Chronicle Print.
+
+ October 1st, 1918
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+Even since the issue, last year, of my book:--"_L'Angleterre, Le Canada
+et la Grande Guerre_"--"_England, Canada and the Great War_"--a second
+edition of which I had to publish, a few weeks later, to meet the
+pressing demand of numerous readers--I have been repeatedly asked by
+influential citizens to publish an English edition of my work.
+
+A delegate from Quebec to the National Unity--or
+Win-the-War--Convention, in Montreal, I had the pleasure of meeting a
+great many of the delegates from Toronto and all over the Dominion. Many
+of them insisted upon the publication of an English edition.
+
+Having written that book for the express and patriotic purpose of
+proving the justice of the cause of the Allies in the Great War, and
+refuting Mr. Bourassa's false and dangerous theories, I realized that
+the citizens of Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto, who strongly
+advised an English edition to be circulated in all the Provinces,
+appreciated the good it could make.
+
+I consider it is my imperious duty to dedicate to my English speaking
+countrymen this volume containing all the substance matter of my French
+book, and the defense a truly loyal French Canadian has made of the
+sacred cause of Civilization and Liberty for the triumph of which the
+glorious Allied Nations have been so heroically fighting for the last
+four eventful years.
+
+As I say, in the Introduction to this work, I first intended to write
+only an English resume of my French book. But once at work writing down,
+the questions to consider were so important, and the replies to the
+Nationalist leader's inconceivable theories so numerous, that I had to
+double and more the pages I had thought would be sufficient for my
+purpose. I realized that many points, to be fully explained, required
+more comments and argumentation that I had at first supposed necessary.
+
+Moreover, since writing my French book, most important events have taken
+place. To have the present English volume up to date, I had to consider
+recent history in its very latest developments, and reply to the
+Nationalist leader's last errors, which by no means were not the least.
+When once a man has run off the path of reason and sound public sense,
+he is sure to rush to most dangerous extremes, unless he has the moral
+courage to acknowledge that he was sadly mistaken.
+
+I trust that the English speaking readers of this book, will not, for a
+single moment, suppose that I am actuated by the least ill-feeling
+against Mr. Bourassa personally, in the severe but just denunciation it
+was my plain duty to make of his deplorable Nationalist campaign.
+
+For many years past, I have ever been delighted in welcoming promising
+young men to the responsibilities of public life. I remember with a
+mixed feeling of pleasure and regret the occasion I first heard Mr.
+Bourassa, then a youth, addressing a very large public meeting held on
+the nomination day of the candidates to a pending bye-election for the
+House of Commons of Canada: Pleasure at the recollection of what I
+considered a fairly successful beginning of a political career; deep
+regret at the failure to justify the hopes of his compatriots and his
+friends through an uncontrollable ambition always sure to deter, even
+the best gifted, from the safe line of duty, well understood, and
+firmly, but modestly, performed.
+
+Passion, aspiring and unbridled, is always a dangerous counsellor. Mr.
+Bourassa could have had a useful political life, if he had realized that
+public good cannot be well served by constant appeals to race
+prejudices, and by persevering efforts to achieve success by stirring up
+fanaticism.
+
+The result of the unpatriotic course he has followed, against the advice
+of his best friends, has been to sow in our great and happy Dominion the
+seed of discord, of hatred, of racial conflicts.
+
+Unfortunately, for the country, for his French Canadian compatriots, and
+for himself, he was deluded to the point of believing that the war would
+be his grand opportunity.
+
+Instead of using his influence to promote the national unity so
+essential under the trying circumstances with which Canada and the whole
+British Empire was suddenly confronted, he exerted himself to the utmost
+to prevail on his French Canadian countrymen to assume a decisive
+hostile stand to the noble cause which Britain had to fight for, in
+order to avenge the crime of the violation of Belgium's territory, to
+protect France from German cruel invasion, and to prevent Autocratic
+power from enslaving Humanity.
+
+Such a misconception of a truly loyal man's part was most detrimental to
+the good of Canada's future, to the destinies of the French Canadians,
+and to the political standing of the publicist who was its willing
+victim.
+
+And to-day he finds himself in this position that he has no other choice
+but that of pursuing, at all hazards, his unwholesome campaign against
+all things British, or, boldly retracing his steps, to go back on all he
+has said and written to support inadmissible views, vain ideas, and
+passionate prejudices.
+
+The latter course would certainly be the best to follow in the interest
+of his country, of his French Canadian countrymen, and of his usefulness
+as a public man. But, however much to be regretted, he seems utterly
+unable to overcome the prejudices which have taken such deep root in his
+heart and mind.
+
+Prejudice, constantly cultured, soon develops into blind fanaticism,
+closing the intellect to the light of sound logic, to the call of duty,
+to the clear comprehension of what is best to do to promote the public
+good.
+
+However seriously guilty he may be, the public man, so swayed by a
+fanatical passion, is sure not to rally to the defense of the superior
+interests of his countrymen when they are threatened by a great
+misfortune.
+
+I cannot help deploring that after giving good hopes of a life
+patriotically devoted to the increasing welfare of Canada, by doing his
+share in promoting the best feelings among his countrymen of all races,
+classes and creeds, one of my kin, really gifted to play a much better
+part, has been so sadly mistaken as to exhaust his activities in forcing
+his way to the leadership of a group of malcontents unable to overcome
+their racial antipathies and listen to reason, even when their country
+and the Empire to which they have sworn allegiance are destructively
+menaced.
+
+He has nobody else to blame but himself for the failure of his political
+career, due to his misguided efforts in thwarting the happiness and
+prosperity which our great Dominion would certainly derive from the
+persevering union of all the citizens enjoying the blessings of her free
+British institutions, to work out her brilliant destinies by their
+intelligent labours, their hearted patriotism in peace times, and with
+their undaunted courage and their self-sacrificing devotion in war
+days.
+
+After a somewhat prolonged spectacular display in the House of Commons,
+as member for the electoral division of Labelle, he felt instinctively
+that he had exhausted what he considered his usefulness, and was doomed
+to a dismal failure. He retired from the Dominion political arena, to
+try his luck in the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Quebec. No
+wiser a man by experience, he challenged the Leader of the parliamentary
+majority to a truly duellist struggle on the floor of the House. He
+thrusted at his opponent with the vigour of a combatant certain to
+conquer. All those who witnessed this encounter, must remember how
+completely overbearing confidence, proudly asserted, was overcome by
+calm and superior argumentative power, sound and clear political sense.
+True parliamentary eloquence easily brought to reason pedantic and
+bombastic oratory. The first throw--_le debut_--went decidedly against
+the Nationalist leader. A beaten fighter from this very first day, he
+met with as complete a failure in the provincial political arena as he
+had done in the federal one. Wisely indeed, he retired from
+parliamentary life, after realizing that debating power cannot be
+acquired by demagogic speaking.
+
+The Nationalist leader next limited his efforts to the tribune, to the
+public platform. All remember the time when he was periodically calling
+great popular meetings held in _Le Monument National_, Montreal, where
+he preached his Nationalist gospel with vehement talking. This new
+experiment could not last. It soon subsided. And the Nationalist leader
+is since addicted to pamphleteering of the worst kind as I will show in
+this book.
+
+Deeply moved by the dangers of a most mischievous campaign, I considered
+it my bounded duty to do my utmost efforts to prove how utterly wrong
+were the views which those pursuing it with passionate energy wanted to
+prevail, and to show the sad consequences it was sure to produce.
+
+Having first addressed myself to my French Canadian compatriots to
+persuade them how much detrimental to their best future the Nationalist
+campaign was sure to be, I am to-day laying the case before my English
+speaking countrymen, at the urgent request of many of them, in order to
+fully acquaint them with the refutation I have made, to the best of my
+ability, of Mr. Bourassa's erroneous theories and wild charges against
+England and all those who patriotically support our mother country in
+the great struggle she has had to wage after doing all she possibly
+could to maintain the peace of the world.
+
+I ardently desire that the reading of the following pages, will
+contribute to the restoration of harmony and good will, for a while
+endangered by the Nationalist campaign, in our wide Dominion, to whose
+happiness, prosperity and grandeur we, of both English and French
+origins, must devote our best energies and all the resources of our
+unwavering patriotism.
+
+ L. G. DESJARDINS.
+ Quebec, October 1st, 1918.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ Chapter Page
+ --INTRODUCTION 1
+ I --WHO ARE THE GUILTY PARTIES? 25
+ II --THE PERSISTENT EFFORTS OF ENGLAND
+ IN FAVOUR OF PEACE 29
+ III --THE CALL TO DUTY IN CANADA 40
+ IV --RECRUITING BY VOLUNTARY SERVICE 46
+ V --INTERVENTION OF NATIONALISM 49
+ VI --WHAT DO WE OWE ENGLAND? 51
+ VII --CANADA IS NOT A SOVEREIGN STATE 55
+ VIII --GERMAN ILLUSIONS 67
+ IX --THE NATIONALIST ERROR 68
+ X --HAD CANADA THE RIGHT TO HELP ENGLAND? 71
+ XI --THE DUTY OF CANADA 74
+ XII --THE SOUDANESE AND THE SOUTH AFRICAN
+ WARS 77
+ XIII --BRITISH AND GERMAN ASPIRATIONS
+ COMPARED 87
+ SUB-TITLE--CONSTRUCTION AND SUPPLY 93
+ " --TRANSPORT 97
+ " --THE AIR SERVICE 98
+ " --THE FINANCIAL EFFORT OF
+ GREAT BRITAIN 100
+ " --ACHIEVEMENTS OF DOMINION,
+ COLONIAL AND INDIAN
+ TROOPS 101
+ XIV --THE VERITABLE AIMS OF THE ALLIES 104
+ SUB-TITLE--THE ONLY POSSIBLE PEACE
+ CONDITIONS 111
+ XV --JUST AND UNJUST WARS 116
+ SUB-TITLE--A "NATIONALIST" ILLOGICAL
+ CHARGE AGAINST ENGLAND 125
+ " --OTHER "NATIONALIST" ERRONEOUS
+ ASSERTIONS 128
+ " --INCREDIBLE "NATIONALIST"
+ NOTIONS 131
+ " --CANADIAN FINANCIAL OPERATIONS
+ IN THE UNITED STATES 134
+ XVI --"NATIONALIST" VIEWS CONDENSED 139
+ XVII --LOYAL PRINCIPLES PROPOUNDED 143
+ SUB-TITLE--UNJUST "NATIONALIST"
+ GRIEVANCES AGAINST ENGLAND 150
+ XVIII --IMPERIALISM 164
+ XIX --AMERICAN IMPERIALISM 177
+ XX --BRITISH IMPERIALISM 189
+ XXI --THE SITUATIONS OF 1865 AND 1900-14
+ COMPARED 194
+ XXII --BRITISH IMPERIALISM NATURALLY
+ PACIFIST 198
+ XXIII --BRITISH IMPERIALISM AND POLITICAL
+ LIBERTY 207
+ XXIV --IMPERIAL FEDERATION AND "BOURASSISM" 216
+ SUB-TITLE--CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
+ OF INDIA 227
+ XXVII --THE FUTURE CONSTITUTIONAL RELATIONS
+ OF THE EMPIRE 231
+ SUB-TITLE--NO TAXATION WITHOUT
+ REPRESENTATION 235
+ " --COLONIAL REPRESENTATION 236
+ " --THE FAR OFF FUTURE 247
+ " --A MACHIAVELLIAN PROPOSITION 251
+ " --A TREASONABLE PROPOSAL 259
+ XXVIII --OUTRAGES ARE NO REASONS 267
+ XXIX --HOW MR. BOURASSA PAID HIS COMPLIMENTS
+ TO THE CANADIAN ARMY 277
+ XXX --RASH DENUNCIATION OF PUBLIC
+ MEN 288
+ XXXI --MR. BOURASSA'S DANGEROUS PACIFISM 302
+ XXXII --A MOST REPREHENSIBLE ABUSE OF
+ SACRED APPEALS TO THE BELLIGERENT
+ NATIONS 307
+ XXXIII --A CASE FOR TRUE STATESMANSHIP 321
+ XXXIV --AFTER-THE-WAR MILITARY PROBLEM 324
+ XXXV --THE INTERVENTION OF THE UNITED
+ STATES IN THE WAR 334
+ XXXVI --THE ALLIES--RUSSIA--JAPAN 348
+ XXXVII --THE LAST PEACE PROPOSALS 357
+ XXXVIII --NECESSARY PEACE CONDITIONS 372
+ XXXIX --CONCLUSION 383
+ APPENDIX--A 411
+ APPENDIX--B 421
+
+
+
+
+ England, Canada and the Great War
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+Canada, as one of the most important component parts of the British
+Empire, is going through the crucial ordeal of the great crisis which
+will determine her destinies jointly with those of the whole world.
+Instantly put under the strain, four years ago, by the outrageous
+challenge of Germany to human civilization with the criminal purpose of
+universal domination, she was fully equal to her unbounded duty.
+Conscious of her sacred rights, she at once realized that the
+constitutional liberties which she enjoyed in the freest Empire of all
+times, could not be more patriotically exercised than for the defence of
+the sacred cause which united in a gigantic effort England, France and
+Russia, soon to receive the support of Italy. By an almost unanimous and
+enthusiastic decision she rallied to the flag around which all the
+Dependencies of the Empire gathered from the five continents. Never a
+more inspiring array of loyal subjects, owing allegiance to a
+Sovereignty, was witnessed in the wide world.
+
+Through the trying days of four full years of the greatest war which
+ever saddened the life of the human race, Canada has nobly, gloriously,
+done her duty. Several hundred thousands of her devoted sons have rushed
+to the front to fight the battle of Liberty, of Right, of Civilization.
+Thousands of them have heroically given their lives for the triumph of
+the cause which, if finally triumphant, will brighten with freedom,
+prosperity, human happiness and undying glory, the destinies of many
+generations.
+
+The struggle is not over. The battle is not yet won. Victory is in sight
+but unfortunately still so far distant, that it is still calling forth
+the undaunted exertions of all those who have pledged their faith to
+rescue the world from the cruel thraldom of German militarism.
+
+Two years ago, at the critical period which culminated in the undecided
+military operations which, though rendered illustrious by the glorious
+defence of Verdun, made it plain to the Allies that success would only
+be the reward of a much more prolonged effort of untold sacrifices, I
+undertook to write the book entitled in French: "_L'Angleterre, le
+Canada et la Grande Guerre_."
+
+Several of the most influential and widely circulated News-papers of
+Montreal, Toronto and Quebec, have kindly published highly appreciative
+Reviews of the French Edition of my book, concluding with the request of
+the publication of an English Edition, which, they affirmed, would be
+conducive to the public good. I have received many letters and verbal
+demands to the same purpose.
+
+It is my duty to answer to a call daily becoming more pressing.
+
+I now offer to the English reading public a condensed edition of my
+work, with the title "_England, Canada and the Great War_." I concluded
+not to issue a complete English Edition of the French volume. Instead of
+translating my book, I considered it more advisable to write an English
+synopsis of its contents. Undertaking such a work, I realized more than
+ever how important it is for the Citizens of Canada to be able to speak
+and write the languages of the two great races of the Dominion. Knowing
+well my own deficiency in this regard, I hoped, however, to write the
+following pages with enough clearness to have my views well understood,
+trusting to the kindness of my readers to excuse the inadequacy of my
+command of English.
+
+A few words explaining the reasons that prompted me to write the French
+book will, I am confident, be kindly appreciated by my readers. A close
+observer of the daily impressions which the events developed by the war
+were creating in Canada, I felt more and more deeply grieved at the
+persistent and unpatriotic efforts of the leaders of the Nationalist
+school of the Province of Quebec, and their henchmen, to sway my
+French-Canadian countrymen from the clear path of duty. I undertook
+earnestly to do my best to stem the threatening wave of disloyal
+sentiments and racial conflict they were stirring up throughout the
+land. "_England, Canada and the Great War_" was the result of the very
+careful study of the numerous questions therein considered and of the
+patriotic impulse which led me to publish it.
+
+I dedicated the volume to my French-Canadian countrymen by a letter from
+which I translate the following:
+
+"It would surely be vain to conceal how serious was the situation
+imposed upon our country by the sudden outbreak, in August, 1914, of the
+greatest war of all times. It was dominated by the supreme fact that
+Canada was a component part of one of the most powerful Empires whose
+destinies were to be determined, for good or ill, for many long years,
+by the terrible conflict suddenly opened, but, for a prolonged period,
+prepared by those who dreamt of conquering the world."
+
+"Great Britain, our Sovereign Metropolis, had done her utmost to protect
+Humanity against the misfortunes which endangered her future, for the
+maintenance of peace. She had failed in her noble efforts. At the very
+moment when, against all the most critical appearances, she was still
+hopeful, she had, all of a sudden, to face the terrible alternative,
+either to submit to national dishonour by complying with the violation
+of solemn treaties which bound her as much as Germany, or to unite with
+France and Russia to avenge Justice outrageously violated, sworn
+international Faith, Civilization perilously threatened."
+
+"Could she hesitate for one single moment?"
+
+"Our Mother Country has done that which her most imperious duty
+commanded her to do. She accepted the challenge of Germany with the
+patriotic determination inspired by the most sacred cause. All the loyal
+subjects of the British Crown have applauded her decision to rush to the
+defence of invaded Belgium and France, to reclaim their national honour
+and her own, and to protect her Empire against the German armies."
+
+"With the most inspiring unanimity and admirable courage, all the
+British Colonies have rallied around the flag of their Sovereign
+Metropolis to share the glory of the triumph of Right and Justice. At
+the very front rank, Canada has nobly done her duty. Her decision was
+most spontaneous and decisive. She was not deterred by fallacious
+subtilties, deducted from pretended conventions, out of age and
+opportunity, to hinder her laudable and patriotic course. Throughout the
+length and breadth of her vast territory, all minds shared the same
+view, all hearts were united and beating with the same powerful
+sentiment."
+
+"The decision of Canada to participate in the present war was taken by
+the constitutional government of the country, sanctioned by Parliament,
+approved by public opinion, glorified by the hundreds of thousands of
+brave volunteers who courageously answered the call of duty."
+
+"Views with which I cannot concur have been expressed and given full
+publicity. They challenge discussion. It is my undoubted right to
+criticize them."
+
+"Since the beginning of the present war, Mr. Henri Bourassa, in addition
+to the daily publicity of his journal "_Le Devoir_", has developed, in
+two principal pamphlets, the theories of his "_Nationalism_". They are
+respectively entitled: "_Que devons-nous a l'Angleterre?_" "_What do we
+owe England?_" and: "_Hier, Aujourd'hui, Demain_" "_Yesterday, To-day,
+To-morrow_"."
+
+"In earnestly searching out the real causes of the war, the
+responsibilities of the belligerent nations, their respective
+aspirations, the duty imposed by the irresistable course of events upon
+the British Empire and consequently upon Canada, I was incessantly
+called upon to consider the very strange propositions contained in those
+pamphlets."
+
+"It was with great surprise that I read, for instance, as the heading of
+one of the chapters, the utterly false proposition that: "_The
+Autonomous Colonies are Sovereign States._"
+
+"And these most extraordinary affirmations that the _King of England has
+not the right to declare the State of war for Canada, without the assent
+of the Canadian Cabinet; that Canada could have participated in the
+present war as a Nation_."
+
+"It is my bounden duty to affirm that almost all the propositions
+contained in the two above mentioned pamphlets are wrong according to
+international law and to constitutional law, erroneous in their
+historical bearings, contrary to the true teachings of the past."
+
+"Mr. Bourassa persistingly trying to convince his readers that the
+precedents of the Soudanese and the South-African wars have forced the
+British Colonies to participate in the present one, I considered it my
+duty to make, in two separate chapters, a special study of those
+military campaigns which, in both cases, were so felicitously terminated
+for all parties concerned."
+
+"I cannot close this letter without expressing my profound regret that
+Mr. Bourassa has thought proper to use most injurious language adding
+outrage to the falsity of his opinions. At page 121 of his pamphlet:
+"_Yesterday, To-day, To-morrow_", any one can read, no doubt with
+astonishment, that Mr. Bourassa charges our countrymen of the British
+races with being _ignorant, assuming, arrogant, dominating and rotten
+with mercantilism_."
+
+"Such ridiculous and insulting words to the address of our countrymen of
+the three British races are surely not calculated to increase Canadian
+harmony."
+
+"This book, written for the express purpose of assisting you to form for
+yourselves a sound opinion about the terrible events so rapidly
+developing, was inspired by my loyalty to the Empire whose faithful
+subject I glory to be, by my devotion to Canada and to my countrymen, by
+the affectionate recollection of France I will cherish to my last day.
+
+"During the last fifty years, either as a private or as an officer of
+the Canadian Militia--my service as such having lasted more than forty
+years--as a member of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of
+Quebec, and as a member of the House of Commons of Canada, I have often
+taken the oath of allegiance to the Sovereign of Great Britain. From my
+early youth, I had learned that under the aegis of the British Crown, the
+citizen of the Empire could be true to his oath, and enjoy the precious
+liberty of expressing his opinion. But I had also soon realized that
+during the lifetime of a Sovereign State, days of peril might occur. I
+had easily come to the conclusion that in those trying moments the loyal
+duty could be very happily reconciled with the most sincere love of
+political liberty.
+
+"In defending with the most sincere conviction the sacred cause of the
+Allies, I am doing my duty as a free subject of the British Empire, as a
+citizen of Canada and of the Province of Quebec, as a son of France, as
+a devoted servant of Justice and Right. I am true to my oath."
+
+I desire to call the special attention of my readers to the complete
+sense of the last paragraph just quoted. I most decidedly wish its
+meaning to be fully understood by all, as I intended to convey it to my
+French Canadian compatriots. I have never concurred in the subtle
+distinction so often made between the several notions entertained by
+many respecting their duty towards the Empire and Canada separately.
+Having witnessed, for the last fifty years, the admirable evolution and
+natural growth of the British constitutional system over a fourth of the
+globe, developing into the freest Empire that ever existed, my mind was
+more and more impressed with the conviction that loyalty to the
+Sovereignty presiding over such a magnificent national heritage could
+not be of two different kinds. A free British subject, whether living in
+the United Kingdom, or in any one of the Dependencies of the Crown,
+cannot be at once loyal to the Empire at large and disloyal to any of
+its component parts; or, _vice versa_, loyal to the particular section
+of the State where he is living and at the same disloyal to the Empire.
+Such a false conception of the duties of loyalty, if it could be spread
+successfully throughout the Empire, would undoubtedly lead to its rapid
+dissolution and complete destruction. Genuine loyalty cannot agree with
+exclusive and rampant sectionalism, with local, racial or religious
+prejudices and fanaticism.
+
+The few lines of the preceding closing paragraph of my letter dedicating
+the French edition of my book as aforesaid, express my own conception of
+the true loyalty of a faithful subject of the British Sovereignty, who
+has the clear vision of the meaning of his oath of allegiance. In
+consequence, first, I affirm my duty as a subject of the British Empire;
+second, as a citizen of Canada; third, as a citizen of my own Province
+of Quebec. And then, taking a wider range of the duty of any man towards
+his ancestors' lineage, I declare that under the cruel circumstances of
+the case, I also consider it is my duty to defend France against her
+deadly enemy. Further enlarging the vision of duty to its fullest
+extent, I say that I am bound to defend the cause of the Allies by
+proving that I am a loyal servant of Justice and Right.
+
+Surely I could not emphasize in terms more pregnant my loyalty to the
+cause of the British Empire, of France, and their Allies, of Liberty and
+Civilization. I confidently hope they will persuade my readers that this
+book was written with the most sincere and patriotic desire to help
+rallying my French Canadian compatriots to the defence of the British,
+French and Canadian flags, which must together emerge triumphant from
+the gigantic fight against the most threatening wave of barbarism the
+world has ever had to contend with at the cost of so great and heroic
+sacrifices.
+
+When the first French edition of this book was issued, in January of
+last year, matters respecting the prosecution of the war had not yet
+required the serious consideration by Parliament and the country of the
+question of conscription to maintain to their proper efficiency the
+Canadian divisions on the firing line. Consequently, I was not then
+called upon to consider that most important subject. When I had to
+decide about publishing a second French edition--the first being
+entirely exhausted--I at first thought of adding to my work a few
+chapters respecting the most notable events developed by the gigantic
+struggle shaking the world to its very basic foundation. Foremost
+amongst them were the Russian sudden Revolution, the solemn entrance of
+the United States into the great fight, the imperious necessity of the
+military effort of the Allies far beyond that which had been foreseen,
+in order to achieve the final victory which will be the only adequate
+reward of their undaunted determination not to sheathe the sword before
+Germany will agree to restore peace upon the only possible conditions
+which will efficiently protect humanity from any other attempt at brutal
+universal domination. The question of conscription in Canada was the
+natural outcome of the progress of the deadly conflict between
+Civilization and barbarism, constitutional Freedom and despotism,
+democratic institutions and autocracy.
+
+I soon realized that I could not properly do justice to such grave
+subjects in a few pages added to my first book. After mature
+consideration, I considered it was my duty to undertake to write a
+second volume. I have so informed the public in the _Advertisement_
+which prefaces the second French edition of the first. This second
+volume I will soon issue, also intending to publish an English synopsis
+of it, if that of the first volume meets the kind appreciation I hope of
+my English speaking countrymen.
+
+However, pending the publication of the second volume, I think it is my
+duty to express now my views, in a summary way, on that much discussed
+question of obligatory military service. Let me preface by saying that
+they are not new, having originated in my mind more than thirty years
+ago. The military necessities of the present war have, of course, given
+them more precision and clearness.
+
+Deeply conscious of the sacred duty of all truly loyal British subjects
+through the present prolonged world crisis for the life or death of
+human Liberty, I had to consider conscription from the double
+stand-point of a free citizen of Canada and of my military experience
+acquired in the course of a service of over forty years.
+
+Most strongly and convincingly opposed to the militarism of the
+atrocious German type--the curse of Humanity--I have always
+believed--and do still more and more believe--imbued, I hope, with the
+true sense and principles of democratic institutions, that the greatest
+boon that could be granted the world would be that the admirable
+Christian law of peace and good-will amongst men would prevail for all
+times, and save the nations from the cruel obligation of keeping
+themselves constantly fully armed at the great cost of the best years of
+manhood, and of their accumulated treasures. But unfortunately it has
+not yet been the good luck of man to reach the goal of this most noble
+ambition. Instead of a steady advance in the right direction, he has,
+for the last fifty years, experienced a most dangerous set back by the
+predominating influence of German militarism, developed and mastered by
+the most autocratic power to the point of threatening the liberties of
+the whole world.
+
+Need I say that, as a purely philosophical question of principle, I most
+sincerely deplore that the political state of the world has been and is
+such that national safety cannot be, in too many cases, properly assured
+without the law of the land calling upon the manhood of a country to
+make the sacrifice of part of the best years of enthusiastic youth, and
+requiring from the nation, as a collective body, the expenditure, to an
+untold amount, for the purposes of defence, of the accumulated savings
+of hard work and intelligent thrift.
+
+Fortunately, the two continents of America, so abundantly blessed by
+Providence, had, until the present war, been able to pursue their
+prosperous and dignified course free from the entanglements of European
+Militarism.
+
+Even England, in all the majesty of her Imperial power, her flag
+gloriously waving over so many millions of free men, protected as she
+was by the waves which she ruled with grandeur and grace, had succeeded
+in avoiding the curse of continental conscriptionism.
+
+Between permanent conscription, despotically imposed upon a nation under
+autocratic rule, and temporary military compulsion freely accepted by a
+noble people for the very purpose of saving Humanity from military
+absolutism, there is, every one must admit, a wide difference. I have
+been, I am, and will be, to my last day, the uncompromising opponent of
+autocratic conscription, which I consider as a permanent crime against
+Christian Civilization, and the ready instrument of barbarous
+domination. To temporary compulsion I can agree, as a matter of
+patriotic and national duty, if the circumstances of the case are such
+that without its timely use, my country which has the first and
+undoubted right to my most patriotic devotion, at the cost of all I may
+own and even of my life, for her defence, would fall the prey to
+despotism which would bleed her to death to sway the world.
+
+Such is the ordeal through which Canada, the British Empire, in fact
+much the greater part of the universe, are passing with torrents of
+blood shed to rescue Mankind from the domination of German militarism.
+
+If Germany could have her course free; if she could reach the goal of
+her criminal ambition, nearly the whole world would be, for many long
+years, in the throes of the most abominable conscriptionism.
+
+If after the enthusiasm of voluntary military service has exhausted
+itself from the very successful result of its patriotic effort, is it
+not a duty for all loyal citizens to accept temporary compulsion, to
+save their country from the horrors of defeat at the hands of the most
+cruel enemy which has ever shamed the light of the sun since it shines
+over the Human race blessed with Christian principles and moral
+teachings.
+
+To the present generation of young men, strong, healthy, brave, let us
+say: be worthy of the times you live in, be equal to the great task
+imposed upon you, accepting with patriotism the sacrifices you are
+called upon to make, never forgetting that temporary compulsion for you
+means freedom from permanent conscription for your children and
+children's children in years to come.
+
+It is from the very height of such lofty considerations that I have made
+up my mind about this much vexed question which will, we must all
+earnestly hope, be more and more well understood and eventually settled
+to the everlasting good of the country once for all delivered from the
+exasperating menace of German despotism.
+
+I must reserve for the second volume of this work, the fuller expression
+of my views of what should be the military system to be maintained in
+Canada, after the very wide experience we will have derived from the
+present great war. All I will add now is that ever since the early
+eighties of the last century, after many years of voluntary service in
+the Canadian Militia, I had fully realized that it is no more possible
+to make a real soldier by a few days yearly training, for three years,
+than you can make a competent lawyer of a young man studying law for a
+fortnight in the course of three consecutive years.
+
+Since the federal Union of the Provinces we had spent much more than a
+hundred million of dollars for the training of our militia, with the
+appalling result that when came the day of getting ready for the fray,
+we had not two thousand men to send at once to the firing line. The
+first thirty thousands of the brave men who enthusiastically volunteered
+to go to the front had to be trained, at Valcartier and in England,
+several months before being sent to face the enemy whose waves of
+permanent divisions of armed men had overrun, like a torrent, Belgium
+and northern France. Of course, our boys fought and died like heroes,
+but nevertheless we at last learned, at our great cost, that soldiers no
+more than lawyers, doctors, merchants, transportation managers, bankers,
+business men of all callings, farmers, sailors, etc., can be qualified
+in a day.
+
+When the time shall come to consider what will be the requirements of
+our military organization, after this terrible struggle is over, I hope
+none will forget that war is a great science, an awful and very
+difficult art, so that we shall not deceive ourselves any longer by the
+illusion that an army can be drawn from the earth in twenty four hours.
+
+Our most efficient military commander cannot entertain the foolish
+delusion of Pompey, so crushingly beaten by Caesar, at Pharsalia, that he
+can raise legions by striking the ground with his foot.
+
+If our future national circumstances turn out to be such, after the
+restoration of peace, that we will not be called upon to make heavy
+sacrifices for defence--let Providence so bless our dear country--it
+will then be much more rational to save our money than to squander it on
+a military system which cannot produce military efficiency.
+
+The future can be trusted to settle favourably its own difficulties. For
+us of the present generation, we have to attend to the imperative and
+sacred duty of the hour. Let no one shirk his responsibilities, waver in
+the heavy task, falter before the sacrifices to be patriotically and
+heroically accepted. To deserve the everlasting gratitude of future
+generations, we must secure to them the blessings of permanent peace in
+a renovated world freed from the tyranny of autocratic despotism.
+
+Surely, I will be permitted to say that, undertaking to write _England,
+Canada and the Great War_, I fully realized my bounden duty to study all
+the questions raised by the terrible struggle, unreservedly, absolutely,
+outside of all party considerations, of all racial prejudices. A party
+man, in the only true and patriotic sense of the word, during the
+twenty-five years of my active political life, as a journalist and a
+member of the Quebec Legislature and of the Parliament of Canada, it
+became my lot in the official position which I was asked to accept and
+which I loyally filled, to all intents and purposes, for many years, to
+train my mind more and more to judge public questions solely from the
+point of view of the public good. I do not mean to say that partyism,
+well understood and patriotically practiced, is not productive of good
+to a country blessed with free institutions. But certainly in the course
+of a progressive, intelligent and eventful national life, ennobled by
+Freedom happily enjoyed, times occur when it behooves every one to rise
+superior to all other considerations, however important they may be, to
+serve the only one worthy of all sacrifices: the salvation of the
+country. Never was this principle so true, so imperative, than on the
+day when the world was so audaciously challenged by Germany to the
+deadly conflict still raging with undiminished fury.
+
+That most important question of military obligatory service, brought up
+by the pressure of the imperious necessities of military operations,
+lengthening and intensifying to unforeseen proportions, was for many
+weeks considered by Parliament. Surely, no one for a single moment
+entertained the idea that, however desirable and imperative it was for
+the representatives of the people to be of only one mind so far as the
+prosecution of Canada's share in the war was concerned, constant
+unanimity of opinion was possible respecting the various measures to be
+adopted to that end. Parliament sitting in the performance of its
+constitutional functions, with all its undoubted privileges, could not
+be expected not to exercise its right to debate all the matters
+constitutionally proposed for its concurrence and approval. I must
+certainly and wisely refrain from any comment whatsoever upon the
+lengthy discussion of the Military Service Act in both Houses in Ottawa.
+Having received the Royal Assent, the Bill is now the law of the land.
+All will patriotically rejoice to see that without waiving their right
+to pronounce upon the deeds and the views of those who are responsible
+to them, the free citizens of Canada will cheerfully accept the new
+sacrifices imposed by the obligation of carrying the war to a successful
+issue, praying to God to bless their patriotic efforts, and even with
+the true Christian spirit, to forgive guilty Germany if she will only
+repent for her crimes, and agree to repair a reasonable part of the
+immense damages she has wrought upon trodden and martyred nations.
+
+I hope,--and most ardently wish--that all my readers will agree with me
+that next to the necessity of winning the war--and, may I say, even as
+of almost equal importance for the future grandeur of our beloved
+country--range that of promoting by all lawful means harmony and good
+will amongst all our countrymen, whatever may be their racial origin,
+their religious faith, their particular aspirations not conflicting with
+their devotion to Canada as a whole, nor with their loyalty to the
+British Empire, whose greatness and prestige they want to firmly help to
+uphold with the inspiring confidence that more and more they will be the
+unconquerable bulwark of Freedom, Justice, Civilization and Right.
+
+After having so fully expressed my profound conviction of what I
+consider to be my sacred duty as a loyal British subject, I feel sure I
+will be allowed to ask my English-speaking countrymen not to judge my
+French compatriots by the sayings and deeds of persons, too well gifted
+and too prone to injure their future and that of the whole country
+itself, but utterly disqualified and impotent to do them any good.
+
+Need I affirm that my French Canadian compatriots are loyal at heart, a
+liberty loving and peaceful people, law-abiding citizens, fairly minded,
+intelligent, hard working, industrious. They have done, they are doing,
+and will do, their fair share for the progress and the future greatness
+of our wide and mighty Dominion. To all those who desire to appreciate
+their course in all fairness and Christian Justice, I will say: do not
+fail to take into account that like all other national groups they are
+liable, in overtrying circumstances, to be in a certain measure wrongly
+influenced by deficiencies of leadership, but depend that they cannot
+be, for any length of time, carried away by unscrupulous players on
+their feelings. Some of them were deceived by persistent efforts to
+persuade them that England was, as much as Germany, guilty of having
+precipitated the great war which has been the curse of almost the whole
+world for the last four years. The accumulated remembrance of their
+staunch loyalty and patriotism during more than a century and a half
+will do much to favour the harmonious relations of all Canadians of good
+will who, I have no doubt, comprise millions of well wishers of the
+glorious destiny of our country.
+
+May I be allowed to conclude by saying that my most earnest desire is to
+do all in my power, in the rank and file of the great army of free men,
+to reach the goal which ought to be the most persevering and patriotic
+ambition of loyal Canadians of all origins and creeds.
+
+And I repeat, wishing my words to be reechoed throughout the length and
+breadth of the land I so heartily cherish:--I have always been, I am and
+will ever be, to my last breath, true to my oath of allegiance to my
+Sovereign and to my country.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+WHO ARE THE GUILTY PARTIES?
+
+
+Any one sincerely wishing to arrive at a sound opinion on the great war
+raging for the last four years, must necessarily make a serious study of
+the causes which led to the terrific struggle so horribly straining the
+energies of the civilized world to escape tyrannical domination. The
+case having been so fully discussed, and the responsibilities of the
+assailant belligerents so completely proved, I surely need not show at
+length that the German Emperor, his military party, the group of the
+German population called JUNKERS, are to the highest degree, the guilty
+parties of all the woful wrongs imposed upon Mankind and of the
+bloodshed unprecedented in all the ages.
+
+The German Empire had for many years decided that it would not alone
+attempt to dominate the world. It wanted a partner to share the
+responsibility of the crime it was ready to commit at the first
+favourable opportunity, but a docile partner which she could direct at
+will, command with imperious orders, and crush without mercy at the
+first move of resistance. That plying tool was found in the complicity
+of Austria-Hungary, for years under the sway of Berlin diplomacy.
+
+No sane man, if he is sincere, if he is honest, can now, for a single
+moment, hesitate to proclaim that between Germany and Austria-Hungary,
+and the group of nations henceforth bearing the glorious name of THE
+ALLIES, Right and Justice are on the side of England, of France, of the
+United States, of Belgium, of Italy, of Canada.
+
+Where is the man with a sound mind, with a strong heart, beating with
+the noble impulses of righteousness, with a soul dignified by lofty
+aspirations, who ignores to-day that for fifty years previous to the
+declaration of war, in August 1914, Germany had been perfecting her
+military organization for a grand effort at universal domination?
+
+All my life a close student of History, I was much impressed by the
+constant Policy of England to maintain Peace during the last century.
+When the World emerged from the great wars of the Napoleonic Era, she
+firmly took her stand in favour of peaceful relations between the
+nations, trusting more and more for the future prosperity of them all to
+the advantages to be derived from the permanency of friendly
+intercourse, from the ever increasing development of international
+trade, prompted by the freest possible exchanges of the products of all
+the countries blessed by Providence with large and varied resources. Her
+statesmen, so many of them truly worthy of this name, however divided
+they may have been with regard to questions of domestic government and
+internal reforms, were most united about the course to be followed
+respecting foreign relations. Perhaps more than all others having a say
+in the management of the world's affairs at large, they fully realized
+that no nation could prosper and successfully work out her destinies by
+systematically trying to injure her neighbours. No independent country
+can become wealthier, happier, and greater, by spreading ruin and
+devastation around her frontiers.
+
+The most convincing evidence that England was constantly favourable to
+the maintenance of peace amongst the great Powers of the World, for the
+last hundred years, is found in her permanent determination not to be
+drawn into the vortex of European continental militarism, so powerfully
+developed by Prussianism. She could have organized a standing army of
+millions of men. She would not. True, during the few years which
+preceded the present hurricane, some of the most eminent of England's
+military officers, notably, foremost amongst them, Lord Roberts, seeing,
+with their eyes wide open, the aggravated dangers accumulating on the
+darkening horizon, warned their countrymen about the threatening waves
+which menaced the future of the world. But British public opinion, as a
+whole, would not depart from her almost traditional policy of
+"_non-intervention_". For nearly a century, Great Britain maintained her
+"_splendid isolation_", trusting to the sound sense which should always
+govern the world to protect Mankind against the horrors of a general
+war. Never was this great national policy better exemplified than during
+the long and glorious reign of Her Majesty Queen Victoria. For more than
+fifty years, she graced one of the most illustrious Thrones that ever
+presided over the destinies of a great Empire, with sovereign dignity,
+with womanly virtues, with motherly devotion, with patriotic respect of
+the constitutional liberties of her free subjects. When she departed for
+a better world, she was succeeded by the great King and Emperor--Edward
+VII.--who, during the few years of his memorable reign, proved himself
+so much the friendly supporter of harmony and good will amongst the
+nations that he deserved to be called "THE KING OF THE PEACE OF THE
+WORLD."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE PERSISTENT EFFORTS OF ENGLAND IN FAVOUR OF PEACE.
+
+
+In 1891, Lord Salisbury, then Prime Minister of England, witnessing the
+constant progress of Prussian militarism on land and sea, and fully
+conscious of the misfortunes it was preparing for Humanity, ordered an
+official statement to be made of the extravagant cost of the European
+military organization, and sent it confidentially to the German Kaiser,
+who took no notice of it.
+
+In 1896, Lord Salisbury lays before the Czar of Russia all the
+information he has obtained on the question of militarism in Europe. On
+the 28th of August, 1898, the Emperor of Russia addressed to the world
+his celebrated Manifesto in favour of peace. It urged, first, the
+necessity of a truly permanent peace; second, the limitation of military
+preparation which, in its ever increasing development, was causing the
+economic ruin of the nations.
+
+The conferences of The Hague in favour of an international agreement for
+the maintenance of peace were the direct result of the initiative of the
+British Prime Minister, who foresaw the frightful consequences for
+Humanity of the enormous development of militarism by the German
+Empire.
+
+All the great Powers of Europe and America, together with the secondary
+states, at once heartily concurred with the proposition of the Czar of
+Russia. Unfortunately, there were two sad exceptions to the consent to
+consider the salutary purpose so anxiously desired by those who valued
+as they should all the benefits the world would have derived from an
+international system assuring permanent peace. Germany and Austria, the
+latter already for years dominated by the former, opposed the patriotic
+move of the Emperor of Russia, suggested to him by Great Britain. They
+agreed to be represented at the Conferences for the only object of
+thwarting the efforts in favour of a satisfactory enactment of new rules
+of International Law to henceforth protect the world against a general
+conflagration, and to free the nations from the crushing burdens of a
+militarism daily developing more extravagant.
+
+Ministerial changes in Great Britain in no way altered this part of the
+foreign policy of the Mother Country. In 1905, Mr. Campbell-Bannerman
+became Prime Minister of England. He was well known to be an ardent
+pacifist. Deprecating the mad increase of unchecked militarism, he said,
+in his ministerial program:--
+
+"_A policy of huge armaments keeps alive and stimulates and feeds the
+belief that force is the best, if not the only, solution of
+international differences._"
+
+On the 8th of March, 1906, Lord Haldane, then Minister of War, declared
+in the British House of Commons:--
+
+"_I wish we were near the time when the nations would consider together
+the reduction of armaments.... Only by united action can we get rid of
+the burden which is pressing so heavily on all civilized nations._"
+
+The second Conference of The Hague which took place in July and October,
+1907, was then being organized. Russia was again its official promoter.
+Well aware of the uncompromising stand of Germany on the question of
+reduced armaments, she had not included that matter in the program she
+had decided to lay before the Conference. The British Government did all
+they could to have it placed on the orders to be taken into
+consideration. A member of the Labor Party, Mr. Vivian, moved in the
+House of Commons, that the Conference of The Hague be called upon to
+discuss that most important subject. His motion was unanimously and
+enthusiastically carried.
+
+Informing the House that the Cabinet heartily approved the Resolution,
+Sir Edward Grey, Secretary for Foreign Affairs, said:--
+
+"_I do not believe that at any time has the conscious public opinion in
+the various countries of Europe set more strongly in the direction of
+peace than at the present time, and yet the burden of military and naval
+expenditure goes on increasing. No greater service could it (the Hague
+Conference) do, than to make the conditions of peace less expensive
+than they are at the present time.... It is said we are waiting upon
+foreign nations in order to reduce our expenditure. As a matter of fact,
+we are all waiting on each other. Some day or other somebody must take
+the first step.... I do, on behalf of the Government, not only accept,
+but welcome such a resolution as this as a wholesome and beneficial
+expression of opinion._"
+
+In July, 1906, a most important meeting of the Inter-Parliamentary Union
+took place in London. Twenty-three countries, enjoying the privileges,
+in various proportions, of free institutions, were represented at this
+memorable Congress of Nations. In the course of his remarkable opening
+speech of the first sitting, Mr. Campbell-Bannerman, Prime Minister,
+said:--
+
+"_Urge your Governments, in the name of humanity, to go into The Hague
+Conference as we ourselves hope to go, pledged to diminished charges in
+respect of armaments._"
+
+A motion embodying the views so earnestly pressed by the British
+Government was unanimously carried.
+
+On the fifth of March, 1907, only four months before the opening of the
+Second Hague Conference, Mr. Campbell-Bannerman, affirming the bounden
+duty of England to propose the restriction of armaments, said, in the
+British House of Commons:--
+
+"_Holding the opinion that there is a great movement of feeling among
+thinking people in all the nations of the world, in favor of some
+restraint on the enormous expenditure involved in the present system so
+long as it exists.... We have desired and still desire to place
+ourselves in the very front rank of those who think that the warlike
+attitude of powers, as displayed by the excessive growth of armaments is
+a curse to Europe, and the sooner it is checked, in however moderate a
+degree, the better._"
+
+Unfortunately, German hostility to reduced armaments prevented any good
+result from the second Hague Conference in the way of checking
+extravagant and ruinous military organization. There was sad
+disappointment in all the reasonable world and specially in England at
+this deplorable outcome. Mr. Campbell-Bannerman expressed it as
+follows:--
+
+"_We had hoped that some great advance might be made towards a common
+consent to arrest the wasteful and growing competition in naval and
+military armaments. We were disappointed._"
+
+Unshaken in her determination to do her utmost to protect Civilization
+against the threatening and ever increasing dangers of German
+militarism, England persisted with the most laudable perseverance in her
+noble efforts to that much desired end. But all her pleadings, however
+convincing, were vain. Germany was obdurate. Finally, on the 30th of
+March, 1911, speaking in the Reichstag, the German Imperial Chancellor
+threw off the mask, and positively declared that the question of
+reduced armaments admitted of no possible solution "_as long as men were
+men and States were States_."
+
+A more brutal declaration could hardly have been made. It was a cynical
+challenge to the World. Times were maturing and Germany was anxiously
+waiting for the opportunity to strike the blow which would stagger
+Humanity.
+
+Through all the great crisis of July and August, 1914, directly
+consequent upon the odious crime of Sarajevo, England exhausted all her
+efforts to maintain peace, but unfortunately without avail.
+
+Knowing very well how much England sincerely wished the maintenance of
+peace, the German Government was to the last moment under the delusion
+that it could succeed in having Great Britain to remain neutral in a
+general European war. They were not ashamed to presume they could bribe
+England. Without blushing they made to the British Government the
+infamous proposition contained in the following despatch from Sir E.
+Goschen, the British Ambassador at Berlin, to Sir Edward Grey, the
+Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs:--
+
+ Sir E. Goschen to Sir Edward Grey (Received July 29).
+ Berlin, July 29, 1914.
+ (Telegraphic.)
+
+ I was asked to call upon the Chancellor to-night. His Excellency
+ had just returned from Potsdam.
+
+ He said that should Austria be attacked by Russia a European
+ conflagration might, he feared, become inevitable, owing to
+ Germany's obligation as Austria's ally, in spite of his
+ continued efforts to maintain peace. He then proceeded to make
+ the following strong bid for British neutrality. He said that it
+ was clear, so far as he was able to judge the main principle
+ which governed British policy, that Great Britain would never
+ stand by and allow France to be crushed in any conflict there
+ might be. That, however, was not the object at which Germany
+ aimed. Provided that neutrality of Great Britain was certain,
+ every assurance would be given to the British Government that
+ the Imperial Government aimed at no territorial acquisitions at
+ the expense of France should they prove victorious in any war
+ that might ensue.
+
+ I questioned his Excellency about the French colonies, and he
+ said he was unable to give a similar undertaking in that
+ respect. As regards Holland, however, his Excellency said that,
+ so long as Germany's adversaries respected the integrity and
+ neutrality of the Netherlands, Germany was ready to give His
+ Majesty's Government an assurance that she would do likewise. It
+ depended upon the action of France what operations Germany might
+ be forced to enter upon in Belgium, but when the war was over,
+ Belgian integrity would be respected if she had not sided
+ against Germany.
+
+ His Excellency ended by saying that ever since he had been
+ Chancellor the object of his policy had been, as you were aware,
+ to bring about an understanding with England; he trusted that
+ these assurances might form the basis of that understanding
+ which he so much desired. He had in mind a general neutrality
+ agreement between England and Germany, though it was of course
+ at the present moment too early to discuss details, and an
+ assurance of British neutrality in the conflict which present
+ crisis might possibly produce, would enable him to look forward
+ to realisation of his desire.
+
+ In reply to his Excellency's inquiry how I thought his request
+ would appeal to you, I said that I did not think it probable
+ that at this stage of events you would care to bind yourself to
+ any course of action and that I was of opinion that you would
+ desire to retain full liberty.
+
+ Our conversation upon this subject having come to an end, I
+ communicated the contents of your telegram of to-day to his
+ Excellency, who expressed his best thanks to you.
+
+To the foregoing outrageous proposition, the Government of Great Britain
+gave the proud and noble reply which follows, for all times to be
+recorded in diplomatic annals to the eternal honour and glory of the
+Ministers who incurred the responsibility of, and of the distinguished
+diplomat who drafted, that memorable document:--
+
+ Sir Edward Grey to Sir E. Goschen.
+ (Telegraphic.)
+ Foreign Office, July 30, 1914.
+ Your telegram of 29th July.
+
+ His Majesty's Government cannot for a moment entertain the
+ Chancellor's proposal that they should bind themselves to
+ neutrality on such terms.
+
+ What he asks us in effect is to engage to stand by while French
+ colonies are taken and France is beaten so long as Germany does
+ not take French territory as distinct from the colonies.
+
+ From the material point of view such a proposal is unacceptable,
+ for France, without further territory in Europe being taken from
+ her, could be so crushed as to lose her position as a Great
+ Power, and become subordinate to German policy.
+
+ Altogether, apart from that, it would be a disgrace for us to
+ make this bargain with Germany at the expense of France, a
+ disgrace from which the good name of this country would never
+ recover.
+
+ The Chancellor also in effect asks us to bargain away whatever
+ obligation or interest we have as regards the neutrality of
+ Belgium. We could not entertain that bargain either.
+
+ Having said so much, it is unnecessary to examine whether the
+ prospect of a future general neutrality agreement between
+ England and Germany offered positive advantages sufficient to
+ compensate us for tying our hands now. We must preserve our full
+ freedom to act as circumstances may seem to us to require in any
+ such unfavourable and regrettable development of the present
+ crisis as the Chancellor contemplates.
+
+ You should speak to the Chancellor in the above sense, and add
+ most earnestly that the only way of maintaining the good
+ relations between England and Germany is that they should
+ continue to work together to preserve the peace of Europe; if we
+ succeed in this object, the mutual relations of Germany and
+ England will, I believe, be =ipso facto= improved and
+ strengthened. For that object His Majesty's Government will work
+ in that way with all sincerity and good-will.
+
+ And I will say this: if the peace of Europe can be preserved,
+ and the present crisis safely passed, my own endeavour will be
+ to promote some arrangement to which Germany will be a party, by
+ which she could be assured that no aggressive or hostile policy
+ would be pursued against her or her allies by France, Russia,
+ and ourselves, jointly or separately. I have desired this and
+ worked for it, as far as I could, through the last Balkan
+ crisis, and, Germany having a corresponding object, our
+ relations sensibly improved. The idea has hitherto been too
+ Utopian to form the subject of definite proposals, but if this
+ present crisis, so much more acute than any that Europe has gone
+ through for generations, be safely passed, I am hopeful that the
+ relief and reaction which will follow may make possible some
+ more definite rapprochement between the Powers than has been
+ possible hitherto.
+
+The British Government could not take a more dignified stand and express
+their indignation at the infamous proposal in stronger and more noble
+terms.
+
+Let us now read the indignant protest of Mr. Asquith, the British Prime
+Minister, against the outrageous German proposition, addressed to the
+House of Commons, where it raised a storm of applause, proclaiming to
+the World the dogged determination of England to wage war rather than
+agree to the dishonourable German proposal:--
+
+ What does that amount to? Let me just ask the House. I do so,
+ not with the object of inflaming passion, certainly not with the
+ object of exciting feeling against Germany, but I do so to
+ vindicate and make clear the position of the British Government
+ in this matter. What did that proposal amount to? In the first
+ place, it meant this: That behind the back of France--they were
+ not made a party to these communications--we should have given,
+ if we had assented to that, a free license to Germany to annex,
+ in the event of a successful war, the whole of the extra
+ European dominions and possessions of France. What did it mean
+ as regards Belgium? When she addressed, as she has addressed in
+ the last few days, her moving appeal to us to fulfil our solemn
+ guarantee of her neutrality, what reply should we have given?
+ What reply should we have given to that Belgian appeal? We
+ should have been obliged to say that without her knowledge we
+ had bartered away to the Power threatening her our obligation to
+ keep our plighted word. The House has read, and the country has
+ read, of course, in the last few hours, the most pathetic appeal
+ addressed by the King of Belgium, and I do not envy the man who
+ can read that appeal with an unmoved heart. Belgians are
+ fighting and losing their lives. What would have been the
+ position of Great Britain to-day in the face of that spectacle
+ if we had assented to this infamous proposal? Yes, and what are
+ we to get in return for the betrayal of our friends and the
+ dishonour of our obligations? What are we to get in return? A
+ promise--nothing more; a promise as to what Germany would do in
+ certain eventualities; a promise, be it observed--I am sorry to
+ say it, but it must be put upon record--given by a Power which
+ was at that very moment announcing its intention to violate its
+ own treaty, and inviting us to do the same. I can only say, if
+ we had dallied or temporized, we, as a Government, should have
+ covered ourselves with dishonour, and we should have betrayed
+ the interests of this country, of which we are trustees.
+
+After quoting and eulogizing the telegraphic despatch of Sir Edward Grey
+to Sir E. Goschen, dated July 30, 1914, Mr. Asquith proceeded as
+follows:--
+
+ That document, in my opinion, states clearly, in temperate and
+ convincing language, the attitude of this Government. Can any
+ one who reads it fail to appreciate the tone of obvious
+ sincerity and earnestness which underlies it; can any one
+ honestly doubt that the Government of this country in spite of
+ great provocation--and I regard the proposals made to us as
+ proposals which we might have thrown aside without consideration
+ and almost without answer--can any one doubt that in spite of
+ great provocation the right hon. gentleman, who had already
+ earned the title--and no one ever more deserved it--of Peace
+ Maker of Europe, persisted to the very last moment of the last
+ hour in that beneficent but unhappily frustrated purpose. I am
+ entitled to say, and I do so on behalf of this country--I speak
+ not for a party, I speak for the country as a whole--that we
+ made every effort any Government could possibly make for peace.
+ But this war has been forced upon us. What is it we are
+ fighting for? Every one knows, and no one knows better than the
+ Government the terrible incalculable suffering, economic,
+ social, personal and political, which war, and especially a war
+ between the Great Powers of the world must entail. There is no
+ man amongst us sitting upon this bench in these trying
+ days--more trying perhaps than any body of statesmen for a
+ hundred years have had to pass through, there is not a man
+ amongst us who has not, during the whole of that time, had
+ clearly before his vision the almost unequalled suffering which
+ war, even in just cause, must bring about, not only to the
+ peoples who are for the moment living in this country and in the
+ other countries of the world, but to posterity and to the whole
+ prospects of European civilization. Every step we took with that
+ vision before our eyes, and with a sense of responsibility which
+ it is impossible to describe. Unhappily, if in spite of all our
+ efforts to keep the peace, and with that full and overpowering
+ consciousness of the result, if the issue be decided in favour
+ of war, we have, nevertheless, thought it to be the duty as well
+ as the interest of this country to go to war, the House may be
+ well assured it was because we believe, and I am certain the
+ Country will believe, we are unsheathing our sword in a just
+ cause.
+
+ If I am asked what we are fighting for I reply in two sentences.
+ In the first place to fulfil a solemn international obligation,
+ an obligation which, if it had been entered into between private
+ persons in the ordinary concerns of life, would have been
+ regarded as an obligation not only of law but of honour, which
+ no self-respecting man could possibly have repudiated. I say,
+ secondly, we are fighting to vindicate the principle which, in
+ these days when force, material force, sometimes seems to be the
+ dominant influence and factor in the development of mankind, we
+ are fighting to vindicate the principle that small nationalities
+ are not to be crushed, in defiance of international good faith,
+ by the military will of a strong and overmastering Power. I do
+ not believe any nation ever entered into a great
+ controversy--and this is one of the greatest history will ever
+ know--with a clearer conscience and stronger conviction that it
+ is fighting, not for aggression, not for the maintenance even of
+ its own selfish interest, but that it is fighting in defence of
+ principles, the maintenance of which is vital to the
+ civilisation of the world. With a full conviction, not only of
+ the wisdom and justice, but of the obligations which lay upon us
+ to challenge this great issue, we are entering into the
+ struggle.
+
+The German Government refusing to order their army to retire from the
+Belgian territory it had violated, at midnight, 4th to 5th August, 1914,
+the whole British Empire was at war with the whole German Empire.
+
+Surely, there is not the slightest necessity to argue any more that in
+the terrific war raging for the last four years, Justice and Right are
+on the side of England and her Allies. No war was ever more just, waged
+with equal honour for the triumph of Liberty and Civilization, for the
+protection of Humanity against the onslaught of barbarism developed to
+the cruelty of the darkest ages of History.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE CALL TO DUTY IN CANADA.
+
+
+Every one knows how the news of the State of War between the British and
+German Empires were received in our great Canadian Dominion, after the
+days of anxious waiting which culminated in the rallying of England to
+the defence of the cause of Freedom and Civilization. When the call for
+duty was sounded in the Capital of the British Empire, it rolled over
+the mighty Atlantic, spreading over the length and breadth of Canada,
+being re-echoed with force in our Province of Quebec.
+
+At once called to prepare for the emergency, the Canadian Parliament met
+and unanimously decided that the Dominion would, of her own free will
+and patriotic decision, participate in the Great War. The course of
+events in Canada, for the last four years, is well known by all. It is
+recent history.
+
+My special object in condensing in this book the defence which I
+considered it my duty to make of the just and sacred cause of the
+British Empire, and her Allies, in the great war still raging with
+undiminished fury, being to show how I did, to the best of my ability,
+try to persuade my French Canadian Countrymen where was the true path
+of duty, and how false and disloyal were the unscrupulous theories of
+"Nationalism", I must first review the successive movements of public
+opinion in the Province of Quebec.
+
+In the preceding sentence, I have intently affirmed that the cause of
+the Allies was that of the whole British Empire. Surely, it should not
+be necessary to say so, as no truly loyal British subject would for a
+moment hesitate to come to that patriotic conclusion. Still, however
+incredible it is, the duty of the British colonies to rally to the flag
+to defend the Empire and participate in the deadly struggle between
+Civilization and barbarism, was challenged by the leaders of the
+"Nationalist school" in the Province of Quebec. Of course, that school
+never represented more than a small minority of thought and numbers.
+But, sad to admit, a fanatical minority, in days of trying sacrifices,
+can do a great deal of injury to a people by inflaming national and
+religious prejudices. We, French Canadians, have had much to suffer from
+the unpatriotic efforts of a few to bring our countrymen to take an
+erroneous view of the situation.
+
+At the opening of the war, the general opinion in the Province of Quebec
+was without doubt strongly in favor of Canada's participation in the
+struggle. Any student of the working of our constitutional system knows
+how the strength of public opinion is ascertained, outside of a general
+election, in all cases, and more specially with regard to measures of
+paramount importance when the country has to deal with a national
+emergency.
+
+The Parliament of Canada is the authorized representative of the
+Country. Called in a special session, at the very outbreak of the
+hostilities, they voted unanimously that it was our duty to participate
+in the war. All the representatives of the Province of Quebec heartily
+joined with those of all the other Provinces to vote this unanimous
+decision.
+
+In the light of events ever since, who can now reasonably pretend that
+the patriotic decision of the Parliament of Canada was not entirely,
+even enthusiastically, approved by the Canadian people? The press, even
+in the Province of Quebec, with only one exception of any consequence,
+was unanimous in its approval of the action of Parliament.
+
+The heads of our Church, the Archbishops and Bishops of the
+Ecclesiastical Provinces of Quebec, Montreal and Ottawa, in their very
+important Pastoral Letter on the duties of the Catholics in the present
+war, positively said:--
+
+"_We must acknowledge it--(nous ne saurions nous le dissimuler--): that
+conflict, one of the most terrific the world has yet seen, cannot but
+have its repercussion in our country. England is engaged into it, and
+who does not see that the fate of all the component parts of the Empire
+is bound with the fate of her arms. She relies upon our support, and
+that support, we are happy to say, has been generously offered to her
+both in men and money._"
+
+No representative of public opinion, of any weight, outside of
+Parliament, professional men, leaders of finance, commerce and industry,
+in the Province of Quebec, raised a word of disapproval at the
+Parliamentary call to arms.
+
+Not one meeting was called, not one resolution was moved, to oppose the
+decision of the Canadian Parliament.
+
+Not one petition was addressed to the two Houses in Ottawa against
+Canada's participation in the war.
+
+Every one in the Province of Quebec knew that participating in the war
+would entail heavy financial sacrifices, and that the taxation of the
+country would have to be largely increased to meet the new obligations
+we had freely decided to incur for the salvation of the Empire and of
+Civilization.
+
+The Government of the day proposed the financial measures they
+considered necessary to raise the public revenue which the circumstances
+required. Those measures were unanimously approved by Parliament. The
+taxpayers of the country, those of the Province of Quebec like all the
+others, willingly and patriotically accepted and paid without complaint
+the new taxes into the public treasury. During more than the three first
+years of the war, I visited a good part of the Province of Quebec, and
+addressed several large public meetings. Everywhere my attention was
+forcibly struck by the prompt willingness of my French Canadian
+countrymen to bear their share of the financial sacrifices Canada was
+called upon to make for the triumph of the cause of the Allies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+RECRUITING BY VOLUNTARY SERVICE.
+
+
+No stronger evidence could be given of the determination of the country
+as a whole, and over all its component parts, to support Great Britain
+and her Allies to final success, than the truly wonderful record of the
+voluntary enlistment of more than four hundred thousand men, of all
+walks in life, to rush to the front.
+
+Recruiting in the Province of Quebec indeed started very well. Several
+thousands of French Canadian youth rallied to the colors. I hope and
+trust that, sooner or later, it will be possible to make a more
+satisfactory statistical record of the number of French Canadians who
+enlisted. I am fully convinced that the total is somewhat much larger
+than the figures usually quoted. It would surely be conducive to a
+better understanding of the case, if such statistical information was
+carefully prepared and made public. It is easily conceivable that the
+pressure of the work of maintaining the splendid Canadian army renders
+it perhaps difficult to attend actually to the details of that
+compilation. So we can afford to wait for the redress of figures which
+may constitute a wrong to the race second in numbers but equal to any in
+patriotism in Canada.
+
+Pending my remarks upon certain causes which have contributed to check
+recruiting amongst the French element in the Province of Quebec, I
+consider it important to mention those which were easy to ascertain and
+comprehend.
+
+It is a well known fact that early marriages are a rule in the Province
+of Quebec much more than in the other Provinces of the Dominion. As a
+natural consequence, the available number of young unmarried men for
+recruiting purposes was proportionately less. I myself have known
+parishes in our Province where half a dozen of unmarried young men from
+twenty years of age and upwards could not be found.
+
+It was easily to foresee that a comparison would be made between the
+number of Canadian-born volunteers in the English-speaking Provinces and
+that from the Province of Quebec. The degree of enthusiasm for
+enlistment in the other Provinces between the foreign born and the
+Canadian born has also been noticed. It has generally been admitted that
+most naturally the young men recently arrived in Canada were more
+strongly appealed to by all the sacred ties still binding them to their
+mother land. When generations have, for more than a century, enjoyed all
+the blessings of peace and lived far away from the turmoil of warlike
+preparations and military conflicts, is it to be much wondered at that
+the entire population is not at once permeated with the feeling of the
+dangers ahead, and do not rise rapidly to the full sense of the duty she
+is suddenly called upon to perform.
+
+My daily personal intercourse with hundreds of my French Canadian
+compatriots allowed me to realize that many of them, even amongst the
+leading classes, were over-confident that the Allies representing at the
+beginning the united effort of England, France and Russia, soon to be
+reinforced by Italy, breaking away from the Central Powers, would
+certainly be equal to the task of being victorious over German
+militarism. Repeatedly, before public meetings and in very numerous
+private conversations, I urgently implored my hearers not to be so
+deluded, doing my best to convince them that it would be a fatal error
+to shut our eyes from the truth, that the military power of Central
+Europe, comprising the two great Empires of Germany and Austria,
+Bulgaria, with the help of Asiatic Turkey, and the undisguised support
+of baneful teutonic influences and intrigues at the courts of Petrograd
+and Athens, was gigantic, and that the terrible conflict would surely
+develop into a struggle for life and death between human freedom and
+barbarism.
+
+This feeling of over-confidence was passing away, when it became evident
+that to triumph over the modern huns and their associates was no easy
+task; that the goal of freeing humanity from the threatening universal
+domination would require the most determined effort of the nations who
+had heroically undertaken to reach it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+INTERVENTION OF NATIONALISM.
+
+
+The great struggle being waged with increased intensity, it was daily
+becoming more and more evident that the Allied nations were bound to
+muster all their courage, perseverance and resources to successfully
+fight their determined foe. It was just at the thick of this critical
+situation, calling forth the devotion and patriotism of all, that the
+"Nationalist" campaign of false theories and principles was launched
+with renewed activity in the Province of Quebec.
+
+Mr. Henri Bourassa, ex-member of Labelle in the House of Commons, was,
+and still is, the recognized leader of the "Nationalist School" in our
+Province, and wherever it finds adherents. His personal organ, "_Le
+Devoir_," is daily expounding the doctrines of that School.
+
+In October, 1915, Mr. Bourassa issued a pamphlet of over four hundred
+pages entitled:--"_What do we owe England?_"--in French:--"_Que
+devons-nous a l'Angleterre?_"
+
+In the long overdrawn and farfetched argumentation of this volume, the
+author's effort is to try and prove that Canada owes nothing to England,
+that all those who favour the Canadian participation in the war are
+"revolutionists," that we are unduly paying a large tribute to the
+Empire.
+
+In 1916, Mr. Bourassa supplemented his first book with a second
+pamphlet, entitled:--"_Yesterday, To-day, To-morrow_," in
+French:--"_Hier, Aujourd'hui, Demain_," in which he amplified the views
+expressed in the preceding volume.
+
+I undertook to read Mr. Bourassa's works, and I must say that I was
+astonished at what I found therein. I felt very strongly that his
+erroneous views--without questioning their sincerity--were bound to
+pervert the opinion of my French compatriots, to enflame their
+prejudices, and to do a great deal of harm in promoting the ever
+dangerous conflict of race fanaticism. Over forty years of experience of
+public life had taught me how easy it is to introduce a prejudice in a
+man's mind, but how difficult it is to destroy it when once it has taken
+root.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+WHAT DO WE OWE ENGLAND?
+
+
+To this question raised by Mr. Bourassa, and argued at length by himself
+in the negative, I answered by a chapter of my book:--"_L'Angleterre, le
+Canada et la Grand Guerre_"--"_England, Canada and the Great War_."
+
+Great Britain, ever since she came to the conclusion that the days of
+the old colonial policy were passed, and agreed that we should freely
+govern ourselves, with ministerial responsibility, within the powers set
+forth in our constitutional charter, has scrupulously respected our
+political liberty. We have administered our own affairs at our own free
+will. The Imperial Government never attempted to interfere with the
+development of our federal politics. They would surely have declined
+such interference, if it had been asked for.
+
+As long as we form part of the British Empire, it is evident that we owe
+to England that loyalty which every colony owes to her mother-country.
+Granted by the Sovereign Power ruling Canada the freest institutions,
+having the best of reasons to be fully satisfied with our relations with
+Great Britain, we are in duty bound to be loyal to her flag. We must be
+true to our allegiance.
+
+We have freely decided to incur the sacrifices we are making for the
+war. We have so decided because we considered it of the greatest
+importance, for the future of Humanity, that the German ambition for
+universal domination be foiled; that the British Empire be maintained;
+that France should continue a first class Power, as expressed by Mr.
+Asquith; that before all, and above all, the eternal principles of
+Right, Justice and Civilization, shall not be trampled upon by the
+terrific assault of teutonic barbarism. Moreover, we are also in duty
+bound to judge with fairness England's part in the great society of
+nations, and, especially, that she plays in the great events of the
+present crisis. Beyond doubt, a truly loyal Canadian must refrain from
+poisoning foreign opinion and that of his fellow British subjects
+against Great Britain in attributing her course to selfish interests,
+wilfully taking no account of her broad and admirable foreign policy,
+ever inspired by the steady desire to maintain peace.
+
+In the first mentioned work, Mr. Bourassa lays great stress on the fact
+that for nearly a century and a half, previous to the South African War,
+Canada did not participate in the wars of the Empire. He extensively
+quotes from the documents and the discussions between Canada's
+representatives and the Imperial Government, respecting the defence of
+our country, and that of the Empire herself. He concludes by pretending
+that the result of all these negotiations and conventions was the
+agreement that Canada would have only to attend to her own defence, and
+that Great Britain was always obliged to protect us against all outside
+attacks. From these pretensions he draws the startling conclusion that
+all those who do not stand by the conventions he did his best to
+emphasize are doing revolutionary work.
+
+The answer to such extravagant notions is rather plain and easy. There
+was not the slightest necessity for the Nationalist leader to multiply
+lengthy quotations to prove what mere common sense settles at first
+thought:--
+
+First:--That any country, whether it be independent or a colony, must
+defend itself when attacked by an enemy.
+
+Second:--That a Sovereign State is bound to defend all the territory
+under its authority and covered by its flag.
+
+But all this has nothing whatever to do with the very different question
+of Canada's participation, outside her own territory, in a war in which
+Great Britain is engaged, which participation Canada has freely,
+deliberately approved and ordered. Such was the case in 1914. The
+Parliament and the people of Canada at once realized that in the
+gigantic conflict into which Germany had drawn all the Great Powers of
+Europe, our future destiny as much as that of England herself was at
+stake. Without the slightest hesitation, unasked and unsolicited by the
+Mother Country, we decided that we were in duty bound to do our share
+to defend the great Empire of which we are a very important component
+part, and to help saving the world from tyrannical domination.
+
+Much too often giving to words a meaning which they positively cannot
+convey, Mr. Bourassa argued at length to prove that the agreements,
+conventions, and understandings arrived at between the Imperial and
+Canadian Governments, at different dates, were a _solemn treaty_.
+
+How false and untenable such a pretention is, surely needs no lengthy
+argument. International Law knows no treaties but those made between
+Sovereign States. It is most absurd to pretend that a Sovereign State
+can make a treaty between herself and its own colony. Where is the man
+with the slightest notion of Constitutional Government who would
+pretend, for instance, that the British North American Act is a treaty
+between Great Britain and Canada. It is an Act passed by the Legislative
+authority of the Sovereign State to which we belong, enacting the
+conditions under which Canada would enjoy the rights and privileges of
+constitutional self-government, participating in the exercise of
+Sovereignty within the limits of the powers enumerated in the Act
+creating the Dominion. It was precisely because we knew we were acting
+within the limits of those powers, that we decided to join with England
+and her Allies in the great war.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+CANADA IS NOT A SOVEREIGN STATE.
+
+
+As long as Canada will remain under the flag of Great Britain--and for
+one I hope it will yet be for many long years,--it is evident that it
+will not be a "_Sovereign State_" in the full sense of the word.
+
+One can hardly believe that the Nationalist leader, at page 17 of his
+pamphlet--"_Hier, Aujourd'hui, Demain_"--"_Yesterday, To-day,
+To-morrow_," opens a chapter with the title: "_Les Colonies autonomes
+sont des Etats Souverains._"--"_The autonomous colonies are Sovereign
+States._"
+
+Mr. Bourassa was evidently led to the grievous error contained in the
+preceding title by a complete misapprehension of the true meaning of the
+word "_autonomous_." He took "_autonomy_" for "_Sovereignty_," being
+under the delusion that the two are synonymous.
+
+Any student of History knows, or ought to know, that after the war which
+culminated in the independence of the United States, England adopted an
+entirely new colonial policy. She was the first Sovereign Power, and has
+ever since remained the only one, to realize that the old system was
+doomed to failure, that it was worn out. Her leading statesmen, who
+always ranked amongst the most eminent the world over, were more and
+more convinced that the only safe colonial policy was that which would
+grant "_self-government_" to the colonies, trained to its harmonious
+working, for their interior management. The true meaning of this new
+policy was that several of the colonies were, by acts of the Imperial
+Parliament, called to the exercise of a share of the Sovereignty, well
+defined in their respective constitutional charters. Canada was one of
+the first British colonies to enjoy the advantages of such a large part
+of the Sovereign rights.
+
+Such "_autonomous colonies_" as Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South
+Africa, Newfoundland, have been, and are to the present day, do not
+transform them into "_Sovereign States_," enjoying full "Sovereign
+powers." They are not "_Independent States_" in the full sense of the
+word.
+
+That Canada is not a Sovereign State is proved beyond doubt by the very
+fact that she could not amend or change her constitutional charter by
+her own power and without a new Imperial law. If the Nationalist
+leader's pretention was sound, any member of the House of Commons, or of
+the Senate, in Ottawa, could propose a bill to repeal the British North
+America Act, 1867, and to replace it by another constitutional charter.
+The very supposition is absurd. Can it be imagined that His Excellency
+the Governor-General could be advised by his responsible Ministers to
+sanction, in the name of His Majesty the Sovereign of Great Britain, a
+bill repealing an Act of the Imperial Parliament? Still it is exactly
+what Mr. Bourassa's theory amounts to.
+
+Our constitutional charter does not only provide what is called our
+Federal,--or National--autonomy, but also the Provincial autonomy. The
+powers of both are well defined in the Imperial Act. The Provinces of
+the Dominion also exercise that share of the Sovereign rights delegated
+to them by the Imperial Parliament. Would the Nationalist leader draw
+the extravagant conclusion that the territory of any one of the
+Provinces cannot be declared in the "State of War" with a Foreign Power,
+by His Majesty the King, without the assent of the Ministers of that
+Province? Still that absurd proposition would not be more so than that
+affirming the necessity of the assent of the Canadian Cabinet, to a
+declaration of War involving Canada in an Imperial struggle.
+
+The Sovereign right of declaring war to, and of making peace with,
+another independent State, is vested in the King of Great Britain,
+acting upon the advice of his responsible Ministers in the United
+Kingdom. To the Imperial Parliament belongs the constitutional authority
+to deal with the Imperial Foreign Affairs.
+
+It is plain that when Great Britain is at War with another Sovereign
+State the whole territory of the British Empire is in the "State of War"
+with that Nation.
+
+It is inconceivable that Mr. Bourassa has seriously pretended that
+Canada was not at war with the German Empire the very moment the British
+Empire was so in consequence of the violation by Germany of Belgian
+neutrality. One can hardly believe that he has propounded the fallacious
+constitutional doctrine that His Majesty "_the King of England hath not
+the right to declare Canada in the State of War without the assent of
+the Canadian Cabinet_."
+
+Where and when has the Nationalist leader discovered that the Canadian
+Ministers have the right to advise His Majesty upon all the questions
+pertaining to the Imperial Foreign Affairs? Any one conversant with the
+constitutional status of Canada knows that the Canadian Ministers have
+the right to advise the representative of the Sovereign only upon
+matters as defined by the British North America Act, 1867, and its
+amendments.
+
+I was indeed very much surprised at the attempt of Mr. Bourassa to use
+the authority of Sir Erskine May in support of his erroneous pretension
+that the autonomous colonies of Great Britain were Sovereign States.
+
+To all the students of the Constitutional History of England, Sir
+Erskine May is a very well known and appreciated writer. I have read his
+works several times over for many years. I was certain that he had never
+written anything to justify the Nationalist leader in quoting him as he
+did.
+
+Here follows the paragraph of May's Constitutional History quoted by Mr.
+Bourassa in support of his own views:--
+
+ Parliament has recently pronounced it to be just that the
+ Colonies which enjoy self-government, should undertake the
+ responsibility and cost of their own military defence. To carry
+ this policy into effect must be the work of time. But whenever
+ it may be effected, the last material bond of connection with
+ the Colonies will have been severed, and colonial states,
+ acknowledging the honorary sovereignty of England, and fully
+ armed for self-defence, as well against herself as others, will
+ have grown out of the dependencies of the British Empire.
+
+I must say that I am absolutely unable to detect one single word in the
+above quotation to authorize Mr. Bourassa to affirm that Sir Erskine May
+was of opinion that "_the autonomous colonies were Sovereign States_."
+The true meaning of the above extract is surely very plain. What does it
+say? It declares, what was a fact, that the British _Parliament has
+recently pronounced it to be just that the Colonies which enjoy
+self-government should undertake the responsibility and cost of their
+own military defence_.
+
+Would the British Parliament have deemed it necessary to express such an
+opinion, if the Colonies had, then, been Sovereign States, consequently
+obliged, in duty bound, to defend themselves _alone_ against any
+possible enemy. Surely not, for the obvious reason that Great Britain
+would have had no more responsibility for the defence of territories no
+longer covered by her flag and under her Sovereignty.
+
+The very fact that the British Parliament thought proper, _under the
+then circumstances_, to say that the Colonies enjoying self-government
+should undertake to defend themselves, is the convincing proof that they
+were not Sovereign States.
+
+The following sentence of May's quotation says:--_To carry this policy
+into effect must be the work of time_.
+
+It is clear that the _policy_ requiring the work of time to be carried
+into effect was not actually existent at the time Sir Erskine May was
+writing.
+
+The extract quoted by Mr. Bourassa concludes by declaring that when such
+a policy _has_ been finally adopted, the Colonies will have developed
+into Colonial States having _grown out of the dependencies of the
+British Empire_.
+
+Evidently, when the Dominions of Canada, Australia, South Africa, New
+Zealand, will have grown out of the dependencies of the British Empire,
+they will no longer be Colonies of Great Britain. But when will that
+very important event take place? Surely, Sir Erskine May could not
+foresee. Even to-day Mr. Bourassa cannot say more than any one else.
+Pending that unforeseen outcome, the Dominions will remain parts of the
+British Empire under her Sovereignty.
+
+The above quotation was taken by Mr. Bourassa from the edition of Sir
+Erskine May's "Constitutional History" published in 1912. But they were
+first edited by the author in 1863. When has the Imperial Parliament
+adopted the above mentioned "_Resolution_"? It was voted in 1862--the
+4th of March--more than fifty-six years ago. Quoted as it has been by
+Mr. Bourassa, it appears to have been only very recently adopted. The
+fact that it is more than half a century old, and was carried before the
+Federal Union of the Provinces, is a convincing proof that it has no
+bearing whatever upon the conditions of Canada's present colonial
+status. By the aforesaid "_Resolution_," the British House of Commons
+was only expressing the opinion that the time had come for the Colonies
+to undertake the responsibility and the cost of their defence. The
+"Resolution" does not say that Great Britain would no longer be called,
+in the exercise of the rights and duties of her Sovereignty, to defend
+her Colonial Empire.
+
+By what reasoning can a mere expression of opinion by the English House
+of Commons be interpreted as at once transforming the Colonies into
+independent Sovereign States?
+
+Any one somewhat conversant with the political events that led to the
+Federal Union of the Provinces knows that in applying to the British
+Parliament for the new Constitutional Charter, the Legislature of United
+Canada had a twofold object:--first, the settlement of the
+constitutional difficulties then pending between Upper and Lower Canada;
+secondly, a broader development of Canada and also of the British
+Empire. Such was the purpose of the coalition government formed in 1864.
+All the members of that Cabinet were strongly in favour of the
+maintenance of Canada's union with Great Britain. I have heard them
+expounding their views on what the future of Canada ought to be. I am
+positive that neither Sir John A. Macdonald, Sir Georges Cartier, the
+honorable Georges Brown, nor any of their colleagues, of both political
+parties, ever said a word which could be construed as expressing the
+opinion that the proposed Federal Union would make of Canada an
+independent Sovereign State. It is incredible that Mr. Bourassa should
+have so erroneously understood their real views so as to pretend that
+they favoured Confederation for that very purpose.
+
+As a proof of his pretension, he quoted the following words of Sir John
+A. Macdonald, in the Legislative Assembly of old United Canada:--
+
+"_With us the Sovereign, or, in this country the representative of the
+Sovereign, can act only on the advice of His Ministers, those Ministers
+being responsible to the people through Parliament._"
+
+Mr. Bourassa used the foregoing sentence in support of his contention
+that the King of England could not declare war without the assent of the
+Canadian Cabinet. It is impossible to understand how such a notion can
+be seriously held and expressed. His Majesty cannot ask nor accept such
+an advice, if it was tendered, for the very reason that the Canadian
+Cabinet has not the constitutional right to advise the King respecting
+the international relations of the Empire. And why? Precisely because
+the Canadian Ministers would not be responsible for their advice to the
+Imperial Parliament and to the electorate of the United Kingdom.
+
+The true meaning of the above quoted sentence of Sir John A. Macdonald
+is very plain. Ministerial responsibility was the fundamental principle
+of the old Constitution, as it is of the Federal Charter. Sir John A.
+Macdonald was perfectly right in affirming that "_in Canada, as in
+England, the Sovereign could act only on the advice of His Ministers,"
+that is to say on the advice of His responsible Ministers within the
+constitutional powers of our Parliament on all matters respecting which
+they had the constitutional right to advise His Majesty_.
+
+Sir John A. Macdonald never said--he could not possibly say--that as
+Prime Minister of Canada, under the new Constitution, he would have the
+right to advise the Sovereign on all matters within the exclusive
+constitutional jurisdiction of the Imperial Parliament, for instance
+respecting the exercise of the Royal prerogative of declaring war
+against, or of making peace with, a foreign independent State. He has
+never propounded such an utterly false constitutional doctrine.
+
+Mr. Bourassa went still further. He quoted the following sentence from
+Sir John A. Macdonald:--"_We stand with regard to the people of Canada
+precisely in the same position as the House of Commons in England stands
+with regard to the people of England_."
+
+I was indeed most astonished to read Mr. Bourassa's inference from those
+words that Sir John A. Macdonald _had affirmed the absolute equality of
+powers of the Imperial and the Canadian Parliaments_.
+
+If the opinion expressed by Sir John A. Macdonald could be so
+interpreted, he would have affirmed--what was radically wrong--that
+under the new Constitution, the Canadian Parliament would have,
+_concurrently with the Imperial Parliament_, absolutely the same powers.
+What did that mean? It meant that the Canadian Parliament, just as the
+Imperial Parliament, would have the right to edict laws establishing
+Home Rule in Ireland, regulating the government of India and the Crown
+Colonies, granting constitutional charters for the good government of
+the Australian and South African Dominions, &c., &c.
+
+Surely it is not necessary to argue at any length to prove that Sir John
+A. Macdonald never for a moment entertained such an opinion. What he
+really said, in the above quoted words, was that within their
+constitutional jurisdiction, within the limits of their respective
+powers, the two Parliaments stood in the same position, _respectively_,
+with regard to the people of England and to the people of Canada. It was
+equivalent to saying--what was positively true--that the British
+Ministers and the British Parliament were responsible to the people of
+England, and that the Canadian Ministers and the Canadian Parliament
+were responsible to the people of Canada,--both of them within the
+limits of their respective constitutional powers.
+
+If the Canadian Legislature had enjoyed all the constitutional powers of
+the British Parliament, she would not have been obliged to pass
+addresses asking the latter to enact a new charter creating the Federal
+Union of the Provinces. She could have repealed her then existing
+constitution and enacted the new one by her own authority. But that she
+could not do. She could not repeal the old, nor enact the new charter.
+
+But the most extraordinary is that Mr. Bourassa went so far as to
+declare that Canada should have participated in the present war only as
+a "_Nation_," meaning, of course, as an independent Sovereign State.
+
+On reading such a preposterous proposition, at once it strikes one's
+mind most forcibly that if Canada had really had the power to intervene
+in the world's struggle as a "Nation," she would have had the equal
+right to the choice of three alternatives.
+
+First:--Declare war against Germany and in favor of the Allies.
+
+Second:--Remain neutral.
+
+Third:--Declare war against Great Britain and fight for Germany.
+
+For it is obvious that all the Sovereign States--and Canada like them
+all if she had been one of them--had the Sovereign Right to fight for or
+against Great Britain, or to remain neutral. Of course, I am merely
+explaining in its entirety the Right of a Sovereign State. I surely do
+not mean to say that Canada, had she really been such a State, would in
+any way have been justifiable in joining with Germany in her dastardly
+attempt to crush Civilization in the barbarous throes of her domination.
+
+What would His Excellency the Governor-General have answered his Prime
+Minister advising him to declare war against England, he who represents
+His Majesty at Ottawa? Would he not have told him at once that the
+Canadian Prime Minister had no right whatever to give him such an
+advice; that Canada, being a British Colony, could not declare war
+against her Sovereign State; that for the Canadian people to take up
+arms against England would be treasonable revolt?
+
+It is absolutely incredible that a public man, aspiring to the
+leadership of his countrymen, can have been so completely lost to the
+sense of the Canadian constitutional situation as to boldly attempt to
+pervert their mind with such fallacious notions. He might as well
+pretend that the State of New York, for instance, has the Sovereign
+Right to declare war against the Government of the United States.
+
+I, for one, cannot help wondering that any one can seriously think that
+a colony, always pretending to remain loyally so, can wage war against
+her Sovereign State. I feel sure that all sensible men do share my views
+on that point.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+GERMAN ILLUSIONS.
+
+
+When Germany threw the gauntlet to the Powers of the "Entente," she
+labored under the delusion that the war would most surely break down the
+British Empire. She was determined to do her utmost to that end. But she
+utterly failed in her criminal efforts.
+
+Strongly bound by ties of affection and constitutional freedom, the
+great autonomous Dominions and Colonies at once rallied with courage and
+patriotism to the defence of the Empire, of Justice, of Right and
+Civilization. India,--that great Indian Empire--to the utter
+disappointment of Germany, has stood admirably by Great Britain ever
+since the outbreak of the War, by her noble contributions of man-power
+and her munificent generosity of very large sums of money, in one
+instance amounting to $500,000,000.
+
+The Crown Colonies have also done their share of duty with great
+devotion.
+
+The admirable result which for the last four years has been shining
+bright and glorious all over the world, is that, contrary to teutonic
+expectations, the war, far from breaking asunder the British Empire, has
+wonderfully solidified her mighty edifice, by an intensity of loyalty to
+her free institutions, to her glorious flag, which the enjoyment of the
+blessings of peace would not have proved so easily possible.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE NATIONALIST ERROR.
+
+
+The leaders of our Nationalist School have for years strenuously
+laboured to pervert the mind of our French-Canadian compatriots by the
+false pretensions that we were, in some mysterious way, coerced to
+participate in the European War. Even previous to the days of the South
+African conflict, they boldly took the stand that Canada should, on no
+account, and under no circumstances whatever, participate in what they
+called the Wars of the Empire--_les guerres de l'Empire_. Canada, they
+affirmed, had only to defend her own territory if attacked.
+
+Fully appreciating how insidious and dangerous such theories were, I
+endeavoured to show, as forcibly as I could, that there had been no
+attempt by England at coercion of this Dominion to help her in the
+struggle against Germany. Of course, as previously explained, Great
+Britain being at war with the German Empire, the whole British Empire
+was at war. But no one in England ever intended to propose to force the
+colonies to engage actively into the fight. The Imperial Parliament
+would certainly not have taken into consideration any such proposition.
+
+But is it not plain and beyond discussion that we, _ourselves_, had the
+undoubted right to intervene in the war to the extent that we would
+consider it our bounden duty to do so?
+
+Evidently we could not remain neutral in the great conflict. At the very
+moment that Great Britain was at war with Germany, Canada, a British
+Colony, was part and parcel of the belligerent Sovereign State, the
+British Empire. By an incredible misconception, the Nationalist leaders
+confounded _neutrality_ with _non-participation_ in the war, if we had
+so decided.
+
+To be, or not to be, neutral, was not within our constitutional rights.
+If Germany, either by land or by sea, had attacked our territory, as she
+had the undoubted belligerent right to do, would it have availed us an
+iota to implore her mercy by affirming that we were neutral? Could we
+have pretended that she was violating neutral territory?
+
+No one with the least notion of International Law would for a moment
+hesitate to give the true answers to those questions.
+
+But the very different question to participate, or not, in the war, was
+for us alone to decide according to our constitutional charter. We have
+freely, deliberately, decided to do our share in the great war. We
+continue and persevere in our noble task, freely and deliberately.
+
+It is admitted by all that under the actual constitutional organization
+of the Empire, the Imperial Parliament could not require the autonomous
+colonies to participate in the war. But no one can assuredly deny to
+that Parliament the right, in the case of an imminent peril, to
+formulate the desire that the autonomous colonies would help Great
+Britain to conjure the threatened calamity.
+
+But, in the present case, the Imperial Parliament has not even been
+under the necessity of expressing such a legitimate wish, for the
+obvious reason that the colonies at once took their patriotic stand in
+favor of the cause of England and her Allies. If the colonies had not so
+decided, of their own free will, it is most likely that the Imperial
+Parliament would not have expressed the wish for the assistance of the
+Dominions overseas.
+
+The hearty support granted by the colonies to Great Britain, to develop
+its full value, had to be spontaneous, enthusiastic. Such it was, such
+it is, and such it will be to the last day of the conflict which
+victorious conclusion we are so strongly determined to achieve.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+HAD CANADA THE RIGHT TO HELP ENGLAND?
+
+
+Not satisfied to do the best it could to persuade our French-Canadian
+countrymen that they had been coerced into the war by England, our
+"Nationalist School" extensively used the argument that Canada had not
+the right to intervene into the European struggle. I refuted this
+erroneous pretension by the following propositions, the very essence of
+our constitutional rights and liberties:--
+
+1.--The Canadian Cabinet had the undoubted constitutional right to
+advise His Excellency the Governor-General to approve the measures to be
+taken to give effect to their decision to participate in the war,
+decision and measures for which they were responsible to the Canadian
+Parliament and to the Canadian Electorate.
+
+2.--The Canadian Parliament had the undoubted constitutional right to
+approve or disapprove the decision and the measures of the Cabinet.
+Parliament approved that decision and those measures, acting within
+their constitutional right.
+
+3.--Even at the time I was writing, it could evidently be affirmed that
+the Canadian Electorate had approved the stand taken by both the
+Canadian Cabinet and the Canadian Parliament according to well known and
+defined constitutional usages.
+
+Was it not proved beyond reasonable controversy, that the Canadian
+people heartily approved the decision of their Parliament to help in the
+great war?
+
+Let me summarize the evidence as follows:--
+
+1.--The war policy of the Cabinet, at the special session called in
+August, 1914, for that very purpose, was unanimously approved by
+Parliament, no Senator and no Member of the House of Commons moving to
+censure the responsible ministers for their decision to have Canada to
+participate in the war. The two great political parties have solemnly
+sanctioned that decision.
+
+2.--Public opinion was also very strongly proved by the almost unanimity
+of the public press patriotically supporting the stand taken by
+Parliament. The exceptions were so few, that, as usual, they contributed
+to emphasize the soundness of the general rule.
+
+3.--During the three years following the decision of the Canadian
+Parliament, a great number of large public meetings were held throughout
+Canada, and addressed by many leading and influential citizens all
+approving the action of Parliament. The meetings enthusiastically
+concurred in the powerful indorsation of the war policy of the speakers.
+
+In a few public gatherings some disapproval was expressed, but not one
+meeting would go to the length of passing "Resolutions" censuring the
+Cabinet and the Parliament of Canada, or declaring that our Dominion
+should not have interfered into the war.
+
+4.--Not one petition against the Canadian intervention into the war was
+addressed to Parliament.
+
+5.--Leading Clergymen, of all denominations; leaders of political
+associations almost of all shades of opinion; financial, industrial,
+commercial leaders, all of them approved the patriotic interference of
+Canada into the war.
+
+6.--The evident general approval of the unanimous decision, taken in
+1916, to extend the Parliamentary term.
+
+7.--The wonderful success of the public loans raised for war purposes.
+
+8.--The enlightened and generous patriotism with which the country has
+accepted and paid war taxation.
+
+9.--But, above all, the voluntary recruiting of four hundred thousand
+men of all social conditions who have rallied to the flag of the Empire
+for the defence of her existence and for the triumph of Civilization and
+Justice.
+
+I, therefore, drew the undeniable conclusion that, contrary to the
+"Nationalist" pretension, Canada was participating in the war in the
+most regular constitutional way, without even the shadow of a breach of
+our Canadian autonomy, of our constitutional rights and liberties.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE DUTY OF CANADA.
+
+
+Having affirmed that Canada had no right to interfere in the war, the
+"Nationalist" leaders at once concluded that she was not in duty bound
+to do so. That most discreditable inference was, of course, the natural
+sequence of the wrong principle aforesaid. They further drew the
+conclusion that it was no part of the duty of Canadians to join the
+Colors to help winning the war.
+
+It was in flat contradiction of those erroneous notions that I
+positively declared, in my letter dedicating my book to my French
+Canadian compatriots, that "_in defending with the most sincere
+conviction the sacred cause of the Allies, I am doing my duty as a free
+subject of the British Empire, as a citizen of Canada and of the
+Province of Quebec, as a son of France, as a devoted servant of Justice
+and Right_."
+
+Very narrow minded indeed is the man who has no higher conception of his
+duty than the one limiting him to the observance of positive and
+negative laws enacted by the legitimate authority to protect society and
+every one of its members.
+
+When England, together with the other leading nations, was brutally
+challenged by Germany, and threatened in her very national existence,
+it is beyond comprehension that Canada, and all the British colonial
+possessions overseas, could so mistake their bounden duty as to refuse
+rushing to help the Mother Country in such a trying occurrence.
+Moreover, have we not, merely as men, duties to perform to protect
+Civilization against the deadly attack of barbarism, to have Justice and
+Right triumphant in international relations?
+
+It is a matter of deep wonder to me that any one could have been so
+blind as not to perceive that in joining with Great Britain to defend
+the cause of the Allies, we were surely defending our own territory, our
+own soil, our own homes. How incredible was the "Nationalist" contention
+that we should have waited for the actual German attack of our land
+before mustering our resources of resistance. Who could not see, at a
+glance, that if Germany had, as it fully expected, easily triumphed over
+the combined forces of France, England and Russia, it would have been
+sheer madness to attempt resisting the victorious onslaught of a few
+hundred thousands of her veteran soldiers, whose valour would have been
+doubled by the enthusiasm of their European conquest.
+
+After mature consideration of the possible results of the disastrous
+defeat of the combined efforts of the Allies, both on land and sea, the
+conclusion was forced upon my mind that Germany, ferociously elated by
+such a wonderful success, would no doubt have exacted from England the
+cession of Canada to her Empire. So that without even firing a gun
+against our territory, our wide Dominion would have been instantly
+transferred from the British to the German Sovereignty. I shuddered at
+such a vision, and still more deeply realized how much we, Canadians,
+were all in duty bound to help the Allies in crushing Prussian
+militarism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE SOUDANESE AND SOUTH AFRICAN WARS.
+
+
+In the two previously mentioned pamphlets, Mr. Bourassa argued at length
+to prove that Canada had been led to intervene in the great European war
+as a consequence of her intervention in the South African War. It is
+well known throughout the Dominion that the South African conflict was
+the occasion chosen by the "Nationalist" leader to proclaim his doctrine
+that the autonomous colonies should have nothing to do with the wars of
+the Empire--LES GUERRES DE L'EMPIRE. He then strongly opposed Canadian
+support of Great Britain in her struggle in South Africa.
+
+In one of his pamphlets, Mr. Bourassa affirmed that the Government of
+Sir John A. Macdonald had, in 1884, refused the request of the Imperial
+Government to interfere in its favour in the Soudanese war. Well aware
+of the events of this struggle, I positively knew that the "Nationalist"
+leader's assertion was not borne out by the facts, and was historically
+false. I considered it my duty, in a special chapter, to explain fully
+the circumstances of the case to my French Canadian countrymen.
+
+It should be well remembered that England was brought into the Soudanese
+conflict on account of her relations with Egypt, which she had delivered
+from the Turkish yoke.
+
+Mr. Bourassa prefaced his above mentioned affirmation by recalling the
+fact that it was in consideration of the Soudanese difficulties that
+"_for the first time in the history of the Colonial Empire of Great
+Britain, offers of armed support were made by the autonomous colonies_."
+
+Is it not evident that if--as was true--such offers were made
+spontaneously by the Colonies, it cannot be pretended that the proffered
+armed support was asked by England. If England did not solicit such
+support, it is plain that Sir John A. Macdonald and his Cabinet could
+not refuse what was never applied for.
+
+What are the true historical facts?
+
+In November 1884, General Laurie, who has represented one of the
+electoral divisions of Nova Scotia at Ottawa, who has also held a seat
+in the British House of Commons, took the initiative to propose to raise
+a Canadian regiment for the campaign in the Soudan. In the regular
+official way, General Laurie's offer was addressed to the Secretary of
+State for the Colonies, Lord Derby. The Imperial Government declined the
+offer.
+
+On the 7th of February, 1885, on hearing the news of the disaster of
+Khartoum, which caused great excitement in England, and naturally
+created a strong public feeling to avenge the outrage, General Laurie,
+always enthusiastic, tendered anew his services. He was not the only
+Canadian officer wishing to go and fight the cruel Soudaneses. A member
+of the Canadian Parliament, Colonel Williams, commanding the 46th
+volunteer battalion of Durham-East, also desired to take part in the
+African campaign with his regiment. On the 9th of February, 1885, he
+tendered his proposition to Sir Charles Tupper, then High Commissioner
+in London, who sent it to the Colonial Office.
+
+On the 10th of February, His Excellency the Governor General, Lord
+Lansdowne, cabled to the Colonial Secretary that the offers of military
+service were very numerous. This spontaneous movement, so rapidly
+spreading, was the forerunner of those of 1899 and 1914. Thirty years
+ago, and long before, there were brave men in Canada. There always have
+been and ever will be.
+
+These news were no doubt very encouraging for the Imperial authorities.
+
+Lord Derby, thanking Lord Lansdowne, begged him to say "_Whether they_
+(the offers of service) _are sanctioned and recommended by the Dominion
+Government_."
+
+On the 12th of February, Lord Lansdowne answered Lord Derby that the
+Dominion Government was ready to approve recruiting in Canada for
+service in Egypt or elsewhere, provided that the men would be enlisted
+under the authority of the Imperial Army Discipline Act, and the expense
+paid by the Imperial Treasury.
+
+It consequently follows from the above despatches that the Soudanese
+campaign offered to many officers of our volunteer Militia the long
+wished for opportunity to freely tender their services to the Imperial
+Government; that the British authorities never applied to the Canadian
+Government, then presided by Sir John A. Macdonald, for armed support in
+Soudanese Africa; that, on being officially informed of the offers of
+service received by His Excellency the Governor General, the Colonial
+Secretary, before accepting or declining them, enquired if the Canadian
+Government sanctioned and recommended them; that the Governor General
+answered him in the affirmative, the recruiting to be made according to
+the Imperial Military Act at the expense of the Imperial exchequer.
+
+On the 16th of February, the War Minister, then the Marquis of
+Hartington, informed the Colonial Secretary that he had come to the
+conclusion to decline with thanks the offers of service from Canada, for
+the reason that it would have taken too long a time to recruit and
+organize the regiments offered by General Laurie and Colonel Williams.
+
+Was I not right, when I refuted Mr. Bourassa's assertion, in saying that
+if a _refusal_ was _then_ given, it was by the British Government who
+had received the freely tendered services, and not by the Canadian
+Government, to whom no demand of armed support had been made by Great
+Britain?
+
+If it is indeed very astonishing that Mr. Bourassa should have taken the
+responsibility to affirm that the Government of Sir John A. Macdonald
+had refused to help Great Britain in the Soudanese campaign, it is easy
+to understand his object in so doing. His purpose was to convince his
+French Canadian readers that the political leaders at the head of the
+Government, in 1899 and 1914, together with the Canadian Parliament,
+had, in a revolutionary way, reversed the traditional policy of Canada
+of non-intervention in the "wars of the Empire"--_les guerres de
+l'empire_. And to achieve his end, so detrimental to the best interests
+of the Dominion, he did not hesitate to draw an absolutely erroneous
+conclusion from undeniable historical facts.
+
+The "Nationalist" leader was very anxious to charge the chieftains of
+the two great political parties with an equal responsibility for what he
+terms a "Revolution" in our relations with the Mother Country. With this
+object constantly in view, he pretended that the intervention of Canada
+in the South African War created the precedent which brought about the
+Dominion participation in the European war, in 1914. In order to stir up
+to the utmost the prejudices of the French Canadians, he boldly
+qualified the South African conflict as an _infamous crime_ on the part
+of England.
+
+Unfortunately, the true history of the difficulties which culminated in
+the Boer War of 1899, was at the time little known throughout Canada,
+and even less particularly in the Province of Quebec. At the outbreak of
+the struggle, wishing to form a sound opinion of the causes of which it
+was the direct outcome, I made an exhaustive study of the South African
+question, beginning at the very inception of the Dutch settlement dating
+as far back as 1652, the year during which the Dutch East India Company
+occupied Table Bay. Six years later, in 1658, French Huguenots reached
+South Africa, joining with the Dutch Reformists, who rather
+energetically did all they could to assimilate them. Still later on,
+besides some few German immigrants, a third group of Europeans settled
+on the African coast. They were Englishmen.
+
+All the Europeans, on landing in South Africa, few in numbers, had at
+once to contend with the black race numbering many millions. The history
+of the long struggle between European civilization, represented by the
+English and Dutch immigrants, and African barbarity, is indeed very
+interesting. Carefully read and studied in all its bearings, it strongly
+impressed upon my mind the conviction that had it not been for the
+timely armed protection they often solicited and received from England,
+the Dutch Boers would certainly have been annihilated by the tribes of
+the black race. They could not hope to successfully resist the
+onslaughts to which they were repeatedly submitted. They were saved from
+utter destruction by the strong arm of Great Britain, occupying an
+important strategical position by her Cape Colony. The British
+Government had favoured the settlement of the sons of England in South
+Africa, for the purpose of assuring, by a powerful naval station, the
+freedom of communication with the great regions soon to develop into her
+vast Indian Empire.
+
+How, and under what circumstances, was British Sovereignty established
+in South Africa? I considered this question the most important to
+ascertain, in order to judge fairly the history of the last century in
+those regions. It was settled by the Peace Congress of Vienna, in 1815.
+All the European nations represented at that congress, have sanctioned
+British Sovereignty in South Africa upon the condition of the payment by
+England to the Kingdom of the Netherlands, of which Holland was then a
+part, of the sum of $30,000,000. Consequently the Sovereign Rights of
+Great Britain in South Africa were henceforth undeniable.
+
+In my French book, I somewhat extensively summarized the development of
+the British and Dutch groups of settlers in South Africa. It is well
+known that the Boers are of Dutch origin. That a rivalry did develop
+between the two national elements, is not to be wondered at by any one
+having some knowledge of the history of the world.
+
+I do not consider it necessary to go at any length in relating the
+vicissitudes of the conflict between the aspirations of the Boer element
+and the undoubted rights of British suzerainty. As a rule they are
+sufficiently well known by my English readers.
+
+But I wish to emphasize the two undeniable facts: first, that throughout
+this protracted contest, England did perseveringly try to favour South
+Africa with the largest possible measure of political liberty. Second,
+that the crisis was finally brought about by the persistent
+determination of the Government of Pretoria to refuse justice to the
+Uitlanders and to the British capitalists who, at the urgent request of
+President Kruger, had invested many millions in the development of the
+very valuable mines recently discovered in the Transvaal territory.
+
+Though England had agreed to the establishment of the two Republics of
+the Transvaal and Orange, she had maintained her suzerainty on those
+territories, which suzerainty the Government of Pretoria had again
+recognized by the Convention of 1884.
+
+The most convincing proof that England did not intend any unfair design
+against the South African Republics, is the fact that she did not
+prepare to resist the armed attack of the Government of Pretoria which
+could be easily foreseen by the intense organization they were evidently
+making to impose Boer supremacy in South Africa.
+
+In his very unjust appreciation of the policy of Great Britain in South
+Africa, Mr. Bourassa kept no account whatever of the very important
+fact that war was declared against England by the South African
+Republic. How could Great Britain have been guilty of a hideous crime in
+not bowing to the dictate of President Kruger and his Government, as the
+"Nationalist" leader said, is beyond comprehension.
+
+England was absolutely within her right in accepting the challenge of
+the Government of Pretoria, and fighting to maintain her flag and her
+Sovereignty in South Africa.
+
+Fortunately, the South African War, characterized by deeds of heroism on
+both sides, has had the most satisfactory conclusion. It is to be hoped
+that for many long years the future of that great country is settled
+with all the blessings that political liberty and free institutions will
+surely confer on that important part of the British Empire. The Boers
+themselves have fully recognized that their own national development
+cannot be better guaranteed and safeguarded than by the powerful
+Sovereignty pledged to their protection, on the only condition of their
+loyal allegiance to the flag waving on the fair land where they can
+multiply in peace, prosperity and happiness. The enthusiasm and the
+admirable courage with which they have rallied to the support of Great
+Britain and her Allies in the present war, is the best evidence how much
+they appreciate the advantages of their new conditions in the great
+South African Dominion destined to such a grand future.
+
+I most sincerely deplore the persistent efforts of the "Nationalist"
+leader to pervert more and more the mind of my French Canadian
+countrymen by his so very unfair appreciation of the nature of the South
+African conflict. It was with the hope of counteracting them that I
+introduced a special chapter in my French edition explaining, as fully
+as I could, though in a condensed form, the South African question.
+
+The assertion that the participation of Canada in the present European
+war was the sequence of the precedent of our intervention in the South
+African struggle, is also most injustifiable and untenable. Had Canada
+taken no part whatever in the South African War, it would not have made
+the least difference with regard to the decision of the Canadian people
+to support Great Britain and the Allies in their gigantic effort to put
+an end to Prussian terrorism. The assertion which I most emphatically
+contradict could have no other object but to prejudice the public mind
+against Canadian intervention in any of the wars of the Empire--_les
+guerres de l'empire_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+BRITISH AND GERMAN ASPIRATIONS COMPARED.
+
+
+In the attempt to justify his opposition to the Canadian armed support
+of the Allies' cause, Mr. Bourassa repeatedly asserted that Great
+Britain was as much as Germany aspiring to rule the whole world. He
+pretends that there is no difference between Anglo-Saxonism and
+Germanism.
+
+How unjust and dangerous is such a doctrine is evident to any fair
+minded man. It was no doubt calculated to prejudice the French Canadians
+against Great Britain, by telling them that the sacrifices they were
+called upon to make were imposed upon them only to favour the British
+determination to reach the goal of her ambition:--universal domination.
+
+I strongly repudiated such assertions and vindicated England's course
+and policy.
+
+To accuse Great Britain to aspire to universal domination is a most
+unwarranted charge, contradicted by the whole history of the last
+century during which she was the most determined supporter of peace.
+
+Though one of the great Powers of the world, England never undertook to
+organize a large standing army. How could she aspire to the world's
+domination without a complete military organization comprising many
+millions of men, is what I am unable to understand.
+
+Mr. Bourassa's argument to prove his assertion is based on the efforts
+of England to maintain and develop her naval forces so as to guarantee
+her supremacy on the high seas of the world. How he failed to realize
+that Great Britain, on account of her insular position, close to the
+European continent, is by nature itself bound, of sheer necessity, to
+protect herself by the strength of her military naval power, is beyond
+comprehension. Supremacy on the seas is for the Mother Country a mere
+question of national existence,--to be or not to be. But supremacy on
+the seas cannot, and will never, permit England to attain anything like
+universal domination. And why? For the obvious reason that Great Britain
+is not, and never can become, a continental Power, in the exact sense of
+the word.
+
+I explained, conclusively, I believe, that the case would be very
+different if Germany succeeded in her efforts to supplant England's
+supremacy on the seas. When the Berlin Government undertook to build a
+huge military fleet, Germany was the greatest continental military
+Power. What were her expectations when she adopted that threatening
+naval policy? The Berlin authorities were very confident that when they
+would decide to bring on the great war for which they had been
+strenuously preparing for half a century, they would in a few months
+have continental Europe at their feet and under their sway. Triumphant
+over Europe they would have at once dominated Asia and a great part of
+Africa. The next surest way for the German Empire to reach universal
+domination was to break England's power on the seas. What is impossible
+for England to accomplish, on account of her insular position, Germany,
+being a continental Empire, could achieve if she became mistress of the
+seas.
+
+The present war is the proof evident that the mighty power of England on
+the seas has been the salvation of her national existence and, almost
+equally, that of France and Italy. It kept the oceans open for the trade
+of all the Allied and neutral nations. He is willingly blind,
+intellectually, the man who does not see that deprived of the matchless
+protection of her naval forces, Great Britain could be starved and
+subdued in a few months by an enemy ruling the waves against her.
+
+Is it possible to suppose that any man aspiring to help moulding the
+public opinion of his countrymen, ignores that with the relatively small
+extent of the territory it can devote to agricultural production, Great
+Britain can never feed her actual population of over forty-five
+millions, most likely to reach sixty millions in the not very distant
+future. Consequently how unjust, how extravagant, is it to accuse
+England of any aspiration to dominate the world by means of the
+sacrifices she is absolutely bound to make for the only sake of her
+self-defence, her self-protection.
+
+If he does not know, I will no doubt cordially oblige the "Nationalist"
+leader by informing him that Great Britain, usually importing food
+products to the amount of seven to eight hundred millions of dollars,
+for many years past, required as much as a billion dollars worth of them
+in the war year of 1915. It is so easy to foresee that the continual
+increase of the population of the United Kingdom, by the new large
+developments which will surely follow the war in all industrial,
+commercial and financial pursuits, will cause a relative increase in the
+importations of food products likely to reach, and even exceed before
+long, an average total annual value of a billion and a quarter dollars.
+
+None of the European continental Powers has the same imperious reasons
+as England to take the proper means to guarantee her control of the
+seas. How is it then that Germany is the only Power to object to
+England's policy, if it is not for the ultimate object to attain
+universal domination by the overthrow of Great Britain's ascendency on
+the wide oceans, which would permit her to realize her long cherished
+aim by the combined powerful effort of her gigantic military forces both
+on land and sea.
+
+With regard to England's naval supremacy, the "Nationalist" leader is
+also committed to other opinions which I strongly contradicted. He
+entirely forgets that beyond the sea coast limits, well defined by
+International Law, no Sovereign rights can be claimed on the high seas.
+The navigation of the ocean is free to all nations by nature itself. Has
+any Government ever entertained the foolish idea that the broad Atlantic
+could, for instance, be divided into so many parts as the European,
+Asiatic, or American continents, over which several States could
+exercise Sovereign powers? No Chinese Wall can be built on the seas.
+
+My own view of the case, which I believe to be the correct one, is that
+England's naval supremacy means nothing more nor less than the police of
+the seas, and the protection of the flags of all the Nations navigating
+them, besides being, of course and necessarily, the guarantee of her
+National existence.
+
+Blind also, intellectually, is the British subject not sufficiently
+inspired by the true sense of the duties of Loyalty, who does not
+understand that once Great Britain's maritime power would be crushed and
+the United Kingdom either conquered or obliged to an humiliating peace
+which would ruin all her future prospects, the Colonial Empire would
+equally be at the mercy of the victorious enemy of the Mother Country.
+
+With the most earnest conviction, I have tried, to the best of my
+ability, to persuade my French-Canadian compatriots of the inevitable
+dangers ahead if the false views which were so persistingly impressed
+upon their minds were ever to prevail, and the aim they undoubtedly
+favour to be realized.
+
+Another argument widely used by our "Nationalist" School to influence
+the opinion of the French Canadians against Canada's participation in
+the war, was that Great Britain herself was not doing what she ought to
+win the victory. I have personally heard this false objection repeated
+by many--unconsciously of course--who were influenced in so saying by
+the "Nationalist" press.
+
+No more unfair charge could have been made against England. I could not
+help being indignant at reading it, knowing as I did, by daily acquired
+information what an immense effort the United Kingdom had been making,
+from the very beginning of the hostilities, to play its powerful part in
+the great war into which it had nobly decided to enter to avenge its
+honour, to defend the Empire and the whole world against German
+barbarous militarism.
+
+I have already commented on the immense service guaranteed to the Allied
+nations by the British fleet. To illustrate the wonderful and admirable
+military effort of Great Britain, I will quote some very important
+figures from the most interesting Report of the British War Cabinet, for
+the year 1917, presented to Parliament by Command of His Majesty.
+
+Under the title "_Construction and Supply_" the Report says:--
+
+ During the past year the Naval Service has undergone continual
+ expansion in order to enable it to meet every demand made upon
+ it, not only in the seas surrounding these islands, but in the
+ Mediterranean, the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, the Arctic Ocean,
+ the Pacific, and the Atlantic, where it has co-operated with the
+ Naval forces of the Allies. The displacement tonnage of the
+ Royal Navy in 1914 was 2,400,000 tons. To-day it has increased
+ by 75 per cent.--=(making a total of 4,200,000 tons--)=. The
+ ships and vessels of all kinds employed in the Naval Service in
+ September, 1914, after the whole of the mobilisation had been
+ completed, had a tonnage of just over 4 million; now the figure
+ is well over 6 million. Transports, fleet attendants and
+ overseas oilers and similar auxiliary vessels at the outbreak of
+ war numbered 23; the Admiralty to-day control nearly 700 such
+ craft. The strength of the personnel, which was 145,000, has
+ been increased to 420,000.
+
+ From these brief particulars regarding the ships and their
+ manning, an estimate can be formed of the expansions that have
+ been made in the auxiliary services, such as guns, torpedoes,
+ munitions, and stores of all kinds, anti-submarine apparatus,
+ mines, &c., and some idea is gained of the demands that have
+ been made upon the great army of workers on shore, the men in
+ the Royal dockyards and arsenals, in the shipyards, the engine
+ shops, and the factories, without whose help the Fleet could not
+ be maintained as a fighting force.
+
+ As regards warship and auxiliary ship construction, the output
+ during the last 12 months has been between three and four times
+ the average annual output for the few years preceding the war.
+
+ The Admiralty now control all the dry docks in the
+ country,...--250 merchant ships are being repaired each week,
+ either in dry dock or afloat.
+
+ Since the beginning of the war, 31,470 British war vessels have
+ been placed in dock or on the slips =(--as many as 225 being
+ repaired in one week--)=.... These figures do not include repair
+ work carried out to the vessels of our Allies....
+
+The Transport Service is of the highest importance in carrying on the
+war. What has been the achievement of England on that score? Under the
+title:--"_Transportation_" the War Cabinet Report proves its immensity
+as follows:--
+
+ The record of what has been done by the transport services for
+ the Armies of the Allies shows a stupendous amount of work
+ accomplished, which constitutes one of the brilliant
+ achievements of the war. There had been transported overseas up
+ till the end of August, 1917, the last date for which complete
+ statistics are available--some:--13 million human
+ beings--combatants, wounded, medical personnel, refugees,
+ prisoners, &c.; 2 million horses and mules; 1/2 million vehicles;
+ 25 million tons of explosive and supplies for the armies; ... 51
+ million tons of coal and oil fuel for the use of our Fleets, our
+ Armies, and to meet the needs of our Allies.
+
+ The operations of the seas are on such a large scale that it is
+ difficult to realize all that is involved in sea transportation;
+ for example, over 7,000 personnel are transported, and more than
+ 30,000 tons of stores and supplies have to be imported daily
+ into France for the maintenance of our own army. About 567
+ steamers, of approximately 1-3/4 million tons, are continually
+ employed in the service of carrying troops and stores to the
+ Armies in France and to the forces in various theatres of war in
+ the East.
+
+We all know that the Berlin Government expected that the submarine
+campaign would result in an early final victory for the Central Empires.
+Herr von Bethmann Hollweg, then the Imperial Chancellor, said:--"_The
+Blockade must succeed within a limited number of weeks, within which
+America cannot effectively participate in the operations_."
+
+How he was mistaken, and extravagant were his expectations, events have
+proved. This sentence is also proof evident that he realized how
+effective the United States effort would become, if the submarine
+campaign did not succeed within a few weeks.
+
+The iniquitous submarine campaign, re-opened early in the year 1917,
+"_added materially to the responsibilities of the Navy. To meet this new
+and serious menace drastic steps had to be taken to supplement those
+adopted in the previous December and January_."
+
+The Report adds:--
+
+ A large number of new destroyers have been built and at the same
+ time auxiliary patrol services have been expanded enormously so
+ as to deal with the nefarious submarine and minelaying methods
+ of the enemy. Before the outbreak of the war there were under 20
+ vessels employed as minesweepers and on auxiliary patrol duties.
+ To-day the number of craft used for these purposes at home and
+ abroad is about 3,400, and is constantly increasing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A new feature of the means adopted for the protection of trade
+ against submarines has been a return to the convoy system as
+ practised in bygone wars. It has been markedly effective in
+ reducing the losses. During the last few months over 90 per
+ cent. of all vessels sailing in all the Atlantic trades were
+ convoyed....
+
+ The Royal Naval Air Service at the outbreak of war possessed a
+ personnel of under 800; at the present moment the numbers
+ approach 46,000 and are continually increasing.... Mention must
+ also be made of the great value of the air services in combating
+ the submarine menace round our coasts.... Illustrating their
+ extent it may be stated that in one week the aircraft patrol
+ round the British coasts alone flies 30,000 miles.
+
+ The general result of the German attack, therefore, though
+ serious enough, is far from unprecedented. In the two years
+ after Trafalgar, when our command of the sea was unquestioned,
+ we still lost 1,045 merchant ships by capture, and in the whole
+ period from 1794 to 1875 we lost over 10,000 merchant ships.
+
+ Nor should we lose sight of the very heavy losses sustained by
+ the enemy in the present war. At the commencement of
+ hostilities, Germany had 915 merchant ships abroad, of which
+ only 158 got home safely; the remainder within a few days were
+ cleared from the oceans, either captured or driven to shelter in
+ neutral ports. In the aggregate the German Mercantile Marine
+ consisted of over 5 million tons of shipping; at the present
+ time nearly half of this has been sunk or captured by ourselves
+ or our Allies, while the bulk of the rest is lying useless in
+ harbour.
+
+Let me now refer to the military effort of Great Britain. Under the
+title:--"_Strength of the Army," &c._, the War Cabinet Report gives the
+following most inspiring figures.
+
+ The effort which the British nations have made under the one
+ item of "Provision of Men for the Armed Forces of the Crown"
+ amounts to not less than 7,500,000 men, and of these 60.4 per
+ cent. have been contributed by England, 8.3 per cent. by
+ Scotland, 3.7 per cent. by Wales, 2.3 per cent. by Ireland, 1.2
+ per cent. by the Dominions and the Colonies, while the
+ remainder, 13.3 per cent., composed of native fighting troops,
+ labour corps, carriers, &c., represent the splendid contribution
+ made by India and our various African and other Dependencies.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ =Royal Artillery.=--The personnel of the Royal Artillery
+ increased 17.6 per cent., between August, 1916, and August,
+ 1917.
+
+ In the first nine months of 1917 the supply of modern
+ anti-aircraft guns in the field increased 44 per cent., that of
+ field guns 17 per cent., of field-howitzers 26 per cent., of
+ heavy guns 40 per cent., of medium howitzers 104 per cent., of
+ heavy howitzers 16 per cent., and of heavy-guns on railway
+ mountings 100 per cent.; these last have an increased range of
+ about 35 per cent.... We have also supplied large numbers of
+ heavy guns and trench mortars to our Allies in different
+ theatres of war.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The Medical Service has continued to expand with the growth of
+ the Army and its strength is now largely in excess of our whole
+ original Expeditionary Force.... More than 17,000 women are
+ employed as nurses and over 28,000 others are engaged in
+ military hospitals on various forms of work.... Hospitals in the
+ United Kingdom now number more than 2,000.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The health of the troops in the United Kingdom is actually
+ better than the peace rate; the same is the case in France,
+ excluding admissions to hospital by reason of wounds.
+
+The above quoted figures prove that out of a total of 7,500,000 men for
+the Armed Forces of the British Crown, Great Britain--the United
+Kingdom--had contributed, at the end of last year, 5,625,000, out of
+which number the shore of England and Wales amounted to 4,800,000. The
+British Colonial Empire's contribution had been 1,875,000.
+
+At the date of the current year--August, 1918--I am writing, I can
+safely calculate that the number of men for the Armed Forces of the
+British Crown--using the words of the Official Report above quoted--has
+reached, at least, _the grand and magnificent total of 8,000,000_. The
+percentage of respective contributions of the United Kingdom and the
+Colonial Empire no doubt remaining the same, the relative number of each
+of them is,--for the United Kingdom 6,000,000; for the Colonies
+2,000,000.
+
+I consider the War Cabinet Report of 1917 so interesting, so
+encouraging, that my readers will, I am confident, kindly bear with me
+in a few more very important quotations, the full Report itself having
+had only a very limited circulation in Canada.
+
+
+TRANSPORT.
+
+In addition to the prodigious Naval effort of England, both military and
+mercantile, previously illustrated, Great Britain has most powerfully
+contributed to the fighting operations on land by an immense improvement
+in transportation facilities by railway construction in all British
+theatres of war.
+
+The Report says:--
+
+ In all these theatres railways have come to play a more and more
+ important part. In France a vast light railway system has been
+ created, involving the supply during the present year of
+ approximately 1,700 miles of track and the whole of the
+ equipment.... Exclusive of these light railway systems, the
+ total amount of permanent railway track supplied complete to all
+ theatres of war is about 3,600 miles. In Egypt the railway
+ crossing the desert from the Suez Canal has now reached and
+ passed Gaza. In Mesopotamia the rapid and successful movements
+ of our troops have only been made possible by the construction
+ of a whole series of lines since the beginning of 1917. The
+ development of road-building has been on a similar scale, and
+ the shipments of material, equipment and stores for these two
+ purposes during the last nine months have averaged 200,000 tons
+ a month. Much labour has also been spent in the organisation of
+ an Overland Line of Communication through France and Italy to
+ the Mediterranean in order to save shipping. This line was
+ opened for personnel traffic in June, 1917, and for goods
+ traffic early in August.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ In France the conveyance of supplies of all kinds to our armies
+ along the French rivers and canals is performed by a large fleet
+ of tugs, barges, and self-propelled barges. The fleet thus
+ employed in France consists of over 700 vessels, and the tonnage
+ carried by it averages over 50,000 tons per week.
+
+
+THE AIR SERVICE.
+
+In a recital indicating generally what steps have been taken in matters
+of administration and control, the Report says:--
+
+ From the point of view of defence, the new arm presented
+ problems pregnant with at least equal importance. The proud and
+ ancient inviolability of these islands was being challenged in a
+ new and startling fashion, and the seriousness of the problem
+ was added to by the fact that the geographical position of the
+ capital of the Empire rendered it particularly inviting to
+ attack from the air.
+
+Respecting the supply of Aircraft, the Report says that:--
+
+ In endeavoring to describe the measures taken to meet the
+ aircraft needs of the Navy and Army, the writer is at once
+ confronted by the fact that the information desired by the
+ country is precisely the information desired by the enemy. What
+ the country wants to know is what has been the expansion in our
+ Air Services; whether we have met and are meeting all the
+ demands of the Navy and of the Army, both for replacement of
+ obsolete machines by the most modern types, and for the increase
+ of our fighting strength in the air; what proportion of the
+ national resources in men, material and factories is being
+ devoted to aviation; what the expansion is likely to be in the
+ future. These are precisely the facts which we should like to
+ know with regard to the German air service, and for that reason
+ it would be inadmissible for us to supply Germany with
+ corresponding information about ourselves by publishing a
+ statement on the subject.
+
+ It can be said that the expansion of our Air Services is keeping
+ pace generally with the growing needs of the Navy and the Army.
+
+In Chapter VIII, under the heading:--"_The Ministry of Munitions in
+1917_," the following is read:--
+
+ The number of persons engaged in the production of munitions in
+ October, 1917, was 2,022,000 men and 704,000 women, as compared
+ with 1,921,000 men and 535,000 women in January. They have thus
+ been increased during the past six months at the rate of 11,000
+ men and 19,000 women per month. These numbers include those
+ employed in Government and in private establishments, in the
+ principal munition industries, chemical and explosive trades,
+ engineering and munition plants, furnaces and foundries, in
+ shipbuilding and in mining other than coal-mining. The total
+ represents approximately two-thirds of the total labour occupied
+ on Government work in industry.
+
+The preceding official statistics prove most conclusively that actually,
+and ever since the beginning of the third year of the war, more than
+_twelve millions_ of men and women--more than the fourth of the total
+population of the United Kingdom--have been either in the Armed Forces
+of the British Crown--Navy and Army--or in the shipbuilding yards, in
+munitions factories, in transportation on land and sea, in the Medical
+Service, in the Air Service, &c., employed for the success of the cause
+of the Allies.
+
+
+THE FINANCIAL EFFORT OF GREAT BRITAIN.
+
+The gigantic military effort of Great Britain, in all the branches of
+its wonderfully developed organization, as above illustrated, was only
+rendered possible by a corresponding financial contribution.
+
+During the financial year preceding the outbreak of the war, the total
+expenditure of the Government of Great Britain was $987,464,845. The
+hostilities have imposed upon the United Kingdom vast expenditures. "For
+that period"--again quoting the War Cabinet Report--"from the 1st April,
+1917, to the 1st December, 1917, the total Exchequer issues for
+expenditure (including Consolidated Fund Service and Supply Services)
+were L1,799,223,000,--($8,796,115,000) representing a daily average for
+that period of L7,344,000 ($36,720,000)."
+
+At this rate of expenditure, the total for the year equals at least
+$13,500,000,000. But the financial charges entailed by the war being
+constantly on the increase, they can be calculated at a daily average of
+no less than $40,000,000 until the close of the conflict.
+
+England has not only incurred very heavy financial obligations, met both
+by an enormously increased taxation and the issue of large National
+loans, to pay the cost of her own war expenditure, but she has also
+generously helped her friends whose financial resources were not so
+abundant as her own. To the 1st December, 1917, she had made advances to
+the Allies amounting to no less than $5,930,000,000. In addition to this
+large amount, the advances she had made to the Dominions for the same
+period summed up $875,000,000.
+
+
+ACHIEVEMENTS OF DOMINION, COLONIAL AND INDIAN TROOPS.
+
+Under the above title, the War Cabinet Report concludes a general review
+of the past year's effort by paying high tribute to the value of the
+services rendered by the whole British Colonial Empire, in the following
+elogious terms:--
+
+ In the above sketch of military operations during the past year,
+ it has not been possible to distinguish between the particular
+ services rendered by the various nations and nationalities of
+ the Empire. But it must not be forgotten that during the war the
+ forces of the Crown have become welded into a true Imperial
+ army, representative of every part of the world-wide British
+ Commonwealth, and a brief note may be included as to the special
+ services of the various overseas forces.
+
+ The share of the Australian, New Zealand, Canadian, South
+ African and Newfoundland contingents in the successes of the
+ 1917 campaign are well known. The capture of Vimy Ridge in
+ April, the prolonged and bitter fighting around Lens during the
+ whole summer and autumn, and the capture of Passchendaele were
+ carried out by the Canadian Corps, which has thus proved itself
+ as excellent in offensive as its splendid defence of Ypres in
+ 1915 had shown it to be in defensive fighting. The New Zealand
+ and Australian contingents have corresponding achievements to
+ their credit in their share of the battle of Messines and in the
+ long sustained and bitterly contested fights in the Ypres
+ salient from July to November. The South African brigade
+ sustained the brilliant reputation which it won last year at
+ Delville Wood by the devoted services it rendered on the
+ battlefields of Arras and Ypres. Finally, the Newfoundland
+ Regiment took a glorious and costly part in the same two
+ battles. The troops of all the Dominions have shown themselves
+ throughout the campaign of 1917 to have maintained the historic
+ standards of the British Army and have been worthy rivals of the
+ United Kingdom troops in every military effort and achievement.
+
+ This testimony to the services rendered by the Dominions would
+ not be complete without some reference to the part played by
+ South Africa in German East Africa, where her troops have borne,
+ under the brilliant leadership of General Van Deventer, a
+ conspicuous share in a peculiarly arduous campaign.
+
+ The smaller Colonies and Protectorates have naturally been
+ unable to play so great and conspicuous a part in the World War,
+ but in their own spheres they have contributed their full share
+ to the military effort of the Empire. Labour and fighting troops
+ were freely drawn upon for the Mesopotamian and East African
+ theatres. West Africa, British East Africa, Uganda, Nyasaland
+ and Rhodesia have all sent contingents to fight in German East
+ Africa. 16,000 men from the West Indies have been sent across
+ the Atlantic; and labour corps from the Eastern Colonies have
+ been sent to the Mesopotamian and East African fronts, and,
+ despite unfavourable conditions, to the Western theatre. A large
+ number of individuals from overseas possessions, such as the
+ Malay States and Hong Kong, have also joined the Imperial
+ forces.
+
+ Finally, India's contribution, both in man-power, material and
+ money, has steadily increased throughout the year. India has
+ taken a very important share in the victorious campaign in
+ Mesopotamia. The great majority of the troops in this theatre of
+ war are Indian. They have fully sustained the high reputation of
+ the Indian Army for gallantry and endurance. India has been
+ responsible for much of the supply, medical and transportation
+ system by water and on land. Indian forces have also rendered
+ conspicuous service in France, Egypt and East Africa. The
+ question of the supply of officers, especially medical officers,
+ has been solved; commissions have been granted to Indians, and a
+ voluntary Indian Defence Force is now being organised and
+ trained. Special mention should be made of the loyal and
+ effective assistance of the Indian ruling princes and chiefs,
+ from the smallest to the greatest.
+
+The Indian Government has moreover generously contributed $500,000,000
+towards the cost of the war.
+
+The foregoing quotations of official figures, of facts undeniable, of
+achievements really most extraordinary, constitute the unanswerable
+refutation, complete and crushing, of the Nationalist charge that
+England, while not doing her own duty with regard to the war, was using
+undue influence to coerce the British Colonies to participate in the
+conflict far beyond the fair proportionate effort to be expected on
+their part; that an illegitimate pressure of Great Britain's Government
+on her Colonies was being practised, as insidiously alleged, to promote
+her Imperialist ambition of the World's ascendency.
+
+Unfortunately, those false and most unjust notions had taken deeper root
+in many minds, even in some who should have been much above such an
+unfair misconception, than was at first supposed. Hence the importance
+of setting the matter right, and the necessity of proving that England's
+war achievements, in every branch of the Military Service, were far
+exceeding what had, at first, been expected of her, and was ever
+considered possible. British pluck and manliness were equal to the
+direst emergency that ever called them forth. Patriotism, courage,
+determination, perseverance, rising superior to any increased
+difficulties, have truly worked miracles of manly efforts and
+self-sacrifices inspired by the noble cause which brought Great Britain
+in the World's struggle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE VERITABLE AIMS OF THE ALLIES.
+
+
+After doing their utmost to persuade the French Canadians that the
+Allies, more especially England and Russia, were equally responsible for
+the war, together with Germany and Austria, our "Nationalist" leaders
+moreover asserted that they were hostile to a just and lasting peace on
+account of their unfair claims. In support of their pretension, they
+repeatedly affirmed that the Allies were pledged to the complete
+destruction of the German Empire. No more unfounded charge could be made
+against the Nations suddenly challenged to a gigantic struggle for life
+or death.
+
+It was very important to protect my French Canadian countrymen against
+views which, if not proved to be absolutely wrong, were calculated to
+bias their mind against the Allies. With this patriotic object strongly
+impressed upon my mind, I fully explained what were the veritable aims
+of Great Britain, France, Russia and Italy, in fighting their deadly
+enemy. When I issued my French book, the United States had not then
+entered the contest. Their declaration of war against Germany, in the
+spring of 1917, after the outrage of the sinking of the Lusitania, and
+the numerous criminal provocations of the submarine campaign, clearly
+emphasized, once more, what the Allies had been strenuously struggling
+for from the outbreak of the hostilities. They had taken up the gauntlet
+savagely thrown to them, declaring to the world that they would battle
+to the last to put an end to German militarism, always threatening
+general peace, to protect the small nations, notably Belgium and Servia,
+against the onslaught of mighty and tyrannical conquerors, to save
+Humanity, Civilization and Freedom from the crushing ascendency of
+autocratic rule. The great American Republic rallied with them to the
+defence of this most sacred cause. Need I refer to the numerous and
+eloquent messages of President Wilson, to the writings of the American
+press, and to the declarations of all the leading public men of the
+United States, in both Houses of Congress, or before public meetings, in
+support of the contention which was proved beyond controversy for all
+fair minded men.
+
+Mr. Bourassa, whether from sheer misconception, or blindly carried away
+by incomprehensible German sympathies, having their root in his
+prejudiced hostility to England, could see no difference between a war
+policy aiming at putting an end to Prussian militarism, and one having
+for its object the dismemberment of the German Empire. Nor could he
+conceive that fighting for human liberty was a nobler purpose than
+struggling for autocratic tyranny. Though ever posing as the champion
+of the small nationalities, he would not utter a word of sympathy for
+martyred Belgium, barbarously conquered Servia, oppressed Poland, since
+the beginning of the war.
+
+The great conflict once begun under so terrific conditions, every one
+somewhat posted with the immense resources of the belligerents, their
+respective warlike spirit and enduring qualities, could easily foresee
+that, unfortunately, it was most likely to last for several years, the
+contending parties being so far apart in their respective aspirations.
+Elated beyond all reason by her triumph over France, in 1870, which had
+for its first very important result the final creation of the German
+Empire, proclaimed to the world from Versailles,--the bleeding heart of
+her vanquished foe,--the new great Power, dominating Central Europe,
+lost no time in setting all its energies to the task of perfecting the
+most gigantic military organization ever seen. To all clear sighted men,
+Germany could not be supposed to accept the heavy sacrifices required
+for such an end with the sole purpose of maintaining peace. Further
+conquests were evidently her inspiring aim.
+
+Who can forget how Humanity was staggered by the rapidity of the
+onslaught of the Teutonic hordes let loose against nations whose
+greatest wish was to keep the peace of the world? In a sudden rush, the
+waves of the torrent overran Belgium and Northern France dashing direct
+towards Paris.
+
+The wonderful plan of campaign, so scientifically conceived and matured,
+could then be understood as it was boldly and powerfully developed. The
+Berlin military staff, knowing that France was not sufficiently prepared
+for the struggle, that England, if forced to intervene in honour bound,
+by the criminal violation of Belgium's neutrality, would require a
+couple of years to organize an army of millions of men, decided to
+strike the first blow with such an overpowering strength as to conquer
+Belgium in a victorious run and crush France out of the fight. A couple
+of months were to be sufficient to that most coveted end. Meantime
+Austria was to face and resist the Russian attack, to allow Germany the
+necessary time to settle victoriously the western part of the campaign,
+so cleverly planned and successfully carried out, before transferring
+her glorious legions to the Eastern theatre of the war. Russia was not
+supposed to be able to properly organize her armies in less than many
+months, when it could no longer expect to triumph over the enthusiastic
+Huns.
+
+In the depressing darkness of those anxious days, the great Marne
+victory came like the brilliant sun piercing the heavy clouds, pledging
+final success as the reward of the persevering courage and heroism to be
+long displayed to deserve it. Germany's first dream of conquering
+universal domination by military operations even overshadowing those of
+the illustrious Napoleonic Era, and of Caesar's marvellously laid deep
+foundations of Roman grandeur, was shattered to pieces.
+
+Before the Teutonic armies could be reorganized for another great
+offensive, England's forces and those of her Colonies would be in a
+position to enter the struggle; France's resources would be brought to
+bear with all their strength; Italy would break away from the Central
+Empires and heartily join the Allies.
+
+Then the conflict turned to that weary trench fighting which to the
+sadness of its trials added new evidence of the inevitable lengthening
+of the war. No wonder that the longing for peace was intensified under
+the pressure of conditions becoming more and more trying. Without doubt
+all true friends of human prosperity and happiness, in their limited
+possible worldly measure, were fervently praying to God in favour of the
+restoration of harmony between the warring Nations. But they saw with
+undeniable clearness that there were two essential--sine qua
+non--conditions to the peace of the future. To be of any value it must
+be _Just_ and _Durable_. If it could become permanent, much more the
+better.
+
+Unfortunately, outside the legions of the true friends of an honourable
+peace, there were found, in the Allied countries, faint hearted men
+getting tired of the worries and sacrifices consequent upon the
+prolonged struggle. The moment they began to show their hands, was the
+signal for the ultra Revolutionists of Russia, finally organized into
+the disastrous bolshevikism, for the paid traitors of France, for the
+disloyal elements of the British Empire, to rally around them to set in
+motion, with accrued force, a current of opinion clamouring for peace
+almost at any price. To quiet this unpatriotic longing of the
+disheartened, the political leaders of the Allies publicly explained
+their war aims, positively affirming that their objective was that _Just
+and Durable_ peace to which alone they could and would agree.
+
+Canada had also her _pacifist_ element. So far as the French Canadians
+were concerned, it was, though small in numbers, almost entirely
+recruited in the ranks of the supporters of "_Nationalism_." I feel I
+must explain that our "_Nationalism_," as it has been repeatedly
+propounded, does not in the least represent the sound views of the very
+large majority of my French Canadian countrymen.
+
+As was to be expected, Mr. Bourassa was again the outspoken organ of our
+French Canadian _pacifists_. He laid great stress on what he gave out as
+a fact: that if peace negotiations were not at once entered upon and
+brought to a successful conclusion, it was on account of the Allies'
+unreasonable claims, pointing especially to England's determination not
+to surrender her supremacy on the high seas, to develop more and more
+what he termed her _imperialism_ for the purpose of dominating the world
+_economically_.
+
+In my French work, I strongly took issue with the views of our
+_pacifists_ as expressed by their leader and their press. Addressing my
+French Canadian countrymen on the bounden duties of all loyal British
+subjects, it was my ardent purpose to tell them the plain truth.
+Writing, as I did, in 1916, I was then, as I had been from the very
+beginning, firmly convinced that the conflict would be of long duration,
+that it was very wrong--even criminal if disloyally inspired--for any
+one to delude them by vain hopes, or deceive them by false charges.
+
+Having some knowledge of military strategy and tactics, I saw with the
+clear light of noon day that, despite the gigantic efforts put forth by
+the Allies, and the admirable heroism of their armies--our Canadian
+force brilliantly playing its part--final victory would be attained only
+by indomitable perseverance, both of the millions of fighting men and of
+the whole Allied nations backing them to the last with their moral and
+material support. That profound conviction of mine I was very anxious to
+strongly impress on the minds of my French-Canadian readers, imploring
+them not to be carried away by the "Nationalist" erroneous pretentions
+that peace could easily be obtained, if the Allies would only agree to
+negotiate. I told them plainly, what was absolutely true, that the war
+aims of Germany were so well known and inadmissible that there was not
+the least shadow of hope that peace negotiations could lead to a
+reasonable understanding realizing the two imperious conditions of
+_Justice and Durability_ in a settlement to which all the Allies were
+in honour pledged. I explained to them that it was no use whatever to be
+deluded by expectations, however tempting they might appear, because
+under the then conditions of the military situation--time and events
+have since brought no favourable change but quite the reverse--there was
+not the slightest chance of an opening for a successful consideration of
+the questions to be debated and settled before the complete cessation of
+the conflict. There was only one conclusion to be drawn from the
+circumstances of the case, and, however sad to acknowledge, it was that
+the fight must be carried on to a final victorious issue, any weakening
+of determination and purpose being sure to bring about humiliating
+defeat.
+
+
+THE ONLY POSSIBLE PEACE CONDITIONS.
+
+Whenever representatives of the belligerents shall meet to negotiate for
+peace, there will of course be many questions of first class importance
+to consider and discuss. But the one which must overshadow any other and
+of necessity carry the day, is that peace must be restored under
+conditions that will, if not forever, at least for many long years,
+protect Humanity and Civilization against a recurrence of such a
+calamity as ambitious and cruel Germany has criminally imposed upon the
+world. I urged my French Canadian readers to consider seriously how
+peace due to a compromise, accepted out of sheer discouragement, would
+soon develop into a still more trying ordeal than the one Canada had
+willingly and deliberately undertaken to fight out with the Allies. I
+forcibly explained to them that if the present war did not result in an
+international agreement to put an end to the extravagant and ruinous
+militarism which, under Prussian terrorism, was proving to be the curse
+of almost the whole universe, all the sacrifices of so many millions of
+lives, heroically given, of untold sufferings, of so much treasures,
+would have been made in vain if Germany was allowed to continue a
+permanent menace to general tranquillity.
+
+It was a wonder to me that any one could fail to understand that an
+armed peace would be only a truce during which militarism would be
+spreading with increased vigour and strength. It was evident--and still
+daily becoming more and more so--that Germany would only consent to it
+with the determination to renew, on a still much larger scale, her
+military organization with the purpose of a more gigantic effort at
+universal domination.
+
+Then was it not plain that labouring under the inevitable necessity of
+such an international situation, the Allied nations,--the British Empire
+as much as France, the United States and Italy--would by force be
+obliged to make the sacrifices required to maintain their military
+systems in such a state of efficiency as to be always ready to face
+their ambitious foe with good prospects of success. Such being the
+undeniable case, I affirmed--I am sure with the best of reasons--that
+Great Britain could not return to her ante-war policy of the enlistment
+of only a small standing territorial army, trusting as formerly to her
+Naval strength for her defence and the safe maintenance of her prestige
+and power. Like all the continental nations, England would have to incur
+the very heavy cost of keeping millions of men always fully armed.
+
+I firmly told my French Canadian countrymen that it was no use deluding
+themselves with the "Nationalist" notion that peace being restored under
+the above mentioned circumstances, the British Colonies would not be
+called upon to share, with England, the burdens of the extensive
+military preparations necessitated for their own safety as well as for
+that of Great Britain and the whole Empire. The very reasons which had
+prompted Canada and all her sister Dominions to intervene in the present
+war, would surely induce them to cooperate with the Mother Country to
+maintain a highly and costly state of military preparedness in order to
+be ever ready for any critical emergency.
+
+Could it be believed that after the sad experience of the actual
+conflict, the Allied nations--Great Britain perhaps more than any
+other--would blindly once again run the risk of being caught napping and
+deceived by an unscrupulous and hypocritical enemy, unsufficiently
+prepared to at once rise in their might to fight for their very
+national existence and the safety of Mankind against tyrannical
+absolutism. If such abominable pages of History as those that for the
+last four years are written with the blood of millions of heroes
+defending Human Freedom were, by fear of new sacrifices, allowed to be
+repeated, shame would be on the supposed civilized world having fallen
+so low as to bow to the dictates of barbarism. Let all truly hearted men
+hope and pray that no such dark days shall again be the fearful lot of
+Humanity. Let them all resolve that if the world can at last emerge free
+from the present hurricane, they will not permit, out of weakness and
+despondency, the sweeping waves of teutonism to submerge Civilization
+and destroy the monuments of the work of centuries of the Christian Art.
+
+After showing the dark side of the picture, and what would be the
+fearful consequences of a German victory, or of an armed peace pending
+the renewal, with still much increased vigour and resources, of the
+conflict only suspended, I explained to my French Canadian readers the
+great advantages to be derived by all, Germany included, from the
+restoration of peace carrying with it the untold benefits to be derived
+from the cessation of extravagant military organization, yearly
+destroying the capital created by hard work and the saving of the
+millions of the working populations. If an international agreement could
+be arrived at by which militarism would be reduced to the requirements
+of the maintenance of interior order and the safeguarding of
+conventional peace amongst the Powers, then many long years of material
+prosperity, in all its diversity of beneficial development, would surely
+follow. Canada, like the other British Colonies, would not have to incur
+any very large expenditure for military purposes, devoting all her
+energies to the intelligent building of the grand future which her
+immense territorial resources would certainly make, not only possible,
+but sure.
+
+How much could material development be conducive to intellectual, moral
+and religious progress, if the Nations of the Earth would only sincerely
+and permanently abide by the Divine teachings of Christianity.
+
+Considering all the conditions of the military situation, at the end of
+the summer of 1916, I clearly perceived the imperious necessity of the
+Allies--Canada as well as all her associates--to fight to a finish. That
+duty I did my best to impress on the minds of the French Canadians.
+Events have since developed in many ways, but they all tend to
+strengthen the conviction that ultimate victory will only be the price
+of unshaken perseverance, of undaunted courage, of more patriotic
+sacrifices.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+JUST AND UNJUST WARS.
+
+
+In one of his pamphlets Mr. Bourassa favoured his readers with his views
+on the justice and injustice of war. He affirmed that a Government could
+rightly declare war only for the three following objects:--
+
+ 1.--For the defence of their own country.
+ 2.--To fulfill the obligations to which they are
+ in honour bound towards other nations.
+ 3.--To defend a weak nation unjustly attacked.
+
+I have no hesitation to acknowledge the soundness of those principles,
+as theoretically laid down. I took the "Nationalist" leader at his own
+word, wondering more than ever how he could refuse to admit the justice
+of the cause of the Allies.
+
+Looking at the case from the British standpoint, was it not clear as the
+brightest shining of the sun that England had gone to war against
+Germany for the three reasons assigned by Mr. Bourassa as those which
+alone can justify a Government entering a military struggle.
+
+Great Britain was by solemn treaties in honour bound to the defence of
+Belgium whose territory had been violated by Germany, the other party
+to those treaties which she threw to the winds contemptuously calling
+them "_scraps of paper_."
+
+Even outside of all treaty obligations, it was England's duty, according
+to the third principle enunciated by Mr. Bourassa as authorizing a just
+declaration of war, to rush to the defense of Belgium, a _"weak nation"
+most dastardly attacked by the then strongest military Power on earth_.
+
+The British Government, being responsible for the safety of the British
+Empire, would have been recreant to their most sacred duty, had they
+failed to see that if the German armies were freely allowed to overrun
+Belgium, to crush France and vanquish Russia, Great Britain and her
+Colonies, unprepared for any effective resistance as they would have
+been, had they remained the passive onlookers of the teutonic conquest
+of continental Europe, would have been the easy prey of the barbarous
+conquerors. Consequently, in accepting the bold challenge of the Berlin
+Government, that of England also did their duty for the defence of Great
+Britain and the British Empire.
+
+But the whole British Empire being at war with Germany for the three
+above enumerated causes combined, were the free autonomous Colonies of
+England not also in duty bound to help her in vindicating her honour and
+theirs, and to do their utmost to support the Mother Country in her
+efforts to oblige the Berlin Authorities to respect their treaty
+obligations! Were they not also in duty bound to participate with
+England in the defence of invaded weak, but heroic, Belgium! Were they
+not in duty bound to at once organize for their own defence, sending
+their heroic sons to fight their enemy on the soil of France, instead of
+waiting the direct attack upon their own territories!
+
+The British Parliament dealing exclusively with the Foreign Affairs of
+the Empire, the international treaties which they ratify are binding on
+the whole Empire. If such a treaty is violated by the other party or
+parties who signed it, violently obliging England to stand by her
+obligations, are not the Colonies also bound to uphold the Mother land
+in the vindication of her treaty rights?!
+
+Looking at the same question, in the full light of the sound principles
+of the justice of any war, from the German standpoint, what are the only
+true conclusions to be drawn? To satisfy Austria's unjust demands and
+maintain peace, Servia had, in 1914, at the urgent request of England,
+France and Russia, gone as far as any independent nation could go
+without dishonour. Not only backed, but no doubt inspired, by the Berlin
+Government, Austria would not consent to reduce by an iota her unfair
+pretentions against Servia.
+
+It was plainly a case of a great Power unjustly threatening a weak
+nation. Consequently, according to the "Nationalist" leader's
+principle, Russia was right and doing her duty in intervening to
+protect the menaced weak State. Instead of hypocritically resenting
+Russia's intervention in favour of Servia, it was equally Germany's duty
+to join with her to save this weak nation from Austrian unjust
+challenge. Had it done so, Austria would certainly have refrained from
+exacting from Servia concessions to which she could not agree without
+sacrificing her independent Sovereignty. The Vienna Authorities backing
+down from their unjust stand, there would have been no war. And Germany,
+together with Russia, would have deserved the gratitude of the world for
+their timely intervention, prompted by a clear sense of their duty and a
+sound conception of their international right.
+
+It is well known how the very opposite took place. Russia, to be ready
+for the emergency of the declaration of war by Austria against Servia,
+ordered the mobilization of that part of her army bordering on the
+Austrian frontier, answering to the Berlin request for explanations that
+she had no inimical intention whatever against the German Empire, that
+her only object was to protect weak Servia against Austria's most unjust
+attack. The Kaiser's government replied by requesting Russia to cancel
+her order for the mobilization of part of her army. And in the very
+thick of this diplomatic exchange of despatches, whilst England and
+France were sparing no effort, by day and night, to maintain peace and
+protect Mankind from the threatening calamity, Germany suddenly threw
+the gauntlet and declared war against Russia.
+
+Foreseeing clearly that France was consequently in honour bound to
+support Russia, in accordance with her international obligations towards
+that great Eastern Power--in strict conformity with the second principle
+enunciated by Mr. Bourassa and previously quoted--, Germany took the
+initiative of a second unjust declaration of war, and this one against
+France.
+
+The military operations against France being very difficult, and
+certainly to be very costly in a fearful loss of man-power, before the
+strongly fortified French frontier could be successfully overrun,
+Germany, after a most shameful attempt to bribe England into neutrality,
+decided to take the easy route and ordered her army to invade Belgium's
+neutral territory, in violation of her solemn treaty obligations. That
+treacherous act filled the cup of teutonic infamy, and brought Great
+Britain, and the whole British Empire, into the conflict.
+
+So Germany was guilty of the most outrageous violation of the three
+sound principles laid down by the "Nationalist" leader qualifying a just
+war against an iniquitous one, whilst England and France won the
+admiration of the world by their noble determination to stand by them at
+all cost.
+
+Still Mr. Bourassa, by an incomprehensible perversion of mind in judging
+the application of his own loudly proclaimed principles, has not to
+this day uttered one word openly condemning Germany's war policy and
+eulogizing that of England and France. On the contrary, he has tried to
+persuade his readers that both groups of belligerents were equally
+responsible for the war, more especially giving vent to his, at the
+least, very strange hostility to England and scarcely dissimulating his
+teutonic evident sympathies. He never positively expressed his
+disapproval of Austria's unjust attack against Servia, but condemned
+Russia for her intervention to protect that weak country, concluding
+that the Petrograd Government was the real guilty party which had thrown
+the world into the vortex of the most deadly conflict of all times.
+
+One of the most damaging and unfair arguments of Mr. Bourassa was that
+in intervening in the struggle, England was not actuated by a real
+sentiment of justice, honour and duty, but was merely using France as a
+shield for her own selfish protection. And when he deliberately
+expressed such astounding views, he knew, or ought to have known, that
+by her so commendable decision to avenge outraged weak Belgium, Great
+Britain had at once, by her command of the seas, guaranteed France
+against the superior strength of the German fleet, kept widely opened
+the great commercial avenues of oceanic trade, the closing of which by
+the combined sea power of the Central Empires, would have infallibly
+caused the crushing defeat of France by cutting off all the supplies
+she absolutely required to meet the terrible onslaught of her cruel
+enemy. He knew, or ought to have known, that the navigation of the seas
+being closed to her rivals by Germany, Russia would have been very
+easily put out of the fight, her only available ocean ports,
+Vladivostock and Arkhangel, through which supplies of many kinds,
+especially munitions, could reach her eastern coast, at once becoming of
+no service to her.
+
+He knew, or ought to have known, that if Great Britain had remained
+neutral, Japan, Italy, Portugal, would not have declared war against
+either Germany or Austria.
+
+As such consequences of British neutrality were as sure as the daily
+rising of the sun, was I not right when I drew the conclusion that if a
+shield there was, it was rather that of Great Britain covering France,
+all her allies and even the neutral nations, with the protection of her
+mighty sea power. With such a conviction, the soundness of which I felt
+sure, I told my French Canadian countrymen that, for one, I would, to my
+last day, be heartily grateful to England to have saved France from the
+crushing defeat which once more would have been her lot, had she been
+left alone to fight the Central Empires. Heroic, without doubt France
+would have been. But with deficient supplies, with much curtailed
+resources, with no helpful friends, heroism alone, however admirable and
+prolonged, was sure to be of no avail against an unmatched materially
+organized power, used to its most efficiency by the severest military
+discipline, by national fanaticism worked to fury, and by soldierly
+enthusiasm carried to wildness.
+
+In a single handed struggle with Germany, in 1914, France would have
+been in a far worse position than in 1870. The extraordinary development
+of the new German Empire--the outcome of the great war so disastrous to
+France--in population, in commerce, in manufacturing industry, in
+financial resources, in military organization, made her fighting power
+still more disproportionate. To her wonderful territorial army, she
+added her recently built military fleet, then much superior, in the
+number of vessels carrying thousands and thousands of skilled seamen, to
+the French one. Moreover Austria, with another fifty millions of people,
+Bulgaria and Turkey, with more than thirty millions, were backing
+Germany, whilst, in 1870, France had only Prussia to contend with.
+
+All those facts staring him like any one else, how could Mr. Bourassa
+reasonably charge Great Britain with using France merely as a tool for
+her own safety. Under the circumstances of the case, such a preposterous
+assertion is beyond human comprehension. I, for one, cannot understand
+how he failed to see that, had England been actuated by the selfish and
+unworthy motives to which he ascribes her intervention in the war, she
+could have then, and at least for several years, wrought from Germany
+almost all the concessions she would have wished for. Could it not, by
+an alliance with the Central Empires, have attained the goal of that
+dominating ambition which the "Nationalist" leader asserts to be her
+most cherished aim.
+
+But such a dishonourable policy England would not consider for a single
+moment. She indignantly refused Germany's outrageous proposals, stood by
+her treaty obligations, and resolutely threw all the immense resources
+of her power in the conflict which, at the very beginning, developed
+into a struggle for life and death between human freedom and absolutist
+tyranny.
+
+I am sure, and I do not hesitate to vouch for them, all the truly loyal
+French-Canadians--they are almost unanimously so--are like myself
+profoundly grateful to Great Britain for her noble decision to rush to
+the defense of Belgium and France in their hour of need. Comparing what
+took place with what might have been, moved by all the ties of affection
+that will ever bind them to the great and illustrious nation from which
+they sprung, they fully appreciate the inestimable value of the support
+given by their second mother-country to that of their national origin.
+They ardently pray that both of them will emerge victorious from the
+great conflict to remain, for the good of Mankind, indissolubly united
+in peace as they are in war.
+
+
+A "NATIONALIST" ILLOGICAL CHARGE AGAINST ENGLAND.
+
+Our Nationalists, after charging England with using France merely as a
+shield against Germany, have been illogical to the point of reproaching
+her for not having intervened in favour of her close neighbour, in 1870.
+It is most likely that, had she done so, they would have pretended that
+she would have been actuated by the same selfish sentiment that prompted
+her, for the only sake of her own protection, to enter into the present
+conflict.
+
+How is it that Mr. Bourassa, so fond of charging England with ambitious
+views of constant self-agrandizement, of worldly domination, can
+suddenly turn about and accuse her of having shamefully sacrificed
+France, in 1870, to the overpowering German blow?
+
+The circumstances of the two cases--1870 and 1914--were very different.
+The conflict of 1870 had, apparently at least, a dynastic cause. The
+House of Hohenzollern had been intriguing to have a Prussian prince of
+her own elevated to the Spanish Throne. The Imperial Government of
+Napoleon III strongly objected to such a policy. The diplomatic
+correspondence which ensued did not settle the difficulty. France
+declared war against Prussia. Many years later it was discovered that by
+a falsified diplomatic despatch, Bismark had succeeded in his satanic
+design to bring the government of Napoleon III to attack Prussia, thus
+shamefully throwing upon France the responsibility of the war.
+
+In 1870, England was at peace with all the European Powers, as she had
+ever been since 1815, with the only exception of the Crimean War. During
+the diplomatic correspondence that led to the hostilities, what reason
+would have justified England to break her neutrality? What would the
+present critics of her course have said if she had sided with Prussia?
+Would they have pretended that she would have used Prussia as a shield
+against France?
+
+I personally remember very well the tragic events of the terrible year,
+1870. The crushing military power of Prussia as proved by the triumphant
+march of her victorious armies, was a revelation for all, for France
+still more than for others. True Prussia had beaten Austria in the short
+campaign ended at Sadowa. The Prussia France was then fighting was not
+the giant Empire against which she is battling with such heroism for the
+last four years. France was at the time the leading continental Power.
+The general opinion was, when war was suddenly declared, that France
+would easily triumph over her enemy.
+
+It must not be forgotten that, in 1870, England was even less ready than
+in 1914 to engage in a continental conflict. Her standing army was not
+large, and then partly garrisoned in the colonies. Some of her best
+regiments were stationed in Canada. She could have been a really
+important ally of France only as a strong support of another continental
+power joining with her against Prussia, for instance Russia or Austria,
+or both of them.
+
+If England had been able to send 500,000 men in a few days to the very
+heart of France, incessantly followed by another half million, it is
+almost certain that the Prussian army would not have entered Paris. But
+England had not that million of trained men. It would have taken at
+least a year to organize such a large army.
+
+I will speak my mind openly. After Sedan, any attempt at saving France
+by force would have been vain and useless. Even Russia and Austria were
+unprepared for such a task. Their intervention, coming too late, would
+most likely have given Prussia a chance to win a much greater victory.
+France out of the struggle, Prussia would then have had the opportunity
+to achieve, as early as 1870, what she has ever since prepared for, and
+tried to accomplish by the war she has brought on in 1914.
+
+What then becomes of the "Nationalist" pretention that Great Britain has
+ever been aiming at dominating the world, when it is so easy to
+understand that without a very large territorial army, which she
+persistingly refused to organize, she was unable to take an important
+part in any continental war. The days were passed, after the
+extraordinary development of Prussian militarism, when she could
+brilliantly hold her own on the continent with a small standing army
+backed by generous subsidies to the European powers. The present war is
+surely proof evident of it, since England, instead of the two hundred
+thousand men she was expected to send over to France, as her man-power
+contribution, has had to raise a total army, with all the auxiliary
+services, of 6,000,000 officers and men, exclusive of the 2,000,000
+contributed by the whole British Colonial Empire.
+
+The Nationalists accusing England to have abandoned France to her sad
+fate, in 1870, was only another instance of their campaign to arouse the
+feelings of the French Canadians against Great Britain.
+
+
+OTHER "NATIONALIST" ERRONEOUS ASSERTIONS.
+
+Mr. Bourassa has had his own peculiar way of explaining the real
+determining cause of the war. Some men are--by nature it is to be
+supposed--always disposed to judge great historical events from
+considerations inspired by the lowest sentiments of the human heart. In
+the "Nationalist" leader's view, the great war was brought about by the
+treacherous alliance of British and German capitalists speculating
+together, in actual partnership or otherwise, in the production of war
+material: cannons, rifles, munitions, war shipbuilding, &c.
+
+In my humble opinion, such views are lowering to a very vulgar and
+lamentably repulsive cause--if it could be true--events of immense
+significance, the result, on the one side, of criminal aspirations
+which, however guilty they may be, have not yet been degraded to the
+profound depth of abjection they suppose; on the other, by the most
+noble sentiments which can inspire nations to make the greatest
+sacrifices to avenge outraged Justice and Right.
+
+Autocratic German ambition, such as it has proved to be, is bad enough.
+Still the cause of the war, such as asserted by Mr. Bourassa, would have
+been far worse. National aspirations, however wrongly diverted from
+their legitimate conception, will never be as contemptible as the nasty
+greed of individual speculators treacherously sucking the very life
+blood of their countrymen for the sake of squeezing millions of dollars
+at the cost of their country's honour and future.
+
+Unfortunately, illegitimate "profiteering" has taken place in the course
+of every war. Of course it must be severely condemned and firmly
+prevented, to the utmost, by governmental authority strongly supported
+by public opinion which must, however, be cautious not to be unduly
+influenced and carried away by the wild charges of some who denounce
+others with so much apparent indignation for the only reason that they
+themselves are not succeeding as they would like to do in their
+speculative attempts.
+
+Illegitimate "profiteering" is one of the deplorable effects of a war;
+it is never its real cause.
+
+What are the true causes, humanly speaking, of the cataclysm so
+violently shaking the world? They were of two kinds. The first was the
+disordered ambition of a nation having reached, by prodigious efforts,
+such a power that she fatally determined to dominate everywhere,
+militarily and politically. To this first cause was added that of
+secular race rivalry.
+
+The two causes of the first kind--which can properly be called
+_offensive_, were followed by the noble one of the resistance to
+oppression, of the defence of the honour of threatened nations, of the
+energetic determination to avenge violated international treaties, and
+to save the civilized world from a new barbarous invasion.
+
+If the Allies had humbly bowed to the odious German claims, there would
+have been no war.
+
+Consequently, the two evident causes of the war are, on the one hand,
+German ambition to universal domination; on the other, the absolute
+necessity on the part of the Allies to prevent by all possible means the
+success of such a tyrannical enterprise.
+
+However much guilty they have been in bringing on the most terrible war
+of all times, it is still injurious for the Berlin Government to suppose
+that in assuming this weighty responsibility, they were playing the part
+of an unconscious instrument of the most diabolical thirst of money
+making by shameless "profiteers."
+
+But such a charge is absolutely inexplicable when one accuses France,
+England and Belgium to be, in their admirable and heroic campaign for
+the world's deliverance and freedom, the pliant tools of contemptible
+speculators in the production of war materials.
+
+Governments and nations are, as a rule, far from having dropped to such
+a low state of incurable corruption. For many of them, there yet exists
+bright summits, shining with the clear light of Justice, Right and
+Honour, which in those times of sufferings and burning tears, are the
+pledge of better days and the promise of the world's resurrection.
+
+
+INCREDIBLE "NATIONALIST" NOTIONS.
+
+Can it be possibly believed that the "Nationalist" leader has asserted
+that when the British capitalists and bankers invested the savings
+entrusted to their safe keeping, they were principally actuated by the
+desire to create in Canada a financial influence which would, in due
+course, assist with force in dragging the Dominion to participate in the
+Imperial wars against her better judgment? Yet, so he has positively
+written and developed the wild argument.
+
+Any man, with the slightest business experience, knows that, in all
+cases, would-be borrowers go where money is to be lent. I have not yet
+learned that one of them ever went to the North Pole in search of
+millions for railway building and all kinds of industrial and commercial
+enterprises. Daring explorers who ventured thither, facing so many
+risks, were stimulated by a laudable thirst of fame and the desire of
+scientific progress. They did not imagine, for a moment, that they were
+likely to discover, in these far away regions, great financial markets
+amply provided with millions of accumulated capital waiting for safe and
+profitable investments.
+
+Canada, a young country, as large as all Europe in territorial extent,
+with wonderful undeveloped resources of the agricultural soil, of the
+mines, of immense forests, of mighty rivers, of large and breezy lakes,
+could not progress without labour and capital. The large natural
+increase of the population, supplemented by immigration, was sure to
+supply the labour. Capital, to the amount of hundreds of millions, could
+not be provided by the only savings of our people. Immigration of
+capital was even more pressingly required than that of men. The
+Governments of Canada, federal and provincial, city corporations,
+railway companies, industrial concerns, wanting money, all went where it
+could be found. It happened that London, the capital of the British
+Empire, was by far the largest financial market of the world. No wonder
+then that instead of going to Lapland, Canadian borrowers crowded in
+London, where they met with those of nearly all the nations of the
+world, gathering in the same city for the same purpose.
+
+Two incontrovertible economical truisms are, without the shadow of a
+doubt, the following:--
+
+1. That a would-be borrower wishes to get the money he wants in the
+easiest way at the lowest interest charge;
+
+2. That a wise lender wishes to secure for his money the safest
+investment carrying the highest possible rate of interest; the rate of
+interest being however subordinated, in his mind, to the safety of the
+investment.
+
+Such were the sound economical considerations which settled for the
+Canadian borrowers of all sorts, and the British investors, the
+conditions of all the loans made on Canadian account.
+
+Any one merely hinting to the British saving public that the money
+invested in Canada was sent over to our shores for the object of
+creating a financial influence which would force the Dominion into
+costly wars, could not have adopted a more unwise course to destroy the
+best chances of the success of a loan. Canadian credit was of first
+class order, because the British investors knew our grand possibilities;
+because they were aware that Canada had always been a safe debtor,
+honouring with clock regularity her interest charges and the payment of
+maturing loans; because also, and in a very large measure, they realized
+that we were not in the same position of so many nations of the Old
+World, exposed to frequent warring necessities likely to exhaust our
+means and to jeopardize our bright prospects.
+
+Confidence being the sound basis of good credit, we got all the money we
+wanted for all the purposes of our national economical development, the
+true interest of Canada and of Great Britain being equally well served
+by the financial intercourse between the wealthy mother-country and her
+progressive colony.
+
+
+CANADIAN FINANCIAL OPERATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Our "Nationalists," so eager to discourage Canadian effort in the war,
+and, with this object, always prone to magnify German warlike
+achievements and the difficulties confronting the Allies, were rather
+nervous at the increasing prospects of the United States joining the
+_Entente_ Nations. Their leader seized every opportunity to argue that
+they would be mistaken in doing so. During the weary months when the
+President of the neighbouring Republic was prudently feeling his way
+before taking the bold stand which he has ever since so brilliantly and
+bravely upheld, the "Nationalists", through successive ups and downs in
+their expectations, could scarcely help hiding their desire that the
+United States would not intervene in the struggle. Those of us who had
+not been moved by the horrors of the Belgian invasion, by the murder of
+so many innocent victims of teutonic savageness, by the brutal killing
+of Edith Cavell, by the Armenian massacres, by the wanton destruction
+of admirable works of Art, could not be expected to thrill at the
+barbarous sinking of the Lusitania, sending to the bottom of the ocean
+hundreds of American citizens of the neutral American Northern Republic.
+They were anxious that the Washington Government should condone the
+outrageous offence and all the subsequent ones perpetrated by the German
+submarines against our neighbours. How much they were dismayed at the
+sudden close of Mr. Wilson's apparent hesitation, and at the proud
+declaration of war from Washington to Berlin. Though rejoicing at it,
+they did not consider that the Russian bolsheviki's collapse could
+compensate for the additional military and financial resources the
+Allies were sure to derive from the United States participation in the
+war.
+
+Canada having to borrow many millions to sustain her warlike effort, and
+the British money market being closed to further outside investments,
+had two sources left for her successful financial operations: her own
+market and that of the United States. The Washington Authorities had
+generously decided to help financially the European Allies in pressing
+need of money. The Ottawa Government, before making a grand appeal to
+the Canadian public, applied to Washington for a loan. Mr. Wilson's
+cabinet, however much they would have liked to meet the wishes of the
+Canadian Government, had to answer that, having such a large war
+expenditure to incur, and such big sums to collect to assist their less
+wealthy European associates in the struggle, they could not see their
+way to grant Canada's demand.
+
+Acknowledging the value of the reasons given for not complying with
+their request, the Canadian Ministers then applied to Washington for the
+permission to negotiate a loan in the open American market. This was
+readily granted.
+
+It was, of course, well understood that going in the open market,
+Canada, to secure the required sum of money, would have to pay the then
+current rate of interest increasing, as usual, in proportion to the
+increased pressure of the demand of funds.
+
+It is utterly incredible--but still it is true--that Mr. Bourassa did
+denounce in his newspaper _Le Devoir_, the Ottawa Cabinet's action in
+borrowing money from the American saving public. In severe terms he
+blamed the Washington Authorities for not having lent millions to Canada
+at the low rate of interest they had agreed to accept from France and
+Italy. He asserted that this refusal on their part was a testimony of
+ill-will against the Dominion. And in the most violent terms he charged
+all those who favoured Canadian borrowings in the American market with
+being traitors selling their country to the United States.
+
+It is hard to say whether the charge is not more ridiculous than
+contemptible. It is the repetition, in an aggravated form of absurdity,
+of the argument accusing the British investing capitalists to have had
+for their only object in lending us their money to help coercing Canada
+into the Imperial wars.
+
+Was Mr. Bourassa ignorant of the fact that the building of the
+magnificent railway system of the United States, that their great
+industrial development, were due to the billions of British capital
+which for the last eighty years have flowed, in rolling waves, towards
+the shores of the Republic, invading, in the most peaceful and friendly
+way, her large territory, and drawing from its immense resources the
+greatest immeasurable accumulation of wealth ever created by the labour
+of man? I am not aware that any American writer ever ran the risk of
+being crushed by ridicule in accusing all the United States borrowers in
+the English market, governmental and others, of the hideous crime of
+selling their country to Great Britain. It would have been sheer madness
+to say so in the broad light of the marvellous economical progress of
+our neighbours. They knew very well that the billions of dollars
+invested by the British saving public for the development of their
+territorial riches, were producing returns much larger than the rate of
+interest paid to their British creditors.
+
+No one in the United States ever apprehended, for a single moment, that
+because the Republic had borrowed enormous sums from Great Britain, she
+was likely to lose her State independence through the financial
+influence of the holders of her securities of all sorts.
+
+Such "Nationalist" notions, as above exposed and contradicted, can only
+create very wrong and deplorable conclusions in the public mind, were
+they allowed to follow their course without challenge and without the
+refutation proving their complete absurdity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+"NATIONALIST" VIEWS CONDENSED.
+
+
+After refuting at length the "Nationalist" theories, I thought proper to
+condense them in a concrete proposition, and challenge their
+propagandist to call a public meeting in any city, town, or locality, in
+the Dominion,--Montreal for instance--and to find a dozen of citizens of
+standing in the community, to consent to move and second a
+"_Resolution_" embodying their doctrines.
+
+This condensed proposition, I translate as follows:--
+
+"Whereas England has unjustly declared war against Germany;
+
+"Whereas Great Britain has done nothing to maintain the peace of the
+world;
+
+"Considering that His Majesty King George V. _had not the right to
+declare the state of war for Canada without the assent of the Canadian
+Cabinet_;
+
+"Considering that Canada, as an autonomous colony, _is a Sovereign
+State_;
+
+"Considering that British Sovereignty over Canada _is only a fiction_;
+
+"Considering that Canada, interfering in the present war, _should have
+done so as a Nation_;
+
+"Whereas Canada should only have fought on her own account, like
+_Belgium, Servia, Italy or Bulgaria_.
+
+"Whereas _the maintenance of a compact British Empire is the most
+permanent provocation against the peace of the world_;
+
+"Considering that the supremacy of England on the seas is unjust;
+
+"Considering that Great Britain's aspiration, for a long time past, has
+been universal domination by means of her military naval power;
+
+"Whereas England is unfair against France in using her as a shield
+against German invasion;
+
+"Considering that England is exercising by all possible means a strong
+pressure upon the Colonies for her only benefit;
+
+"Considering _that all the social leaders have united to demoralize the
+conscience of the people, to poison their mind, to set their vigilance
+at sleep, and to represent to them as a national duty what would
+formerly have been considered as a betrayal of national interests_;
+
+"Considering _that England is trying to crush Germany, being afraid of
+her colonial expansion and her maritime and commercial competition_;
+
+"Whereas our compatriots of the British races have many faults; _that
+they are ignorant, assuming, arrogant, overbearing and rotten with
+mercantilism_;
+
+"Considering that they have acquired _many of the worst vices of the
+Yankees_;
+
+"Considering that Canada should never participate, outside of her own
+territory, in the wars of the British Empire;
+
+"Considering that the Canadian Cabinet and Parliament are criminally
+guilty of having ordered the organization of a Canadian army to go and
+fight against Germany on the French territory, and in authorizing the
+payment of the cost of this military expedition;
+
+"Be it "Resolved", that this meeting energetically protest against the
+declaration of war against Germany by His Majesty King George V,
+_without the assent of the Canadian Cabinet_, to defend Belgium's
+territory invaded by Germany violating solemn treaties;
+
+"That this meeting is of opinion that, for the purpose of favouring the
+restoration of peace as soon as possible, England should notify all the
+Powers that she abdicates for ever her supremacy on the seas, which
+supremacy Germany could hereafter safely exercise;
+
+"That this meeting being absolutely convinced that _the maintenance of a
+compact British Empire is the most permanent provocation against the
+peace of the world_, is strongly of opinion that Great Britain should,
+in order to quiet the fears of the Nations friendly to peace and opposed
+to militarism, like pacifist Germany, dissolve her Empire, at once
+acknowledging the immediate independence of India and of all her
+autonomous Colonies;
+
+"That this meeting's formal opinion is that the Canadian Parliament's
+imperious duty is to order without delay the dissolution of the British
+bond of connection, _which would be a public benefit_, and to proclaim
+the immediate independence of Canada;
+
+"That a copy of the present "Resolution" be addressed to His Excellency
+the Governor General, to the Members of the Federal Cabinet, to the
+Senators and to the Members of the House of Commons."
+
+The italics in the above draft "Resolution" and "Preamble" are quoted
+from Mr. Bourassa's writings.
+
+The "Preamble" and "Resolution" emphasize, in their true and complete
+meaning, the "Nationalist" doctrines perseveringly propounded for years
+past to poison French Canadian mentally. That such teachings can only
+produce disloyal feelings, stir up national prejudices and hatred of the
+Mother Country, and be most detrimental to the best interests of the
+Province of Quebec, of the Dominion of Canada, and of the British Empire
+as a whole, every one must admit with sadness.
+
+My challenge, which is still maintained, has not been taken up yet. All
+may rest assured that it will never be. The most ardent "Nationalist"
+knows that no responsible citizens would move the adoption of such
+views.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+LOYAL PRINCIPLES PROPOUNDED.
+
+
+To the foregoing "Nationalist" proposition, I opposed one condensing, in
+a concrete form, the views and principles of the truly loyal Canadian
+citizens. I also translate it as follows:--
+
+"Whereas, since 1870, the German Empire had been a permanent menace
+against the peace of the world by her threatening military policy;
+
+"Whereas England, throughout the same period, and more especially during
+the twenty years previous to 1914, had done her utmost efforts to
+maintain peace;
+
+"Considering that Great Britain had, in many ways, solicited Germany to
+agree to the limitation of armaments, especially of the building of war
+vessels;
+
+"Considering that she had persisted in her attempts with the German
+Government to save the nations from the ruinous system of excessive
+armaments, in spite of the latter's refusal to accede to her demands;
+
+"Considering that though in honor bound, like England, by three solemn
+treaties, to respect Belgium's neutrality, the German Government have,
+in August 1914, ordered their army to violate Belgian territory in
+order to more easily invade France to which they had declared war;
+
+"Whereas Great Britain, in honour bound, could not permit the crushing
+of Belgium by the German Empire;
+
+"Considering, moreover, that Germany, after mutilating and destroying
+Belgium, by the deprivation of her independence, after triumphing over
+France which she would have once again dismembered, would have
+undertaken to beat England to deprive her of sea supremacy, in order to
+obtain, by this last conquest, her domination over Europe and almost all
+the world;
+
+"Considering that the defeat of England might very likely have resulted
+in the cession of Canada to Germany;
+
+"Considering that the world at large is greatly interested in the
+maintenance of England and France as first class Powers on account of
+their services in favour of Human Civilization and Liberty;
+
+"Considering that the German armies have accompanied their military
+operations with untold barbarous acts, by the murder of priests, of
+peaceful citizens, of wounded soldiers, of religious women, of mothers,
+of previously criminally outraged young girls, of old men, of young
+children, with the destruction by fire and otherwise of Cathedrals,
+Churches,--monuments of the Christian Art,--of libraries--sanctuaries of
+Science--of historical monuments, the legitimate glory and pride of
+Human Genius;
+
+"Whereas the German Government is guilty of the murder of thousands of
+persons, men, women and children, by the sinking of merchant
+vessels--the Lusitania, for instance--by its submarine ships, without
+giving the notices required by International Law;
+
+"Whereas from the very beginning of the war, the Allied Nations,
+England, France and Russia, have jointly agreed, in honour bound, to
+require, as the essential peace condition, the cessation by all the
+belligerent Powers of the crushing and ruinous militarism prevailing
+before the opening of the hostilities, by the fault of Germany's
+obstination to constantly strengthen her military organization both on
+land and sea;
+
+"Considering that England and her Allies are struggling for the most
+venerable and sacred cause:--_outraged Justice_--; that, being a
+British Colony, _Canada is justly engaged in the present cruel and
+deplorable conflict, for the defence of the Right and the true Liberty
+of Nations; that our Canadian soldiers are valiantly fighting with those
+of England, France and Belgium for the great cause of sovereign
+importance--the protection of the world threatened by Germanism_;
+
+"Considering that England, to which the political life of Canada is
+bound, and France, to which the French Canadians owe their national
+existence, _have to fight for sacred interests in a war of endurance_
+requiring the incessant renewal of all the energies of the most ardent
+patriotism, the victims of which falling on the field of honour have
+the merit of giving their lives _for Justice_";
+
+"Considering that, though wishing the restoration of peace as soon as
+possible, and earnestly praying Divine Providence to favour the world
+with the blessings of peace, more and more urgently needed after this
+assault of abominable barbarism against Christian Civilization lasting
+for the last four years, the Allies are absolutely unable to terminate
+the war by giving their consent to conditions which would not protect
+Humanity against the direst consequences of the militarism fastened by
+the German Empire on the Nations so anxious to bring it to an end;
+
+"Be it "Resolved":--
+
+"That this meeting approves of the free and patriotic decision of the
+Federal Parliament to have Canada to participate in the so very Just War
+which England, France, Belgium, the United States and Italy are fighting
+against the German and Austrian Empires, allied in an effort to dominate
+the world;
+
+"That this meeting's strong opinion is that, on account of the terrible
+crisis menacing the British Empire and Civilization, it was the bounden
+duty of Canada to intervene in the war for the safety of the Mother
+Country and her own, for the salvation of Liberty and _of the sacred
+cause of outraged Justice_;
+
+"That this meeting desires to express her admiration and profound
+gratitude for the braves who enlist in the grand army which the
+Canadian Parliament has ordered to be organized for the defence of the
+cause of the Allies, which is also that of the civilized world;
+
+"That this meeting also concur in the opinion that Canada is in duty
+bound to continue to participate in the present war until the final
+victory of the Allies, which will guarantee to the world a lasting peace
+and put an end to German militarism which has been the direct cause of
+so much dire misfortunes for Humanity."
+
+The italics of the above draft "Resolution" are quoted from the writings
+and speeches of leaders of French Canadian Roman Catholics.
+
+There was no need of calling meetings to adopt the preceding
+"Resolution" with its well defined preamble. It had been approved, in
+all its bearings, at the outset of the hostilities by the unanimous
+decision of the Canadian Parliament, by the almost unanimous consent of
+public opinion, by the religious, social, commercial, industrial and
+financial leaders of the country. It had been so approved by the four
+hundred thousand brave Canadians who rallied to the Colours; by the
+subscribers, by thousands, to the national war loans.
+
+Since writing the above draft "Resolution", its full substance has been
+almost unanimously approved by the Canadian people in general elections,
+the two contending political parties entirely agreeing so far as the
+Justice of the cause of the Allies was concerned, differing only as to
+the best means for Canada to adopt to achieve final victory.
+
+Without entering into any considerations respecting the divergence of
+the views of the leaders of political thought, in the still recent
+electoral campaign,--from which it is more advisable for me to abstain
+in the interest of the cause I am defending--I may be allowed to remark
+that only a small remnant of the "Nationalist" element dared to reaffirm
+his hostility to Canada's intervention in the conflict and to avow his
+opinion _that the country had done enough_.
+
+What did those irreconcilable "Nationalists"--so few in numbers as the
+event ultimately proved--mean by their assertion that _Canada had done
+enough for the war_? According to its literal wording, it must have
+signified that no more sacrifices should have been incurred for the
+triumph of the Allied cause. If it was so, the conclusion to be drawn
+from such sayings was that, to put an end to any further Canadian
+contributions, orders should be given to bring back the Canadian Army
+from Europe, and to send home all the forces still on Canadian soil. It
+is plain that even if the new Canadian Parliament had decided not to
+increase our contribution of man-power, in order to maintain the
+efficiency of the Canadian divisions at the front, large sacrifices
+would have had to be made to keep on the theatre of war the forces which
+were still in the field.
+
+To refuse to participate in the war would have been deserting the flag
+at the hour of danger, and a total misconception of our plain duty.
+
+Giving up the fight, once engaged in the struggle, before triumphant
+victory, or irremediable defeat, in the very thick of the battle so
+heroically carried on by the Allies, would have been sheer
+cowardice--bolchevikism of the worst kind.
+
+Whether they meant it or not, those few "Nationalists" dared not openly
+propose the recall of our troops. The solitary "Nationalist" candidate
+who had the nerve to face the electorate was defeated by a very large
+majority.
+
+No better proof of the weakness of the hold of the doctrines of
+"Nationalism," on sound public opinion, is required than the decision of
+its most outspoken advocate and leader, Mr. Bourassa, to refrain from
+being a candidate in any constituency, and to advise all his supposed
+friends to do likewise. No one was deceived, with regard to this
+decision, by the reasons, or rather excuses, given to explain it.
+
+Evidently, if the "Nationalist" group and their leader had been
+confident of the support of the large number of electors whose opinion
+they pretended to represent, they would certainly not have lost the
+chance to show their strength, and the opportunity to elect many
+candidates of their persuasion to enter Parliament free from any party
+allegiance but that of their own element. But any one somewhat posted
+with the currents of public opinion in the Province of Quebec, knew very
+well that if pure "Nationalist" candidates had been nominated in all
+the constituencies of the Province, running between the regular party
+nominees,--ministerial and opposition--the average number of ballots
+cast for them would scarcely have reached ten per cent. of the French
+Canadian votes, less than two per cent. of the whole Canadian
+electorate.
+
+It was moreover highly probable that, had they tried the game, they
+would not have even succeeded, in two-thirds of the constituencies, in
+inducing citizens of sufficient standing to accept their nomination and
+their political program. Once engaged in such a hopeless electoral
+contest, they would have had either to humbly retire from the field, or
+to await the doomed day by nominating men of no weight whatever. Both
+alternatives would have led them to an equally disastrous defeat.
+
+
+UNJUST "NATIONALIST" GRIEVANCES AGAINST ENGLAND.
+
+At the end of the very first page of Mr. Bourassa's pamphlet,
+entitled:--_What do we owe England_?--in French:--Que devons-nous a
+l'Angleterre?,--The following lines are found:--(_Translation._)
+
+ British Imperialism, in its concrete and practical form, can be
+ defined in ten words: =the active participation by the Colonies
+ in the wars of England=. It is almost precisely the definition I
+ gave of it as early as the days of the African war. It is exact.
+ Considered from a larger point of view, from its profound causes
+ and far reaching consequences, British Imperialism calls for a
+ more ample definition. Its object is to have Great Britain
+ dominate the world by means of the organization and
+ concentration of all the Military Forces of the Empire--both Sea
+ and Land Forces--; it means the gradual annihilation, or at
+ least the enslaving of all the divers nationalities constituting
+ the British Empire, in order to bring about the World's
+ supremacy of the Anglo-Saxon race, of her thoughts, of her
+ language, of her political conceptions, of her commerce and her
+ wealth. Its object is to crush all competitions, all internal
+ and external oppositions. It is the German Ideal; it is the
+ Roman Ideal. It is the Imperialism of all countries, at all
+ times, enlarged to the limits of the monstrous pretensions of
+ Pan-Anglo-Saxonism.
+
+All the propositions of the above quotation do not bear, for one single
+instant, the light of historical research, of reason, even of common
+sense.
+
+I challenge Mr. Bourassa, and any one else, to read the speeches and the
+writings of all those who have studied the great question of the future
+of the British Empire, and to detect therein one single word to justify
+the assertion _that the organization and concentration of all the
+Military Forces of the Empire have for their object to help England to
+dominate the world_.
+
+I have already abundantly proved that England never aspired to dominate
+the world. I answered Mr. Bourassa's unfounded propositions as
+follows:--
+
+1--I will surely be allowed to say that for nearly the last fifty years,
+I have done my best efforts to keep myself well informed with the
+opinions expressed by the most authorized political men of the Mother
+Country--of all parties--by the most renowned publicists, by the most
+distinguished writers of the great English press. I have yet to read one
+sentence leading me to suppose that the mind of any one of them was
+haunted by the foolish hope of Great Britain's domination of the world.
+Many of them have spoken and written to persuade their countrymen of the
+growing urgency to consider the most effective measures to be adopted to
+defend the Empire, in view of the efforts of other nations--notably
+Germany--to strengthen their military organizations. No one advised them
+to incur the most heavy sacrifices _in order to dominate the world_.
+They had too much political sense to believe that such a ridiculous
+scheme could ever be carried out.
+
+2--What the "Nationalist" leader calls British Imperialism never had for
+its objective _the gradual suppression, or at least the enslaving of the
+divers nationalities constituting the British Empire_.
+
+Such an assertion is nothing less than a stroke of the imagination which
+recent history utterly refutes, proving, as it does, the very reverse,
+as follows:--
+
+A--The creation, by Imperial Charters, of the great autonomous federal
+Canadian, Australian, South African Dominions.
+
+B--The federal system adopted for the Dominion of Canada purposely for
+the protection of the French Canadians whose special interests are
+entrusted to the Legislature of the Province of Quebec.
+
+C--The South African Union Charter is the guarantee of the Boers'
+control of the future of that vast stretch of country, by means of the
+two fundamental principles of the British constitutional
+system:--government by the majority combined with ministerial
+responsibility.
+
+No Empire in the world grants as large a measure of freedom as the
+British Empire does, to the various national groups living under the
+protection of her flag.
+
+3--British Imperialism, contrary to Mr. Bourassa's assertion, was never
+deluded by the wild dream _of a world wide supremacy of the Anglo-Saxon
+race, of her thoughts, of her language, of her political conceptions, of
+her commerce and her wealth_.
+
+Surely, I have yet to learn that Great Britain has dreamt, and is
+dreaming, to impose _by Force_ her "mentality," her language, her
+political institutions to China, to Japan, to Russia, to France, to all
+the South American Republics, to Italy, to Spain, to Germany, to
+Austria-Hungary, to Turkey, &c., which, considered as a whole,
+represent, any one must admit, a pretty large part of the universe.
+
+4--Mr. Bourassa's assertion that England aspires to dominate the world,
+_economically_, _commercially_, is most positively contradicted by the
+history of the last eighty years. Who does not know--and I cannot for a
+moment suppose that Mr. Bourassa ignores it--that, nearly a century
+ago, Great Britain, finally rallied in favour of a Free Trade Policy,
+has opened her market free to the products of all the nations of the
+world. Is that not a rather strange way of aspiring to an economical
+domination! And whilst all the countries of the earth, the British
+colonies as well as foreign nations, can freely sell their goods in the
+British market, they protect their own markets by high customs
+duties--in some cases almost prohibitive--against British goods.
+
+National commercial statistics are opened to the "Nationalist" leader's
+perusal as to any one else. If he had referred to them, he would have
+learned that the Foreign Trade of Great Britain, in 1913, the year
+preceding the outbreak of the war, amounted to $7,017,775,335; exports
+were valued at $3,174,101,630; imports totalized $3,843,673,695,
+exceeding the exports by the large amount of $669,572,065.
+
+By looking at the figures, Mr. Bourassa would only have had to call upon
+his common sense to draw the conclusion that England was certainly not
+moving along an easy road to the commercial domination of the world by
+maintaining a policy resulting in an import trade larger, by an annual
+average of nearly twenty per cent., than her exportations.
+
+Before the war, Germany, by rapid strides, had succeeded in attaining
+the second rank amongst the great trading nations, coming next after
+Great Britain. In the same year--1913--her Foreign Trade totalized
+$5,351,500,000, divided as follows:--Imports $2,801,675,000; exports
+$2,549,825,000.
+
+The really wonderful industrial and commercial expansion of Germany,
+during the last forty years previous to the war, offered another
+opportunity to Mr. Bourassa to show his spite against Great Britain. He
+would have been sorry not to make the best of it. Calling into play his
+fertile imagination, he unhesitatingly charged England with deep rooted
+jealousy of Germany's trade success and the guilty intent to crush it
+out of existence.
+
+To this absurd assertion--not using the word offensively, being always
+determined to be courteous in any discussion I engage--I answered by
+quoting the figures of the reciprocal relative external British and
+German trade. In 1913, Great Britain sold to Germany goods to the amount
+of $203,385,150, and bought German products for a total value of
+$402,055,285. Great Britain's exports to Germany were then only about
+fifty per cent of her imports from the same market. It is indeed
+difficult to detect in such trade relations between two nations any sign
+of the intent, on the part of the country buying from the other double
+the value of her sales to her, to dominate her people commercially.
+
+Any one knowing all the circumstances and the causes that imposed upon
+Great Britain the duty of taking part in the European struggle, cannot
+help being shocked at Mr. Bourassa's accusation _that England has
+incidentally been brought into the conflict only through the frantic
+desire of her business men to use it to crush the commercial competition
+of Germany_. No serious men could have entertained such strange notions.
+And the "Nationalist" leader certainly charged the political leaders and
+the business community of England with sheer madness.
+
+With all right minded men, the world over, I have long ago reached the
+sound conclusion that universal economical domination is only a
+chimerical idea absolutely outside of all possible realization. England
+does not indulge in any such extravagant dream, being too well aware how
+vain it would be.
+
+May I ask my readers--and Mr. Bourassa has been one of them,--to join
+with me in a short general review of the economical progress of the
+world, in its broadest lines, rising, for this purpose, as should be
+done in all cases, superior to all national and local prejudices. A
+grand natural scenery is always better appreciated from the mountain
+top. Equally so, questions of universal import must be considered from
+the heights of the noblest principles inspiring the Christian desire to
+promote the general good of Mankind. Considered from this elevated
+standpoint, very short-sighted indeed is the man who fails to see THAT
+THE ECONOMICAL PROGRESS OF THE WORLD, AGRICULTURALLY, INDUSTRIALLY,
+COMMERCIALLY, IS BOUND UP WITH INTELLIGENT, ENERGETIC AND PERSEVERING
+LABOUR; THAT IT IS THE OUTCOME OF THE IMPROVEMENTS OF ALL THE MEANS OF
+PRODUCTION, TO THE CONSTANT INCREASED PERFECTION OF THE AGRICULTURAL AND
+INDUSTRIAL ARTS, TO THE ENLARGEMENT OF THE RESOURCES OF CAPITAL,
+ACCUMULATED BY JUDICIOUS SAVINGS. It is bound with the improvement of
+means of transportation by land and sea; with the much enlarged
+facilities of the exchange of all kinds of products; with the superior
+management,--the result of a much wider experience--of all the
+institutions distributing credit; with the energetic development of all
+the resources which generous Providence has profusely provided the
+earth for the good of Humanity. It is more than useless to expect
+economical progress from disastrous armed conflicts which, in the course
+of a few years, nay, only a few months, destroy the accumulated wealth
+of many years of incessant labour.
+
+War is productive of untold material losses. As a general rule, it
+cannot make the nations of the world richer. Many successive generations
+have for a long time to bear the crushing burden which they inherit from
+guilty ambitious Rulers as the only result of their thirst of vain
+glory. Materially, a nation may profit by an unjust war, resulting in
+the defeat of a weaker rival, but the riches thus acquired by the one,
+either by territorial acquisitions, or by the payment to her of war
+contributions and indemnities, or both, from the other, are merely
+transferred from the vanquished to the victor. The great society of
+nations, instead of gaining anything by it, is only losing, as a whole,
+the total amount of the financial cost of the military operations, of
+the squandering of hard earned savings, of diminished labour and
+production, of the waste of productive capital, of the loss of so many
+long days which could have been so much better employed. But most
+deplorable is the loss entailed by the warring nations, and the universe
+at large, by the sacrifice of the younger generations, of early youth
+and of strongly developed manhood, for the success of tyrannical and
+criminal purposes.
+
+There can be but one justification--and it is a noble, a glorious
+one--of the sacrifice of so many valuable lives and so much material
+wealth: the sacredness, the sanctity of the cause for which a nation, or
+a group of peoples, take up arms against an enemy, or enemies, only
+intent on crushing weaker rival, or rivals, by all the illegitimate
+means at his, or their command, for self-aggrandizement, for unjust
+domination. Such is the present war: sacred and just on the Allied side;
+abominable, brutal, barbarous on the German side, enhanced in its guilt
+by the ferocious Turks and the shameful submission of the enslaved
+Austrians to the overpowering will of their teutonic masters. It will
+not have cost too much if it has the result of freeing Mankind from the
+horrors of German militarism, assuring to the world a long reign of
+justice and moral grandeur.
+
+England can rightly claim a very large part of the merit accruing to all
+those who have contributed to the immense material progress of the world
+during the last century. She has actively and most intelligently worked
+for it by her vigorous industrial and commercial development, by the
+very numerous billions of dollars she has contributed, all over the
+world, to railway building and oceanic navigation. She has contributed
+to it by her extraordinary amount of savings which allowed her to supply
+the capital required for so many varied enterprises over all the
+continents. She has played the very important part of universal banker,
+distributing her immense treasures to foster production of all kinds
+everywhere. She has most largely contributed to the economic phenomenon
+of the gradual diminution of the universal rate of interest.
+
+If, according to Mr. Bourassa's strange notion, all this is to be
+considered as equivalent to economical domination, the more the whole
+world will enjoy it the better, more prosperous it will be, and future
+generations will have so much more cause for rejoicing at its increased
+development, and to be grateful to England for it.
+
+The witnesses who, for the last sixty years, have lived with their eyes
+opened, preferring the full shining light of the bright days of
+universal economical development to the darkness obscuring fanatical
+minds only intent on stirring up local, sectional and national
+prejudices, and miserable petty ambitions, have rejoiced at the greatly
+varied advantages Humanity has derived from the gifts of Providence
+favouring her with the great scientific discoveries which have worked,
+are still, and will for all times, work wonders for her material
+prosperity. The regular tendency of those natural forces recently
+applied to production is an increased movement towards the unification
+of the industrial, commercial and financial interests of the world. The
+vital energies of all peoples have more or less been stimulated by the
+same causes, operating everywhere, reaching until lately unknown and
+undeveloped regions. Engineering genius, broadened by the new scientific
+resources at its command, has triumphed over all difficulties. The
+gigantic locomotive, drawing palatial passenger coaches, and sometimes
+as much as a hundred heavily loaded freight cars, run by thousands and
+thousands daily through luxurious prairies. They cross giant rivers,
+ascend with alertness the highest mountains, or rush through tunnels
+which the skill and hard work of man has pierced through them, backed by
+the financial power of millions of money. Automobilism covers the whole
+universe, multiplying intercourse and human relations, and making
+possible, in a few days of marvellous organization, a glorious military
+victory like that almost miraculously carried at the Marne.
+
+Giant steamers, of fifty to sixty thousand tons--of a hundred thousand
+in the near future--ply, day and night, over the high seas. In
+mid-ocean they scatter human thoughts through the air to very distant
+points. They carry within their large skulls immense quantities of the
+most varied products.
+
+Means of transportation have become so numerous, so improved, so rapid,
+that the surplus agricultural production of the most fertile regions do
+reach, in a few short days, the countries which, on account of their
+numerous industrial and commercial population, have to import a large
+quantity of food products. The equilibrium between production and
+consumption becomes yearly more easily obtainable. Famine by the
+inequality of agricultural production is very much less to be
+apprehended. Millions of human beings are no longer, as hitherto,
+threatened to die by starvation at the same time that more favoured
+regions had a surplus of food products which they could not use, sell,
+or export.
+
+Without a most powerful capitalization of savings--totaling, in some
+cases, billions of dollars--without the marvellous development of the
+great transportation industry by land and sea, could the Canadian and
+American western grain crops be delivered, within a few days' time, with
+an astonishing rapidity and at very small cost, on all the markets where
+they are absolutely required for daily consumption.
+
+Every country on earth is multiplying her efforts to develop her
+manufacturing interests by an active and intelligent use of the raw
+materials with which her territory has been favoured by Nature.
+
+To this intense economical development of the world, all the peoples are
+contributing their shares in various proportions, of course:--In Europe,
+Great Britain, France, Germany, Russia, Austria, Italy, Belgium, &c.; in
+the two Americas, the United States, Canada--Canada with the sure
+prospects of such a grand future--the Argentine Republic, Brazil, &c.;
+in Asia, Japan, China, and the so very large Asiatic regions of Russia;
+in Africa, the British colonies, Egypt, Algeria, &c.; and Australia, so
+recently opened to the glories of Christian Civilization, blooming in
+the Pacific ocean washing her shores, fertilizing her lands nearer to
+its refreshing breeze.
+
+Who does not see that all this development tends naturally to the
+economical unity of the world. If Humanity is ever effectively delivered
+from the dangers of wars like the one actually desolating her so
+cruelly, she will have to be grateful for this great boon to the
+unification, on a larger scale, of the general interests of all the
+nations requiring permanent peace for their regular and harmonious
+growth.
+
+To the wonderful material prosperity achieved as above explained,
+England has contributed her legitimate share, without trying to dominate
+economically the universe which derived all the great advantages which
+her business genius has so largely developed.
+
+It must not be supposed that I lose sight of the inconveniences which
+material prosperity may entail. One of them is the tendency to bend the
+national aspirations to materialism. This can be counteracted by the
+national will to apply material development to the more important
+intellectual, moral and religious progress of the people at large.
+
+Any nation aspiring to dominate the world by brute force or by the power
+of wealth, would be guilty of attempting an achievement just as vain as
+it would be criminal in its conception.
+
+Any nation is within her undoubted right and duty in aspiring to the
+legitimate influence of her material progress, of her intellectual
+culture, of her moral development, of her religious increased
+perfection. Happy indeed would be the future of Humanity if all the
+Nations and their Rulers understood well, and did their best efforts to
+practice Christian precepts in the true spirit of their Divine
+teaching.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+IMPERIALISM.
+
+
+Mr. Bourassa is apparently so frightened by what he calls _Imperialism_
+that the horrible phantom being always present to his imagination, he
+shudders at it in day time, and wildly dreams of it at night. Judging by
+what he has said and written, he seems to have worried a great deal, for
+many years past, about the dire misfortunes which, he believed, were
+more and more threatening the future of the world by the strong movement
+of imperialist views he detected everywhere. It is the great hobby which
+saddens his life, the terrible bugbear with which he is ever trying to
+arouse the feelings of his French Canadian countrymen against England.
+
+The deceased British statesman, called Joseph Chamberlain, by his
+efforts to promote the unity of the Empire, inspired Mr. Bourassa with a
+profound fear which he wanted his compatriots to share by all the means
+at his command:--public speeches, newspaper editorials, pamphlets. He
+charged him with the responsibility of the _infamous crime_ he brought
+England to commit in accepting the challenge of President Kruger and the
+then South African Republic, and fighting for the defence of her
+Sovereign rights in South Africa. According to the Nationalist leader, a
+vigorous impulse was given by the South African war to the political
+evolution which he termed _British Imperialism_. Nothing was further
+from the true meaning of this important event.
+
+In refuting Mr. Bourassa's assertion, I showed that the South African
+war was not the outgrowth of Imperialist ideas, and that it has in no
+way resulted in a dangerous advance of the kind of Imperialism which so
+much frightens him and all those who experience his baneful influence.
+
+As I have previously proved, the South African campaign was imposed upon
+England by the then aspiration of a section only of Boer opinion, led by
+the unscrupulous and haughty President Kruger, imprudently relying on
+the support of the German Kaiser who had hastened to congratulate him
+for his success in the Jameson Raid. It resulted not in favor of
+Imperialism of the type so violently denounced by Mr. Bourassa, but in a
+most beneficent expansion of Political Freedom by the granting of the
+free British institutions to the new great South African overseas
+Dominion. It is only the other day that ex-Premier Asquith, on the
+occasion of a great public function, has declared that Premier Botha,
+the former most prominent Boer General, was now one of the strongest
+pillars of the British Empire.
+
+It being so important to set the opinion of the French Canadians right
+respecting that question of Imperialism, so much discussed of late, and
+by many with so little political sense and historical knowledge, I would
+not rest satisfied with a refutation of the special Bourassist
+appreciation of the causes and results of the South African conflict. I
+summarized, in a condensed review, the divers phases of the political
+movement which can properly be called _Imperialism_, tracing its origin
+as far back as the organization of the first great political Powers
+known to History: the Persian, the Egyptian, the Greek Empires, &c. More
+than ever before, Imperialism was triumphant during the long Roman
+domination of almost all the then known world. Every student of History
+is impressed by the grandeur of the part played by the Roman Empire in
+the world's drama. Constantine struck the first blow at Roman
+Imperialism--unwillingly we can rest assured--in laying the foundations
+of Constantinople, and dividing the Roman Empire into the Western and
+Eastern Empires. At last, after repeated invasions, the Northern
+barbarians succeeded in smashing the Roman Colossus.
+
+After many long years during which European political society passed
+through the incessant turmoil of rival ambitions, Charlemagne sets up
+anew the Western Empire, being coronated Emperor in Rome. Ever since,
+amidst multiplied ups and downs, Imperialism has swayed to and fro by
+the successive edification and overthrow of the Holy Roman Empire, the
+short lived Napoleonic European domination, the recently organized
+North German Empire.
+
+So far as Imperialism is concerned, all those great historical facts
+considered, how best can it be defined? Is it not evident that from the
+very birth of political societies for the government of Mankind, a
+double current of political thoughts and aspirations has been
+concurrently at work, with alternate successes and retrocessions: one
+tending towards large political organizations, uniting a variety of
+ethnical groups; the other operating the reverse way to bring about
+their dissolution in favour of multiplied small sovereignties. Each of
+the two opposing political systems has had its ebb and flow tides; the
+waves of the one, in their flowing days, washing the shores of the other
+until they had to recede before the pressure caused by the exhaustion of
+their own strength and the increased resistance of internal opposition.
+
+Viewed from this elevated standpoint, Imperialism is not new under the
+sun. It is as ancient as the world itself. Mr. Bourassa has been
+uselessly spending his energy in breaking his head against a movement
+which is in the very nature of things, developing the same way under the
+same favourable conditions and circumstances.
+
+Are the days we live so fraught with the dangers of Imperialism as to
+justify the fears of the alarmist? The answer would be in the
+affirmative, the question being considered from the point of view of
+Germany's autocratic Imperialism, if the free nations of the world had
+not joined in a holy union to put an end to its extravagant and
+tyrannical ambition. But how is it that Mr. Bourassa, the heaven-born
+anti-imperialist, so frightened at the supposed progress of British
+Imperialism, is so lenient towards Teutonic Imperialism? How is it that
+from the very first days of the gigantic struggle calling for the most
+heroic efforts of the human race to emerge safe and free from the
+furious waves powerfully set in motion by the most daring absolutism
+that ever existed, he has not thought proper to chastise as it deserved
+the worst kind of Imperialism that he could, or any one else, imagine?
+
+Taking for granted that the present economical conditions of the
+universe, likely to intensify, are working for great political
+organisations, from the causes previously explained, any intelligent
+observer could not fail to see that for the last century four great
+imperialist evolutions have been concurrently--or rather
+simultaneously--developing themselves; they were the British, the
+Teutonic, the Russian, the Republican in the United States. Let no one
+be astonished at seeing the two words _Imperialism_ and _Republicanism_
+coupled together. In their true sense, they are easily conciliated.
+
+The Roman Republic, by the grandeur of its part, was Imperialist as much
+as the Empire to which she gave birth. Caesar, without the imperial crown
+was Emperor as much as August. He was more so by his genius, and by the
+eminent position he had acquired by one of the most brilliant careers in
+History.
+
+Bonaparte, General and First Consul, in the closing days of the first
+French Republic, was Emperor as much as he became on the day of his
+Coronation, at Paris, by the Sovereign Pontiff.
+
+Imperialism being a great historical fact through all the ages, and most
+certainly destined to further developments, is it to be judged
+favourably or alarmingly?
+
+No doubt the problem is of the greatest possible political importance.
+The question can, I consider, be at the outset simplified as
+follows:--Would the prosperity, the freedom, the happiness of the world
+be better served by great political Powers, or by the multiplication of
+small sovereignties? It is just as well, and even better, to admit at
+once that a unique, a dogmatic, answer cannot be given to that question.
+Independent nations, sovereign societies, are not created at will by
+men, merely according to their fancy, to their variable and very often
+undefined wishes. History teaches that they are the outgrowth of various
+circumstances, of many divergent causes,--the most important, the one
+inscrutable, being always the action of Divine Providence directing the
+destinies of peoples as well as those of every human being. Different
+causes produce, of course, different results. Large and small political
+communities can surely be productive of much good for their
+populations. Much depends upon the intelligence, the wisdom, the
+devotion, the patriotism of the rulers and the governed. They can also
+do much harm. Unfortunately, the readers of past events have too much
+reason to deplore that both large and small political organizations have
+been equally guilty of maladministration, of ambitious cupidity of their
+neighbours' possessions, of unjust wars. As an uncontrovertible example,
+can I not point to the present German Empire, whose origin dates back to
+the days of the very small Prussia of two centuries ago, fighting her
+way up to her actual greatness by successive, unfair, and often criminal
+aggressions.
+
+After reading much of the history of past ages, I have not been able to
+come to the conclusion--and the more I read, the less inclined I am to
+do so--that the days when England, France, Central Europe, Italy, &c.,
+were subdivided into numerous small political organizations, almost
+always warring, were preferable to ours, even darkened and saddened as
+they are by the present trials and sufferings.
+
+If, on the other hand, the causes which at all times have tended to the
+creation of large political sovereignties are gradually acquiring an
+increased momentum of strength and activity, from the changed conditions
+brought about by the great scientific discoveries so wonderfully
+developing the commercial relations of the nations, is it not more
+advisable to study the true nature of the evolution and the good it can
+produce, rather than to shiver at the supposed prospects of an
+Imperialist cataclysm so certainly to be averted if public opinion is
+sound and Rulers wise. Crying on the shores of the St. Lawrence, against
+the advance of the rolling waves, would not prevent the tide from
+running up. The mad man who would try it, and persist in remaining on
+the spot, displaying his indignant and extravagant protest, would surely
+be submerged and drowned.
+
+Political developments, like many others, obey natural laws which no
+true statesman can ignore nor overlook. Because the limits of a
+political organization are extended, does it necessarily follow that
+only deplorable consequences can be expected from their enlargement?
+Surely not. One might as well pretend that unity, cohesion, strength,
+grandeur, are only productive of baneful results. Is it not a certainty
+that they can be equally beneficial or harmful, according to the
+intellectual and moral qualities of those who are called upon to apply
+them to the best interests of those they govern.
+
+German Imperialism, for instance, was not _per se_ a public misfortune.
+It became such because instead of using its instrumentality for the
+general good of the world as well as that of Germany, it was applied to
+a barbarous and criminal purpose to satisfy unjust and senseless
+aspirations.
+
+In the same years, all the resources of British Imperialism,--so
+abhorrent to Mr. Bourassa and his Nationalist adepts who view with such
+meekness the Teutonic type--have been brought into play for the freedom
+of the world and the protection of the small nationalities--notably
+Belgium.
+
+Bulgaria was a small State. Was it on this account less ambitious and
+troublesome for its neighbours? Any one conversant with the recent
+Balkan history knows that Bulgaria has from the start aspired to
+dominate the Balkan States. When the Berlin Government struck the hour
+which was to throw not only Europe, but three-fourths of the universe
+into the worst horrors of war, has Bulgaria rallied to the defence of
+her weak neighbour, Servia? Has she proved any sympathy for
+treacherously crushed Belgium?
+
+I emphatically declare that I would oppose Imperialism with all my
+might, if I thought that it is by nature a necessary producer of
+absolutism, of autocratic tyranny. But, the British precedent considered
+through all its beneficial developments, I must recognize that true
+Imperialism is not incompatible with the just and wise exercise of
+political liberty, with respectful protection of the rights and
+conditions of the divers national elements under its aegis.
+
+I pray to remain to my last day a faithful friend of the political
+liberties of the people. Knowing, as I do, how hard it is to apply them
+to the government of nations--great or small--I am not bewildered by
+vain illusions. But I cannot conceive--and never will--that the justice
+of the real principles of Political Liberty is to be denied on account
+of the difficulties of their satisfactory working, certainly obtainable
+when applied in conformity with the dictates of moral laws owing all
+their power to their Divine origin.
+
+The best political institutions which can work out such great advantages
+for the populations enjoying them, are too often diverted from their
+beneficient course by the vicious passions of those who are charged
+with, and responsible for, their administration. It would be most
+illogical to draw the inference that good institutions become bad by
+their guilty management.
+
+Free and autocratic governments are essentially different in their
+natural structure. Though liable to mismanagement by unscrupulous
+politicians, free institutions can, under ordinary favourable
+conditions, be trusted to be productive of much good for the peoples
+living under their protection. Autocracy--the whole human history proves
+it--by nature engenders absolutism. Crowned or revolutionary despots as
+a rule are not imbued with the patriotism nor purified by the virtues
+required for the good government of a country. Kaiserism, Terrorism and
+Bolshevikism are equally despicable and unfit to contribute to the sound
+progress which liberty, practiced by sensible and wise men, can develop.
+
+Reverting to the Nationalist bugbear, which does not in the least move
+me to despair of Canada's future, I consider that Imperialism, sensibly
+appreciated, is of two kinds: Autocratic Imperialism; Democratic
+Imperialism:--Absolutism is the foundation stone of the former;
+Political Liberty that of the latter. I am energetically opposed to the
+first. I sincerely believe that the second can do a great deal for the
+prosperity of the countries where it has regularly and justifiably been
+developed according to the natural laws of its growth.
+
+Autocratic Imperialism, in contemporaneous history, is almost
+exclusively typified by its Teutonic production. A general review of the
+world shows that for the last century, and more, with one sad exception,
+all the nations have been moving along the path leading to a greater
+freedom of their institutions. Even Japan and China have joined in the
+race. Russia had deliberately done so. Much was expected from her first
+efforts, and much would certainly have been reaped in due course had not
+the calamitous war still raging at first opened an opportunity for the
+reactionary Russian element, strongly influenced by German intrigues,
+spies and money, to check, through the Petrograd Court, the forward
+movement of Russian political liberty, and to impede, for Germany's
+sake, the success of the Russian military operations. Under those
+circumstances--as was also to be expected--the advancing wave of the
+aspirations of the great Russian people for more political freedom, was
+bound either to recede before the autocratic outburst, or to rush
+impetuously against the wall Germany was to her best helping to raise
+against it. The latter prevision happened, history once more repeating
+itself.
+
+Even barbarous Turkey, in recent years, had been somewhat shaken by a
+sudden desire to remove some of her secular shackles. The young Turks
+movement might have had some desirable results had the Ottoman Empire,
+as every national and political considerations should have induced her
+to do, sided with France and England.
+
+Germany is actually the only country in the world where Autocratic
+Imperialism has been flourishing during the last century. We all know
+the extent and the grievousness of the calamity it has wrought on the
+universe.
+
+During the same last century, Democratic Imperialism--using the term in
+its broadest and most reasonable meaning--has had two distinct
+beneficial developments:--the Monarchical Democratic Imperialism, and
+the Republican Democratic Imperialism.
+
+The Monarchical Democratic or free Imperialism--it is scarcely necessary
+for me to say--is that of Great Britain.
+
+The Republican Democratic or free Imperialism is that of the United
+States of America, of the Argentine Republic, of Brazil.
+
+Happily the two great and glorious countries which are favoured with the
+advantages of the Democratic type of Imperialism are united in a grand
+and noble effort to destroy the German Autocratic Imperialism in
+chastisement of its criminal aspirations to universal domination.
+
+The two types of Democratic or free Imperialism--the Monarchical and the
+Republican--can be better illustrated by a comparative short historical
+study of their development in Great Britain and her colonies, and in the
+United States. I summarize it as follows, beginning by the last
+mentioned, as it requires a shorter exposition.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+AMERICAN IMPERIALISM.
+
+
+The still recent and wonderful growth of the two American continents, in
+population and wealth, is almost an incredible marvel. It is none the
+least politically.
+
+The two Americas, by the extent of their areas, the vastness of their
+productive lands, the length and largeness of their mighty Rivers, the
+broadness of their Lakes, the grandeur of their scenery, seem to be most
+adapted to great developments of many kinds. It is difficult to think of
+small conceptions originating in the New World, which the genius of
+Columbus discovered and the combined genius of all the great races of
+the Old are united in developing.
+
+Let me first put the question:--when the leading European nations
+undertook to colonize the new Continents, were they not, consciously or
+not, throwing the Imperialist seed in a fertile land where it was sure
+to take root and blossom? Spain, France, and, last, England were
+certainly not obeying the dictates of our "Nationalist school" when they
+brought under their Sovereign authority such vast stretches of American
+territory.
+
+That Christian Civilization was to be extended to the new great
+Hemisphere, goes without saying. That the riches, then unknown, of the
+New World, were to be extracted from the land so full of them, was one
+of the duties of the discoverers, all will admit. The European
+Governments in extending their Sovereignties to America unfortunately
+adopted the mistaken Colonial Policy then still too much prevalent.
+Their error was to stick to the wrong conception that a colony was
+important only in the measure that it could be favourable to the
+interests of the Metropolis. History proves that this colonial system is
+bound to lead to unfair treatment of the colonies. Absolutism, then
+dominant in Europe, could not be expected to show any tender leniency
+towards the Colonials who were above all to work for the wealth and
+glory of the Metropolis. Spain proved to be the worst promoter of that
+Regime. Her failure has been most complete. She has had to withdraw her
+flag from the very large part of America over which it might have been
+kept waving, if sounder and more just political notions had prevailed in
+the narrowed minds of her Rulers.
+
+England, treading along the wrong path of Colonial oppression, but in a
+much less proportion, had to face a like result in the revolt of her
+American Colonies. Fortunately for her, for America and the world at
+large, the event widely opened her eyes. In acknowledging the
+independence of the young Republic of the United States, she was
+destined to be proud of her offspring in witnessing the astonishing
+development of the child to whom she had given birth. Could she have
+then foreseen that the day would come when at the hour of her dire
+trial, the daughter who threw off her motherly authority, too
+stringently exercised, would rush to her support for the defence of the
+very principles of Political Liberty for which she, the child, had
+fought for her independence, how soon would England have forgotten the
+sufferings of the parting and blessed Providence for them!
+
+The American Revolution, successfully carried out, was the occasion for
+England to revolutionize her Colonial Policy. She was the first
+nation--and I am sorry to say she has remained alone--to understand with
+great clearness that the old Colonial Regime, fraught with such
+disastrous consequences, must be done away with and replaced by the new
+one which called the colonies to the enjoyment, to the largest possible
+extent, of the free institutions of the Mother Land.
+
+Like every new born child, whose laborious birth was critical, the
+American Republic experienced great difficulties the very moment she
+commenced to breathe freely. So true it is always that national
+development, like personal success, cannot be achieved without struggle.
+
+The United States offer the example of the best development of the
+Imperialist evolution in the world. It dates as far back as the
+proclamation of the Independence of the Republic. When she was admitted
+into the international society of Sovereign States, she had at first to
+settle her political organization. The framing of a constitutional
+charter proved to be a very arduous task, at times almost desperate.
+
+Three sets of divergent opinions were fighting at close range during the
+protracted and solemn deliberations which at last reached a happy
+conclusion. Thirteen American British Colonies had coalesced to wring
+their Independence from England. The goal once attained, a first group
+of opinion was favoured by the supporters of the dissolution of the
+temporary union organized to secure the Independence of the whole, but
+to revert, they said, if successful, to their previous separate status.
+Had this view prevailed, at the very start North America would have been
+cumbered with thirteen Sovereign States. Many were alarmed at the
+creation of so many small Republics. More reasonable persons suggested
+to organize three or four of them, instead of thirteen, meeting as much
+as possible the wants natural to geographical conditions. It was no
+doubt an improvement on the first mentioned scheme. It met with the
+hearty support of devoted adepts.
+
+It is much to be hoped that they will forever receive from the
+successive generations of their countrymen the reward of the gratitude
+they deserve, the true statesmen who, at this important juncture,
+stepped on the scene and bravely took their stand in favour of the
+maintenance of the Union which had conquered Independence, and of the
+establishment of only one great Republic. The celebrated Hamilton was
+their trusted leader. They knew they were undertaking an herculean task.
+At that time, the population of the thirteen original States, scarcely
+four millions in number, was scattered over a vast territory, and
+located, for the most part, on the lands near the Atlantic coasts, two
+thousand miles in length, from North to South. Transportation was in a
+very primitive stage. Many years had yet to run before the whistle of
+the locomotive, powerful and struggling, would be echoed by the solitude
+of immense forests. No one foresaw that, in less than a century, the
+overflowing tide of European immigration would roll its waves so
+powerfully as to cross the whole continent and the Rocky Mountains to
+reach the coast of the Pacific Ocean.
+
+With such conditions, so unfavourable to the aspirations of only one new
+Independent State, moulding together political groups so far apart,
+interests apparently so hostile, the local point of view, local
+prejudices, were sure to dominate. They inspired the strong current of
+opinion in favour of the dissolution of the temporary Union, and the
+organization of every one of the old provinces into a separate Sovereign
+State.
+
+How, under such circumstances, the friends of a unique National American
+Union succeeded in the marvellous achievement of carrying their point by
+a prodigy of persuasive demonstration, will forever be a wonder for the
+student of the Republic's history. Few in numbers when they boldly
+threw their challenge, they encountered the shock of local fanaticism
+heightened by their offensive. Everything seemed to predict their utter
+failure. If ever Founders of States have proved the heroism of their
+convictions, the American Federalists have most gloriously done so.
+Undoubtedly, the force of the argument was with them. But what can
+logic, reason, good sense, too often do against inveterate prejudices?
+Were they, in this particular instance, destined to be powerless?
+
+The Federalists--such is their historical name--were not to be
+disheartened by the formidable obstacles thrown in their way. An
+_Imperialist_ inspiration was certainly the basic foundation of their
+demonstration finally triumphant. They told their countrymen that if
+they were to erect thirteen small Republics upon the burning ruins of
+the first Union to which they owed their Independence, they would
+prepare a very sad future for their children and children's children.
+European immigration was setting in, slowly but surely. They predicted
+that the World, this time, would witness, not a barbarous invasion like
+that which overthrew the Roman Empire, but one which the Old World would
+overflow to the New Continents. This surplus European population would
+bring over to America Christian Civilization, the training of hard work,
+large hopes, courage, experience in many ways, persevering energy,
+which would transform the boundless regions which could become their
+national heritage--until then the domain of the wandering Indian--into
+one of the greatest and wealthiest countries on earth. Would they commit
+the irreparable error to destroy the certainty of such a magnificent
+National Destiny, by creating thirteen separate governments, with the
+sure result of renewing in America, by such race groupings, the
+atrocious military conflicts which, for centuries, have flooded the
+European soil with human blood.
+
+Hamilton and some of his most distinguished friends published that work,
+entitled: "_The Federalist_", which will ever live as one of the
+broadest and most elevated productions of Political Intelligence. To
+all, and especially to the "Nationalist" theorists, I strongly recommend
+the reading of that book, a monument of the genius of great statesmen.
+
+In short, after a lengthy discussion characterized by their brilliant
+eloquence and their argumentative strength, the supporters of the
+Federal Union of the thirteen States, under one Sovereignty, carried the
+day. They had well deserved their glorious triumph. The Republic of the
+United States of North America was founded under the aegis of the free
+constitutional Charter which has done so much for her prosperity and her
+grandeur.
+
+Such was the initial move of the evolution of American Imperialism.
+Those amongst us who desire to learn more about its developments have
+only to look over the boundary line. The thirteen original States,
+federally united, have increased to number forty-four, with three more
+territories gradually developing into Statehood.
+
+The actual population of the Republic is already much over a _hundred
+million_, living in unrivalled prosperity and contentment on a
+territorial area of more than _three millions and a half square miles_,
+larger than all the European Continent. The sun of the present century
+will set upon a people of more than 250,000,000, with a splendid
+situation in a world to the destinies of which they will contribute in
+many admirable ways, if they are only true to the Christian principles
+which alone can assure Civilization and Progress.
+
+If the term _Imperialism_ truly means what the word
+implies,--_Sovereignty being exercised over a large population and a
+vast territory_, this political evolution, so decried by some, has most
+undoubtedly achieved a great success amongst our neighbours to the
+South.
+
+In all sincerity, may I not ask every unprejudiced mind:--has not the
+whole World every reason to be much elated at witnessing the beneficent
+results of the triumph of the American Federalists? Evidently, it has
+been _Imperial_ in its nature, in its proportions. It is so in its
+promises for the future greatness of the Republic. It has maintained,
+with only one exception, peace and harmony during nearly a century and a
+half, between the descendants of the European nationalities who have
+trusted their future welfare to the Sovereignty of the United States.
+Instead of wasting their energies in endless conflicts, such as numerous
+small States would have infallibly occasioned, thanks to the unity of
+the Sovereign Power binding into an admirable whole territories larger
+than Europe, they have learned to consider themselves as citizens of the
+same free country, as the free subjects of the same governmental
+authority. The temporary rupture of the Union, caused by the war of
+Secession, was but a vain reactionary action against the powerful
+current driving the Republic towards her grand future.
+
+It is most unlikely--I can say _impossible_ without the slightest
+hesitation--that the United States, after taking such a grand and
+glorious part in the present war, will abandon the broad and felicitous
+policy by which they have grown to be one of the greatest independent
+nations of the world, to drop so low as to adopt the blinding notions of
+a narrow, sectional, prejudiced and fanatical "Nationalism", such as the
+type which would ruin the future of our own Dominion, if ever it was
+allowed to prevail. They know too well, by the happiest experience, that
+the only true "_Nationalism_" is that which by the united effort of the
+intelligence, the culture, the strength, the patriotism of citizens of
+divers races has wrought for them their present admirable national
+status so full of the brightest promises. When peace shall have been
+restored, the great and mighty American Republic will be one of the
+leading Powers on earth, owing her unrivalled prosperity in a very large
+measure to her appreciation of the wonderful results obtainable by the
+union of all her subjects, of whatever racial origins, working with the
+same heart and devotion for the grandeur of their common country.
+
+I am not unduly enthusiastic, I am only speaking the plain truth, when I
+affirm that the Republican Imperialism of the United States has been
+most beneficent, having guaranteed to Mankind the inestimable boon of
+laying deep and strong in a virgin soil, providentially gifted with the
+most varied, the most abundant, the richest resources, the destinies of
+a great Sovereign Nation comprising numerous ethnical groups. This
+liberal, progressive, peaceful, harmonious Imperialism, it is a duty to
+approve wishing it to achieve new triumphs for the general good of
+Humanity.
+
+Republican Imperialism is also making its way--contaminating it, our
+"Nationalists" would say--in Southern America. This large and splendid
+half of the New World has been for too many years the theatre of civil
+troubles which appeared endless. A great change for the better has taken
+place since the beginning of the concentration movement which has united
+almost the entire Southern American Continent into eight Sovereign
+States, two of which with really Imperial proportions.
+
+The Brazilian Republic has a territorial area of 3,218,991 square miles,
+with a population of more than 24,000,000 increasing at the average rate
+of six or seven hundred thousand a year. With the great natural
+resources at her command, she will certainly develop into one great
+Power. The day is not so far distant when it will have a population
+exceeding _fifty millions_ living in comfort on a soil of luxurious
+wealth.
+
+The Argentine Republic has a territory of 1,153,119 square miles in
+extent. Her population is over 8,000,000, having doubled during the last
+twenty years. At this rate of a yearly increase of five per cent., it is
+easily foreseen what large total it will reach in a few years. It is
+wealthy, doing the best with her splendid resources, already
+contributing extensively to feed the population of Europe.
+
+The other Southern American Republics--the Bolivian, the Chilean, the
+Colombian, the Peruvian, the Venezuelan--have all territorial areas
+double in extent of those of the Great Powers of Western and Central
+Europe.
+
+In Southern America, like everywhere else, the rising tide is not
+running in favour of a multiplicity of small Sovereignties, always in a
+warring frame of mind. Since her political reorganization, South
+America, as a whole, has enjoyed the advantages of peace and of a large
+material progress.
+
+In reality the same political phenomenon is to be found in the five
+continents forming the whole earthly globe. Let the "Nationalists" call
+it _Imperialism_ if they like, I cannot help concluding that it is the
+outgrowth of natural causes operating in the sense of larger political
+units, giving to the Nations getting so constituted, prestige, power,
+grandeur, favouring public order and, in many instances, the development
+of free institutions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+BRITISH IMPERIALISM.
+
+
+Let me now consider the wonderful development of what I have called
+Monarchical Democratic or free Imperialism. It has so far been
+exclusively of British growth. It is the typical form of Imperialism
+which has been honoured with the most violent, the most unjust,
+denunciations of our "Nationalists".
+
+How did it deserve such an hysterical reprobation? Such is the question
+to which I shall now endeavour to give a decisive negative answer.
+
+I have previously once said that British Imperialism, like American
+Imperialism, has Political Liberty as its foundation stone. I think this
+can easily be proven.
+
+Any close observer of political events, will agree with me, I am
+confident, that Imperialism is also "OFFENSIVE" and "DEFENSIVE" in its
+expansion. The meaning of these two terms is clear.
+
+For the last fifty years, "OFFENSIVE" IMPERIALISM has been the GERMAN
+DESPOTIC IMPERIALISM. The present war--its criminal work--is the
+convincing evidence in support of the charge.
+
+I have, I believe, proved to the satisfaction of every fair minded man,
+that during the same last fifty years England's constant efforts have
+been to maintain peace. Consequently, I am authorized to draw the
+conclusion that British Imperialism was not intended to be, and has not
+been "OFFENSIVE".
+
+The Imperialist effort OFFENSIVELY, AGGRESSIVELY and VIOLENTLY tending
+to the continuous and unmeasured expansion of a Sovereign Power, with
+the objective of universal domination by all possible means, however
+unjust, immoral and savage they may be, is a most guilty effort
+deserving the severest condemnation. Such is the German autocratic
+Imperialism.
+
+On the contrary, the DEFENSIVE Imperialist effort, having for its only
+object the protection of an Empire, the maintenance of her standing in
+the society of nations, and of peace so essential to the general
+prosperity of the world, is meritorious, beneficient and laudable. Such
+has been the British Monarchical democratic Imperialism.
+
+It is from this elevated standpoint that I will consider the
+negotiations which, for the last few years, have taken place between the
+Metropolis and her autonomous Colonies, respecting Imperial defence.
+While admitting the right of all the free citizens of Canada to
+appreciate them, and entertaining a real respect for the sincerity of
+opinions which I cannot conscientiously share, I cannot help considering
+that many amongst us have fallen into a serious error in judging the
+nature of these negotiations.
+
+Is it truly, as has been asserted, in obedience to a powerful wave of
+"OFFENSIVE IMPERIALISM" that Great Britain has of late convened
+representatives of her free Colonies to meet, in London, to confer about
+the best means to adopt for the general security of the whole British
+Empire?
+
+Is it, as also asserted, with the unworthy design to entrap the Colonies
+that their self-appointed delegates have been called in secret conclaves
+where the political leaders of England would, by unfair and foul means,
+prevail upon them to agree to unjust sacrifices on the part of the
+peoples they represented?
+
+I am absolutely unable to share such erroneous views. I must admit with
+all candor that I have not yet been brought to the conclusion that
+British Statesmen are all contaminated with "Machiavellism". A free
+country like the United Kingdom is not a land where such deplorable
+principles are likely to blossom.
+
+What are then the extraordinary events which have recently taken place
+to justify the assertion of the "Nationalist" leader that, in the course
+of the last few years, a complete REVOLUTION has been wrought in the
+relations of the autonomous Colonies with their Metropolis? Of such a
+Revolution, cunningly promoted to bring the colonies against their will
+to participate in the Imperial wars--_les guerres de l'empire_--I do not
+perceive the smallest shadow of traces.
+
+As everybody else, living with their eyes not closed to the light of
+day, I clearly saw, principally during the last twenty years, that
+important developments were taking place under the sun; that European
+equilibrium upon the maintenance of which universal peace so much
+depended, was rapidly breaking asunder; that the German Empire was more
+and more unmasking her guilty ambition to dominate an enslaved universe;
+that, to reach that goal, she was organizing an army formidable by its
+millions of warriors, their superior training, their ironed discipline
+and their unrivalled armament. I knew that the sadly famous Kaiser
+Wilhelm II. was determined, at all cost, to increase the power of his
+Empire by the addition of a military fleet in such proportions as to be
+able, in a successful naval battle, to conquer the supremacy of the
+seas.
+
+Under such circumstances, was it to be supposed that the Statesmen
+responsible for the government of Great Britain would be so careless and
+so blind as not to see the dark spots crowding on the horizon!
+
+The problem of Imperial defence was then once more raised, not by a mere
+caprice of vain glory on the part of England, but by the inevitable
+outcome of the initiative of would-be opponents, if not actually
+declared enemies. The overseas colonies being more and more likely to be
+attacked, in a general conflict, was it surprising that the British
+Government was induced to confer with them for their common defence
+under the new conditions which were surely not of their own
+metropolitan or colonial creation.
+
+All the representatives of Great Britain, of Canada, Australia, South
+Africa, New Zealand, at the London conferences, took part in those
+solemn deliberations with the full sense of their responsibility. None
+of them was so mistaken as to consider the question, of paramount
+importance, of the DEFENSIVE organization of the Empire, as futile,
+merely to be used by the astuteness of some and the guilty complicity of
+others, joining together to sacrifice the future of their common
+country. The odious imputation, the shameless charge, were equally
+unjust and calumnious for the British ministers and the colonial public
+men who, in their turn, went to London to deliberate on subjects so
+vitally interesting all the component parts of the Empire.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE SITUATIONS OF 1865 AND 1900-14 COMPARED.
+
+
+Our "Nationalist" opponents of all colonial participation in the
+Imperial wars, affirm that Canada should have abided with the convention
+of 1865. Are they not aware that, since that year, a great deal of water
+has run along the rivers; that the world, although perhaps not wiser,
+has at least grown half a century older; that so many ancient conditions
+have radically changed; that nations, like individuals, to be
+progressive, cannot go on marking time on the same small hardened spot?
+
+Any man sincerely desirous to form for himself an enlightened opinion on
+the question of Imperial defence, must first admit that two national and
+general situations, totally different, create widely different duties.
+
+Let us compare for a moment, 1865 and 1900-14--_yesterday and
+to-day_--as the "Nationalist" leader says.
+
+Fifty years ago, the German Empire was non-existent. Nothing pointed to
+the early birth of this terrible child destined to grow so rapidly to
+such colossal proportions.
+
+The French Empire was the leading continental Power; Great Britain, then
+as now, the leading naval Power, both military and mercantile.
+
+Those two nations, without a formal alliance, had been united ever since
+the days when Lord Palmerston favoured the advent of Napoleon III.
+
+The Union of England and France was doing much to maintain the peace of
+the world.
+
+The United States were just emerging from the trials of their great
+Civil War. They had to solve the very difficult problem of their
+national reconstruction. Their population did not exceed thirty-five
+millions.
+
+How different was the situation of 1900-14!
+
+The German Empire had become formidable with her population of
+68,000,000, her soldiers numbering more than 7,000,000, with 1,000,000
+of men permanently under arms, ever ready for an offensive campaign,
+with her fleet much enlarged yearly at the cost of enormous financial
+sacrifices; allied to Austria-Hungary, with her population of
+50,000,000, to Italy, with her 36,000,000--then being one of the Triple
+Alliance--supported by Turkey and Bulgaria,--in all a combined strength
+of 150,000,000 bodies and souls; with the Germans exalted to the utmost
+by persistent appeals to their feelings and to their ambitious dreams.
+
+The American Republic grown to the rank of a first class Power, with a
+population of 100,000,000 and a magnificent military fleet.
+
+Was it even sensible to pretend that such altered worldly conditions did
+not make the revision of the understanding arrived at in 1865 an
+imperious necessity.
+
+They are living in an imaginary world those of us who assert that Canada
+could remain a British Colony under a permanent agreement--never to be
+amended--by which the Mother Country would be bound to defend her, at
+all costs and all hazards, whenever and by whomsoever attacked, Canada
+in the meantime refusing, whatever the perils of England might be, to
+spend a dollar and to send one man for her defence. There could be but
+one issue to the consideration of such propositions: the dissolution of
+the British Empire. I regret to say that Mr. Bourassa has audaciously
+declared that such has been the objective of his oppositionist campaign
+to the Canadian participation in Imperial wars.
+
+If Canada, through its constitutional organ, the Ottawa Parliament, had
+signified to England, in 1914, that she would not take the least part in
+the war imposed upon her by Germany, nor do anything to help her Allies,
+France and Belgium, could she, without blushing with shame, have claimed
+the protection of the British flag, if her territory had been attacked.
+
+Would not England have been fully justified in taking the initiative to
+break the bond which could henceforth but be disastrous to her, our
+shameless attitude towards her, at the hour of her peril, being most
+favourable to her mortal enemy.
+
+Have I not every sound reason to conclude that Canadian participation in
+the present war was in no way whatever the outcome of an Imperialist
+attempt to drag her, against her will, in the conflict into which she so
+nobly hastened to enter with the determination to fight to the last, and
+to deserve her fair share of the glory which will be but one of the
+rewards that will accrue to all those who will have united together to
+save Liberty and Civilization from the German barbarous onslaught.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+BRITISH IMPERIALISM NATURALLY PACIFIST.
+
+
+According to its "Nationalist" opponents, British Imperialism has always
+been of a conquering nature, like that of the Roman type and those of
+ancient history.
+
+This opinion is formally contradicted by a long succession of undeniable
+historical facts. Undoubtedly the splendid structure of the British
+Empire was not erected without armed support. The creation, without an
+army organization, of a Sovereign State comprising a fourth of the
+Globe, which component parts, themselves of colossal proportions,
+situated in all the continents, separated by the immensity of the seas,
+would have been more than marvellous.
+
+I will not pretend that always and everywhere the expansion of British
+Sovereignty has taken place according to the dictates of strict justice.
+Still I do not hesitate to say that, on the whole, it has developed
+under conditions which were never the outcome of a mere conquering
+ambition.
+
+With much reason, English citizens are proud of the fact that their
+Empire is the result of a NATURAL GROWTH. When the call to arms had to
+be made, it was oftener for DEFENSIVE WARS.
+
+The British Empire, outside the United Kingdom, comprise, for the most
+important part, Canada, Australia, the South African Dominion, and
+India. It is easy to explain, in a few lines, under what general
+circumstances those immense regions were brought under the British flag.
+I shall, of course, begin this short historical review by the
+acquisition of Canada by England.
+
+The great event of the discovery of the New World, at the end of the
+fifteenth century, tempted the western European nations to acquire vast
+colonies in the new continent. Spain, France, Portugal, Holland, were
+the first in the field. If the craving for large colonies in the new
+Hemisphere was of Imperialist inspiration, England does not appear to
+have been one of the first Powers infested with the disease so dreaded
+by our "Nationalists". She was rather late to catch it. Hollanders
+settled in New York before the British.
+
+As all ought to know, Spain took hold of the whole of Southern America.
+France displayed her flag on the larger part of Northern America,
+commanding the St. Lawrence and Mississippi Rivers, and the Great Lakes.
+Those immense regions, extending from the cold north to flowery
+Louisiana, were called NEW FRANCE. Later on, that part of North America
+bordering on the Atlantic, from Maine to Virginia, became British, and
+was subdivided into thirteen provinces, or separate colonies. For such a
+dominating Imperialist, as some pretend she has ever been, it must be
+admitted that England was rather in a modest frame of mind with regard
+to her colonial enterprises. The British Government itself was slow in
+moving towards the Imperialist goal which was stirring up Spain and
+France to a much greater activity. The first British emigrants were
+Puritans looking for that religious liberty, under a new shining sun,
+which was denied to them by their native land in those days when
+fanaticism was unfortunately too much triumphant in many countries.
+
+As it was inevitable, the European Colonies in America, all satellites
+of their metropolis, fell victims to the political rivalries of the
+nations who settled them. Not satisfied with fighting in Europe, those
+Powers also decided to gratify the New World with a specimen of what
+they could do on the battlefields. The Seven Years War did not originate
+in America, as it was the outcome of secular European international
+difficulties.
+
+If the European nations, in taking possession of America, were making a
+conquest, it was that of the white race over the yellow one of the New
+World. Spain and France, in raising their flags over four-fifths of the
+American continent, were surely strengthening Imperialism. Will our
+"Nationalists" accuse them of having unduly saved the New World from the
+secular Indian barbarism?
+
+More especially, Spanish Imperialism in America was most despotic. By a
+very false political conception, Spain undertook a great settlement work
+in America with the sole object of bleeding her colonies to her only
+profit. It failed disastrously as it deserved to. It is because she
+persevered in her fatal error that, in 1898, she was forced out of Cuba.
+The last stone of her immense colonial edifice was cast away.
+
+England shared Spain's error, but much less heavily. Like Spain, she
+reaped what she had sowed. The thirteen British American colonies
+revolted and conquered their Independence. Alone French Canada remained
+loyal to England.
+
+If the French Canadians had sided with the British Colonies to the South
+in the contest for their Independence, the Canada of those days would
+certainly have been included in the American Republic when England was
+forced, by the fate of war, to acknowledge the new Sovereign nation. Her
+offspring then violently broke away from the parental home, but has
+recently hastened to her defence, at the hour of danger, only
+remembering the first happy years of her childhood.
+
+Following the loyal advice of their spiritual leaders, and of their most
+trusted civil chieftains, the French Canadians remained true to England,
+refusing to desert her, thus maintaining her Sovereign rights over the
+Northern half of the Continent destined, a century later, to develop
+into the present Dominion, enjoying the free institutions of the Mother
+Country.
+
+As previously stated, the American Revolution brought for ever to an end
+British absolutism in the new continent. Henceforth, liberty and
+autonomy were to be the two foundation stones of a new colonial Policy
+which, far from disrupting the Empire as the autocratic one had done,
+was to cement its union so strongly as to make possible the gigantic
+military effort she has displayed for more than the last four years.
+
+The Treaty of Paris brought the Seven Years War to a close. Once more
+the peace of the world was temporarily restored. By the Treaty of Paris,
+Canada was ceded to England, our "Nationalists" say. If so, how can they
+pretend that the extension of British Sovereignty over the regions which
+have become the great autonomous Dominion of Canada was an undue
+manifestation of British conquering Imperialism?
+
+An intelligent and impartial student of the early settlements of the two
+continents of America can only draw the conclusion that the New World
+has not been the theatre of the operations of British Imperialism. Its
+first real attempt was tried--with much laudable success--in 1867, by
+the federal union of the Canadian provinces, decreed by the Sovereign
+legislative power of the Parliament of Great Britain, at our own request
+and in accordance with our own freely expressed wishes.
+
+Australia is the second autonomous colony of England in extent and
+importance. It comprises nearly all the territory of the Oceanic
+continent, so called from the geographical position, in the Pacific
+Ocean, of the Islands forming it. New Zealand is the second group of
+these Islands. It is another autonomous British colony, called, since
+1907 "THE DOMINION OF NEW ZEALAND".
+
+Those two Dominions have a combined territorial area of more than
+3,000,000 square miles--almost as large as the whole of Europe--with a
+population of six millions rapidly increasing. Their two largest cities,
+Sydney and Melbourne, each having a population of 700,000, are great
+commercial centres.
+
+If British Imperialism has had anything to do with the bringing of
+Australia and New Zealand under British Sovereignty, it must be admitted
+by all fair minded men that it has worked its way in the most pacific
+manner. Deservedly renowned British explorers--Cook, Vancouver, and
+others--discovered and took possession of the Oceanic continent in the
+name of their Sovereign. Welcomed by the aboriginal tribes, they raised
+the British flag over the fair land of such a promising future in the
+latter end of the eighteenth century--Cook in 1770. It has ever since
+been graciously waving, by the sweet breeze of the Pacific, over one of
+the happiest peoples on earth, enjoying the blessings of interior peace
+and all the advantages of the political liberties conferred upon these
+great colonies, more than half a century ago. As a matter of fact,
+England has organized her Australasian possessions into free autonomous
+colonies at the very dawn of their political life, dating from the
+middle of the last century, when they began that splendid progressive
+advance developing more and more every year.
+
+Is it not evident, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that the settlement of
+the Australasian colonies by England, so satisfactory and so promising,
+has not been brought about by the illegitimate ambition of an unmeasured
+Sovereign aggrandizement by a guilty sort of Imperialism.
+
+The establishment of British Sovereignty in the Indian country, immense
+in extent, wealth and population, is one of the greatest events of the
+historical development of the British Empire.
+
+I shall not say that all that took place in the government of India
+deserves a blind approval. That British authority was much too long left
+in the control of a company was a misfortune. Under such a regime abuses
+were sure to develop and increase. They did and were energetically
+denounced--more especially on that day when Sheridan rose to such an
+eloquence, in the House of Lords, that a motion of adjournment had to be
+carried, to allow the peers to recover the free control of their minds
+before rendering judgment in the case brought before their tribunal,
+impeaching Warren Hastings.
+
+The rule of the Indian Company was abolished, in 1858, by _The
+Government of India Act_.
+
+In 1876, the illustrious Disraeli--Lord Beaconsfield--took the
+statesmanlike decision of adding a new prestige to the British Crown and
+to the Sovereign wearing it. He had Parliament to adopt the _Royal
+Titles Act_, by which Her Majesty Queen Victoria was proclaimed EMPRESS
+OF INDIA.
+
+Such, in due course, and without any trouble, was accomplished that
+great political evolution which substituted, for populations numbering
+more than three hundred millions of human beings, an Imperial system in
+place of the deplorable government by a company. For the last sixty
+years, the new regime has given peace, order and prosperity to India.
+
+A French publicist wrote as follows:--
+
+ After troubles of nine centuries duration, India has recovered
+ peace under the tutelage of England, the best colonizer of the
+ peoples of Europe. England has rendered an evident service to
+ India. She has freed her from the intestine wars tearing her
+ since her historical origin; she has given her a police and an
+ administrative system.
+
+Nations, like individuals, are not perfect. To judge equitably,
+impartially, the government by a Metropolis of the regions under her
+Sovereignty, one must not only be scandalized at her failings, but must
+take the broader view of her whole history in appreciating its final
+good and commendable results. So judging the government of India by
+England, every impartial mind must conclude that, on the whole--and more
+especially for the last sixty years--it has been beneficient. It
+promises to be still more so, as a consequence of the admirable share
+India is taking in the present war.
+
+Egypt and the Soudan have a territorial area of 1,335,000 square miles,
+with a population of 15,000,000. I pride to be one of those who
+congratulate Great Britain to have freed the ancient and glorious
+Egyptian country from Turkish tyranny. A proclamation, dated the 18th
+of December, 1914, has finally placed Egypt under England's protectorate
+with the agreement of France.
+
+In the chapters respecting the Soudanese and South African wars, I have
+shown how satisfactory has been the rule of Great Britain in those
+African countries.
+
+It being ever true that the earth was Providentially created for men to
+live in the legitimate enjoyment of the blessings of peace multiplied by
+the fruits of their labours, the Egyptians and the Soudaneses have every
+reason to congratulate themselves for their liberation from the Turkish
+barbarous yoke, and for the protection they receive from one of the most
+civilizing nations.
+
+I sincerely believe that this short review of the respective situation
+of five of the principal component parts of the British Empire, is
+sufficient to form the honest conviction that if England has practised
+Imperialism, she has done so for the real benefit of the peoples living
+under the aegis of her Sovereignty, the most favourable to colonial
+political liberty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+BRITISH IMPERIALISM AND POLITICAL LIBERTY.
+
+
+British history, for the last century and more, proves that Imperialism
+is not naturally incompatible with Political Liberty, nor with the
+respect due the national aspirations of divers ethnical groups. The
+unity and the consolidation of the Empire made their greatest strides
+since the close of the war which resulted in the independence of the
+neighbouring Republic. As previously explained, they were the outcome of
+the very wise and statesmanlike change of colonial policy then adopted
+by England. The days were to come when they would be put to the severest
+test and would prove more than equal to its greatest strain. Those are
+the days which the British Empire is living through, with brilliancy and
+heroism, amidst the dazzling lightning and the roaring thunder of an
+unprecedented military conflict, with every prospect of surviving its
+sufferings and sacrifices with a still stronger political structure.
+
+The same evolution by which Great Britain was to reach the summit of
+Political Liberty by the final triumph of the new constitutional
+principle of ministerial responsibility, was spreading to her far
+overseas Colonies. Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa,
+Newfoundland were successively granted constitutional charters based on
+the same principles as those of the institutions of the United Kingdom.
+
+As I have already said, Imperialism becomes dangerous and deserves the
+severest condemnation, only where and when it is the instrument of
+autocratic absolutism. It causes me no alarm whatever when it is
+developed under free institutions, guaranteed and protected by
+ministerial responsibility.
+
+Whatever said to the contrary, by prejudiced and designing writers,
+imbued with the extravagant notions of a narrow and fanatical
+"Nationalism", Canada, the most important of the autonomous Colonies of
+the British Empire, is freer than ever. Like all the other nations, she
+suffers from disastrous events shaking the whole worldly edifice, but
+she is none the less the absolute mistress of the initiative of whatever
+efforts she considers her duty to make under those trying circumstances.
+England has imposed nothing upon Canada, has asked nothing from Canada,
+since the beginning of the war. She has, of course, accepted, with much
+pleasure and gratitude, the help we have freely offered and given her.
+Let our "Nationalists", in their inspired unfairness, say, if they like,
+that Canada, like all the Allies defensively fighting, was forced in the
+conflict by the imperious necessity of the situation created by those
+who expected to reach the goal of their ambition. But they have no
+right to charge Great Britain to have coerced the Dominion, against her
+will, to join in the struggle which the British Government had done
+their utmost to prevent.
+
+If it was not giving to this work too wide a range, I would like to
+undertake an historical sketch of all the good the British
+constitutional system has produced in the United Kingdom and in the
+Colonies. I shall quote only a few of the most important examples.
+
+In my opinion, the one development in England's history, since the close
+of the eighteenth century, most interesting to the French Canadians, is
+certainly that which resulted in the emancipation of the Roman Catholics
+of the United Kingdom.
+
+To persuade my French Canadian countrymen of the good to be wrought by
+the patriotic use of the British institutions, I explained to them that
+at the beginning of the last century, the Roman Catholics of the United
+Kingdom enjoyed no political rights. They were neither electors, nor
+eligible to the House of Commons. They asked that justice be done to
+them. True statesmen, high and fair minded, admitted the justice of
+their claims and supported them. The ensuing political contest lasted
+more than twenty years.
+
+To obtain the proposed change in the long standing laws of the realm
+from an exclusively Protestant electorate, was indeed a great task to
+accomplish. The public men supporting the Roman Catholics' claims were
+courageous and eloquent. They carried the day. Have not the true friends
+of political freedom every reason to congratulate themselves that a
+great measure of justice granting political rights to Roman Catholics
+was voted by an Electorate and a Parliament exclusively Protestant.
+
+King George IV, through fear that his Royal prerogative might be
+impaired by the change, was hostile to it. He was persuaded to agree to
+the measure by Sir Robert Peel, the life long opponent of Roman Catholic
+emancipation. Whatever were the religious convictions and feelings of
+Sir Robert Peel, he was a statesman of a high class. As all the leading
+public men of England, he had a broad conception of the duties of the
+chief adviser of the Crown, and of the true spirit of the British
+constitution. The voice of the nation having spoken in no uncertain
+sounds, the national will must be followed. He plainly said so to His
+Majesty who yielded. Then, in a most admirable speech, he--Sir Robert
+Peel--moved himself the passing of the bill granting justice to the
+Roman Catholics, carried it through the two Houses of Parliament and had
+it sanctioned by the King.
+
+A great act of national justice always receives its due reward. The
+Roman Catholics have been faithful and loyal subjects. George IV and his
+successors have lived to see many evident proofs of their loyal
+devotion, more especially since the opening of the present war.
+
+The final success of the free discussion of the question of granting to
+the Roman Catholics of the United Kingdom all the rights enjoyed by the
+British subjects of all the other religious denominations, carried in
+spite of difficulties not easily overcome, is certainly one of the
+greatest and most honorable triumphs that Political Liberty has ever
+obtained. I was often deeply moved at reading the historic account of
+that most interesting debate in Parliament, on the public platform and
+in the press. More and more, the conviction was firmly impressed on my
+mind and soul that a great people accomplishing a grand act of justice
+gives a most salutary example to posterity deserving the admiration and
+gratitude of all generations to come.
+
+I was only appreciating with justice and fairness the part played by
+England in Canada, in telling my French Canadian countrymen that they
+enjoyed the political rights of British subjects many years before the
+same privileges and justice was granted to the Roman Catholics of the
+United Kingdom. That much in answer to the charge of our fanatical
+extremists that England and her Government always wanted to oppress the
+French Canadians on account of their religious faith.
+
+Without going back to the eventful days of _Magna Charta_ and of the
+_Bill of Rights_, both embodying the fundamental constitutional
+principles which were finally bound to overcome the last pretentions of
+absolutism of yore, I considered a short review, in broad lines, of the
+work performed by the British Electorate and the Imperial Parliament,
+during the last century, would help in destroying in the minds of my
+French readers the prejudices forced upon them by "Nationalist" writers.
+That great work is principally illustrated by eight important measures
+of general interest.
+
+I have just mentioned that most honourable one emancipating the Roman
+Catholics of Great Britain.
+
+Shortly after, it was followed by that abolishing the Corn Laws after a
+protracted and very interesting discussion. That important measure was
+also carried on the proposition of the same Sir Robert Peel, for a long
+time its determined opponent. The manufacturing population, increasing
+so rapidly, would soon have been starved by the continuously augmenting
+cost of bread. Sir Robert Peel foresaw the fearful consequences sure to
+ensue, if no relief was granted to millions threatened with hunger. He
+was, as I have already said, too much of a statesman to hesitate in
+doing his duty. He gave up his own opinion and advised his Sovereign to
+do away with the Corn Laws, the repeal of which he had Parliament to
+vote.
+
+With the advent of Queen Victoria, ministerial responsibility for all
+the acts of the Sovereign became definitely the fundamental principle of
+the British constitution.
+
+Complete ministerial responsibility, once fully recognized in Great
+Britain, was without delay granted to all the British colonies having
+representative institutions.
+
+The abolition of slavery all over the British Empire is, every one must
+admit, a political development of first magnitude, one doing the
+greatest possible honour to the great nation having first taken the
+glorious initiative of granting to the black race the justice ordered by
+Christianity. It is undoubtedly a very valuable reform to the credit of
+England.
+
+The Imperial Parliament realized that the constitutional regime of the
+United Kingdom could not bear all the fruits to be expected from it with
+an electorate restricted to privileged classes. To support such a
+splendid edifice, admirable in structure and strength, a larger basic
+foundation, more solid, laid deep in the national soil, was required.
+After a long political struggle, freedom was once more triumphant in the
+Motherland. The first great Reform Bill of 1832 was the starting point
+of successive legislative enactments, enlarging the franchise, calling
+to the exercise of political rights various classes of the people,
+bringing up the British electorate to the glorious standard of being one
+of the freest, the most enlightened, and most independent in the world.
+The crowning measure of this extensive political reform has been the
+Bill of 1917 providing for the addition of some 8,000,000 voters to the
+roll, including about 6,000,000 women.
+
+The rotten boroughs of old were abolished and replaced by a much better
+redistribution of electoral divisions.
+
+Dating from 1867, great autonomous federal colonies, with full Sovereign
+rights in the administration of all their interior affairs, have been
+created by Imperial charters. The Canadian, Australian, South African,
+and New Zealand Dominions, of a total territorial area exceeding
+7,000,000 square miles, with a total population of over 25,000,000,
+nearly 20,000,000 of which belong to the white race, have commenced
+their new political career with all the confidence and the hopes
+inspired by their free institutions.
+
+Finally, the Imperial Parliament passed a law granting Home Rule to
+Ireland. Unfortunately, the war, so disastrous in many ways, prevented
+the immediate carrying out of the will of Parliament, certainly
+representative of that of the nation. But this vexed question must at
+last be settled once for all. It is to be hoped that the day is not far
+distant when it will be removed from the political arena by a solution
+satisfactory to Ireland, to England and to the whole Empire.
+
+Besides all those very important measures of political reform, the
+British Parliament has passed many laws of urgent social improvement.
+
+The crowning act of the Imperial Parliament has been its determined
+attitude for the maintenance of peace through a long series of years.
+
+If all the above enumeration of measures of widespread influence for the
+general good is to be called Imperialism, I say without hesitation that
+it is an Imperialism worth favouring. The world will never have too much
+of it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+IMPERIAL FEDERATION AND "BOURASSISM".
+
+
+The leader of our "Nationalists," always frightened, apparently at
+least, with the supposed dangers of further Imperialist encroachments
+detrimental to the best interests of the British autonomous Colonies,
+seems alarmed at the prospects to follow the close of the hostilities.
+Consequently, it has been a part of his campaign to bring the French
+Canadians to share his fears for their future.
+
+Not in the least worried by such apprehensions, it was also my duty to
+try and persuade my French Canadian compatriots not to be unduly
+disturbed by the sayings of a publicist magnifying the errors of his
+excited imagination.
+
+That there will be after-the-war problems to consider, is most likely.
+What will they be? It is very difficult to foresee just now with
+sufficient definiteness. So much will depend upon the general conditions
+of the restoration of peace. However, broad lines have, for the last
+four years, been outlined with fair clearness permitting a general view
+of what is likely to happen.
+
+Let us for a moment examine the traces of the initial phases of the
+constitutional developments likely to be the outcome of the joint
+effort of the whole Empire to win the war.
+
+The second chapter of the Report of the War Cabinet for the year
+1917--already quoted somewhat extensively--deals with the new aspect of
+Imperial Affairs more especially the consequence of the war. The opening
+paragraph partly reads as follows:--
+
+ The outstanding event of the year in the sphere of Imperial
+ Affairs has been the inauguration of the Imperial War Cabinet.
+ This has been the direct outcome of the manner in which all
+ parts of the Empire had thrown themselves into the war during
+ the preceding years. Impalpable as was the bond which bound this
+ great group of peoples together, there was never any doubt about
+ their loyalty to the Commonwealth to which they belonged and to
+ the cause to which it was committed by the declaration of war.
+ Without counting the cost to themselves, they offered their men
+ and their treasure in defence of freedom and public right. From
+ the largest and most prosperous Dominion to the smallest island
+ the individual and national effort has been one of continuous
+ and unreserved generosity.
+
+After mentioning that during 1917 "great progress has been made in the
+organisation both of the man-power and other resources of the Empire for
+the prosecution of the war," and that "the British Army is now a truly
+Imperial Army, containing units from almost every part of the Empire,"
+the Report says:--
+
+ The real development, however, of 1917 has been in the political
+ sphere, and it has been the result of the intense activity of
+ all parts of the Empire in prosecuting the war since August,
+ 1914.
+
+ It had been felt for some time that, in view of the
+ ever-increasing part played by the Dominions in the war, it was
+ necessary that their Governments should not only be informed as
+ fully as was possible of the situation, but that, as far as was
+ practicable, they should participate, on a basis of complete
+ equality, in the deliberations which determined the main
+ outlines of Imperial policy.
+
+Accordingly, a Special War Conference was convened to meet in London,
+where for practical convenience it was divided into two parts: one,
+"known as the Imperial War Cabinet, which consisted of the Oversea
+Representatives and the members of the British War Cabinet sitting
+together as an Imperial War Cabinet for deliberation about the conduct
+of the war and for the discussion of the larger issues of Imperial
+policy connected with the war." The other "was the Imperial War
+Conference, presided over by the Secretary of State for the Colonies,
+which consisted of the Oversea Representatives and a number of other
+ministers, which discussed non-war problems connected with the war but
+of lesser importance."
+
+On the 17th May, 1917, the British Prime Minister, giving "to the House
+of Commons a short appreciation of the work of the Imperial War
+Cabinet," said in part:--
+
+ I ought to add that the institution in its present form is
+ extremely elastic. It grew, not by design, but out of the
+ necessities of the war. The essence of it is that the
+ responsible heads of the Governments of the Empire, with those
+ Ministers who are specially entrusted with the conduct of
+ Imperial Policy should meet together at regular intervals to
+ confer about foreign policy and matters connected therewith, and
+ come to decisions in regard to them which, subject to the
+ control of their own Parliaments, they will then generally
+ execute. By this means they will be able to obtain full
+ information about all aspects of Imperial affairs, and to
+ determine by consultation together the policy of the Empire in
+ its most vital aspects, without infringing in any degree the
+ autonomy which its parts at present enjoy. To what
+ constitutional developments this may lead we did not attempt to
+ settle. The whole question of perfecting the mechanism of
+ "continuous consultation" about Imperial and foreign affairs
+ between the "autonomous nations of an Imperial Commonwealth"
+ will be reserved for the consideration of that special
+ Conference which will be summoned as soon as possible after the
+ war to readjust the constitutional relations of the Empire. We
+ felt, however, that the experiment of consulting an Imperial
+ Cabinet in which India was represented had been so fruitful in
+ better understanding and in unity of purpose and action that it
+ ought to be perpetuated, and we believe that this proposal will
+ commend itself to the judgment of all the nations of the Empire.
+
+The preceding are words of political wisdom, worthy of the best form of
+British statesmanship. Were they the dawn of a new era, dissipating the
+clouds accumulated by the trials of a long period of military conflict,
+and showing in a future, more or less distant, the rising constitutional
+fabric of a still greater Imperial Commonwealth, not so much in size,
+than in unity, in freedom and strength? Time will tell. But can we not
+at once note with confidence that the fundamental principle upheld by
+all the leading British public men is that, whatever constitutional
+developments may be in store for us all, they will not be allowed to
+infringe "in any degree the autonomy" presently enjoyed by the Oversea
+Dominions.
+
+The Imperial War Conference held in London, last year, passed the
+following very important "Resolution" dealing with the future
+constitutional organisation of the Empire:--
+
+ "The Imperial War Conference are of opinion that the
+ readjustment of the constitutional relations of the component
+ parts of the Empire is too important and intricate a subject to
+ be dealt with during the war, and that it should form the
+ subject of a special Imperial Conference to be summoned as soon
+ as possible after the cessation of hostilities.
+
+ "They deem it their duty; however, to place on record their view
+ that any such readjustment, while thoroughly preserving all
+ existing powers of self-government and complete control of
+ domestic affairs, should be based on a full recognition of the
+ Dominions as autonomous nations of an Imperial Commonwealth, and
+ of India as an important portion of the same, should recognise
+ the right of the Dominions and India to an adequate voice in
+ foreign policy and in foreign relations, and should provide
+ effective arrangements for continuous consultation in all
+ important matters of common Imperial concern and for such
+ necessary concerted action, founded on consultation, as the
+ several Governments may determine."
+
+We can await without the slightest alarm the holding of the proposed
+"_special Imperial Conference to be summoned as soon as possible after
+the cessation of the hostilities_." The fundamental principles upon
+which "_the readjustment_," if any one is made, "_of the constitutional
+relations of the component parts of the Empire_" are to rest, are well
+defined in the above "Resolution":--_through preservation of "all
+existing powers of self-government and complete control of domestic
+affairs_;--_full recognition of the Dominions as autonomous nations of
+an Imperial Commonwealth, and of India as an important portion of the
+same_";--the admission of "_the right of the Dominions and India to an
+adequate voice in foreign policy and in foreign relations_."
+
+Upon that large and strong basis, I, for one, am ready to wait with
+patience and confidence the result of the deliberations of the future
+special Imperial Conference. With regard to the proposed Conference, I
+cannot see any reason for anyone to indulge in the "Nationalist"
+hysterical fears of an oppressive Imperialism devouring, as the old
+mythological god--Saturn--his own children.
+
+As I have said, the work of the special Imperial Conference will be
+rendered more or less easy by the conditions of the future peace. I
+pray, with all the fervour of my soul, that the war shall not end by a
+hasty compromise--as wished for by our blind, if not really disloyal,
+pacifists--by which the world would be doomed to another disaster far
+worse than the one it is straining every nerve to overcome, and that
+after years of the most costly warlike preparations. Such a peace would
+be the saddest possible conclusion of the present conflict, and much
+worse than the sacrifices yet to be borne by the prosecution of the war
+to a finish. We must all implore Providence to save Humanity from such a
+cataclysm.
+
+A special Imperial Conference meeting under such disheartening
+circumstances would indeed have a most difficult task to accomplish. It
+was evidently an act of wisdom on the part of the Imperial War
+Conference of last year to express the opinion that the special Imperial
+Conference should be summoned only after the cessation of hostilities.
+
+When peace shall have been restored with the only conditions which can
+be satisfactory to the Allies and to the world at large, a special
+Imperial Conference will be in order, having for its object to consider
+the readjustment of the constitutional relations of the component parts
+of the Empire, in conformity with the requirements of the new situation
+which will have grown out of the necessities of the war. However
+important the task, the tranquility of the world being, let us hope,
+assured for many long years, there will be no reason for the Conference
+to proceed hastily to any insufficiently matured conclusion. The
+representative public men who will meet in London from all over the
+Empire will not forget, we may rest confident, that the safest way to a
+good working readjustment will be, as it has always been in the past,
+that which will follow the straight line of natural growth. Dry cut
+resolutions, imprudently adopted, and pressed upon unwilling populations
+would have ninety-nine chances out of a hundred to be more injurious
+than profitable.
+
+Every sensible man must acknowledge that the war has in an extraordinary
+manner hastened the rapidity of the advance towards the turning point in
+the Constitutional organization of the British Empire. The day is near
+at hand when the problem will have to be faced with courage and
+broadness of mind. Very blind indeed, and far behind the times, is he
+who does not realize that TO BE, or NOT TO BE, for the Empire, is
+confined to two clear words: CONSOLIDATION or DISSOLUTION. The tide has
+either to ebb or flow, the wave to advance or recede. The edifice must
+be strengthened or left to decay. Like any living being, a political
+society, be it great or small, after its birth, more or less laborious,
+grows to a prosperous and healthy old age, or crumbles down prematurely.
+Very much depends, for either course, on the wisdom or extravagance of
+the way of passing through life. Unmeasured ambitions, wild
+expectations, are too often, alike for the individual and the nation,
+the surest road to a lamentable ruin. Wisdom, the outcome of sound moral
+principles, and wide experience, is, on the other hand, the safest
+guarantee of longevity, of bright old days full of contentment, honour,
+prestige and true grandeur.
+
+Grave will be the responsibility of those who will meet in solemn
+conclave to lay down the foundations of the future British Imperial
+Commonwealth. No less serious will be the responsibility of the
+populations, scattered over the five continents, who will be called upon
+to pronounce, freely and finally, upon the propositions which will be
+submitted to their approval or disavowal. Consequently undue haste would
+be more than ill-advised.
+
+For instance, the paramount question to be considered by the new
+Imperial Conference will most likely be that of the future military
+organization of the Empire. Is it not evident that this problem will be
+much more easily settled if the Allied nations succeed in carrying the
+point they have the most at heart:--The reduction of permanent
+armaments as the safest protection against any new outburst of savage
+militarism flooding the earth of God with human blood. If this _sine qua
+non_ condition is the top article of the future peace treaty, the great
+Powers having agreed, in honour bound, to maintain the world's
+tranquillity and order, will all be afforded the blessings of a long
+rest from the ruinous military expenditures too long imposed upon them
+by the mad run of Germany to conquer universal domination. The British
+Empire, as a whole, will, as much as any other nation, enjoy the full
+benefits of such a favourable situation. She will, like her Allies,
+return to the pursuits of peace, with millions of veteran soldiers who,
+for the next ten years at least, would, in large numbers, certainly join
+the Colours once more, if need be, to defend their country in a new just
+war. Then, under such circumstances, why should the peoples of the whole
+Empire be immediately called upon to incur more expenses for military
+purposes than absolutely necessary for the maintenance of interior
+order, and to meet any sudden and unforeseen emergency.
+
+The liquidation of the obligations necessarily accumulated during the
+war will be the first duty of all the Allied nations. The task will no
+doubt be very large, most onerous. Still I trust that it will not be
+beyond their resources of natural wealth, of capital and labour, of
+courageous savings.
+
+As the "Resolution" adopted by the Imperial War Conference says, "the
+readjustment of the constitutional relations of the component parts of
+the Empire is too important and intricate a subject to be dealt with
+during the war." When taken up after the war--even if just _as soon as
+possible_--it will be none the less IMPORTANT AND INTRICATE. Such a
+subject should not be dealt with without matured consideration and given
+a hasty solution. If the peace treaty satisfactorily settles the world's
+situation for a long future of general tranquillity which will certainly
+bless all the nations with many years of unprecedented prosperity,
+plenty of time will be afforded to deliberate wisely upon the paramount
+question of the building of a "new and greater Imperial Commonwealth."
+Our frenzied "Nationalists" can quiet their nerves. The imperialist wild
+bear will not be growling at the door. Because we are all likely to be
+called upon to consider how best to promote the unity and the future
+prosperity of the Empire, we will have no reason to fear that we shall
+be, from one day to the other, forcibly thrown into perilous adventures
+by the Machiavellic machinations of out and out Imperialist enthusiasts.
+
+I have already said that it is becoming more and more evident that TO
+BE, or NOT TO BE, the British Empire must either CONSOLIDATE or
+DISSOLVE. I must not be understood to mean that with the restoration of
+peace under the happy conditions all the Allies are fighting for, the
+Empire, as she will emerge from the tornado, could not, as a whole,
+resume, for more or less time, her prosperous existence of _ante_-war
+days. What will be best to do, it is too early to foresee. Then it is
+better to wait for the issue of the war, trusting that all the truly
+loyal British subjects will then join together to pronounce upon
+whatever questions of imperial concern will claim their urgent
+consideration.
+
+But there is a certainty that can be at once positively affirmed. All
+the peoples living and developing under the aegis of the British flag are
+determined that the British Empire is to be. Whenever a special Imperial
+Conference sits in London, all the representatives of the many component
+parts of the British Commonwealth will meet in the great Capital surely
+to deliberate over the most practical means TO CONSOLIDATE THE EMPIRE.
+We may all depend that no one will propose to destroy it.
+
+How best to consolidate the Empire, such will be the important question.
+To be sure, the future special Conference will not likely be wanting in
+propositions from many outside would-be constitutional framers. Schemes
+may be numerous, some worth considering, others useless if not
+mischievous. No reason to feel uneasy and to worry about them. We can
+confidently hope that British statesmanship will be equal to the new
+task it will be called upon to perform. Our Canadian public men will
+have much to gain by closer intercourse with their Imperial colleagues,
+and by judging great questions from a higher standpoint.
+
+Let there be no mistake about it: the true secret of the most effective
+consolidation of the Empire was discovered by the British statesmen the
+day when they realized that henceforth free institutions and the largest
+possible measure of colonial autonomy were the only sure means to
+solidify the structure of the British Commonwealth. Such is the opinion
+of the Imperial War Conference outlining in their previously quoted
+"Resolution" what must be the fundamental basis of any future
+"READJUSTMENT OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL RELATIONS OF THE COMPONENT PARTS OF
+THE EMPIRE."
+
+
+CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT OF INDIA.
+
+As a preliminary to the prospective readjustment of the political status
+of the Empire, it is worth noting the advance of India towards political
+autonomy. It was made manifest by the significant step of inviting India
+to the deliberations of the Imperial War Cabinet, and by the
+"Resolution" adopted by the Imperial War Conference that India must be
+fully represented at all future Imperial Conferences.
+
+Respecting India, the Report of the War Cabinet, for the year 1917,
+says:--
+
+ It was clear, however, that this recognition of the new status
+ of India in the Empire would necessarily be followed by
+ substantial progress towards internal self-government.
+ Accordingly, on August 20th, the following important declaration
+ of His Majesty's Government on this subject was made in the
+ House of Commons by the Secretary of State for India:--
+
+ "The policy of His Majesty's Government, with which the
+ Government of India are in complete accord, is that of the
+ increasing association of Indians in every branch of the
+ administration and the gradual development of self-governing
+ institutions with a view to the progressive realization of
+ responsible government in India as an integral part of the
+ British Empire. They have decided that substantial steps in this
+ direction should be taken as soon as possible, and that it is of
+ the highest importance, as a preliminary to considering what
+ these steps should be, that there should be a free and informal
+ exchange of opinion between those in authority at home and in
+ India. His Majesty's Government have accordingly decided, with
+ His Majesty's approval, that I should accept the Viceroy's
+ invitation to proceed to India to discuss these matters with the
+ Viceroy and the Government of India, to consider with the
+ Viceroy the views of local Governments, and to receive with him
+ the suggestions of representative bodies and others. I would add
+ that progress in this policy can only be achieved by successive
+ stages. The British Government and the Government of India on
+ whom the responsibility lies for the welfare and advancement of
+ the Indian peoples, must be the judges of the time and measure
+ of each advance, and they must be guided by the co-operation
+ received from those upon whom new opportunities of service will
+ thus be conferred and by the extent to which it is found that
+ confidence can be reposed in their sense of responsibility.
+ Ample opportunity will be afforded for public discussion of the
+ proposals, which will be submitted in due course to Parliament."
+
+ In accordance with this declaration, the Secretary of State left
+ for India in October, and has since been in consultation with
+ the Government of India and deputations representative of all
+ interests and parties in India in regard to the advances which
+ should be made in Indian constitutional development in the
+ immediate future. No reports as to the results of these
+ discussions had been made public by the end of the year.
+
+ Another important decision relating to India was that whereby
+ the Government abandoned the rule which confines the granting of
+ commissions in the Indian army to officers of British
+ extraction. A number of Indian officers, who have served with
+ distinction in the war, have already received commissions.
+
+Who, only twenty years ago, would have believed that the day was so near
+at hand when this Asiatic vast and populous country, called India, would
+be most earnestly considering, through numerous representatives, in
+consultation with the British Government, the proper steps to be taken
+"FOR THE GRADUAL DEVELOPMENT OF SELF-GOVERNING INSTITUTIONS WITH A VIEW
+TO THE PROGRESSIVE REALIZATION OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT IN INDIA AS AN
+INTEGRAL PART OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE." In every way, it is a most
+extraordinary political evolution. If it reaches the admirable
+conclusion aimed at--for which success every true friend of Political
+Liberty will fervently pray--it will have realized one of the greatest
+constitutional achievements of modern times.
+
+Behold just now how safely and wisely this Indian evolution is
+proceeding under the experienced direction of British statesmanship. It
+is "TO BE ACHIEVED BY SUCCESSIVE STAGES", declares the Secretary of
+State for India, speaking in the name of the whole British responsible
+Cabinet. Such have been accomplished all the constitutional developments
+which have wrought so much perfection for British free institutions.
+
+True progress, in every form, is never revolutionary. And why? For the
+very reason that instead of fighting for destruction by brute force, it
+aims at perfecting by regular advances in the right direction, by
+successive improvements which experience justifies, which reason,
+intelligence and wisdom approve, which political sense recommends, which
+sound moral principles authorize and sanction.
+
+A country favoured with the free British constitutional regime is not
+the land where bolshevikism of any grade or stamp, can flourish and bear
+fruits of desolation and shame.
+
+The wonderful Indian country, for so many centuries tortured by
+intestine troubles, at last rescued by England from that barbarous
+situation, given a reorganized administration able to maintain interior
+peace, favoured by British business experience and capital with material
+progress in many ways, specially in transportation facilities, may soon
+see--let us hope--the dawn of the glorious days of a large measure of
+political freedom and responsible government.
+
+Far away indeed from the perilous Imperialism abhorred by our much
+depressed "Nationalists" is India safely moving.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+THE FUTURE CONSTITUTIONAL RELATIONS OF THE EMPIRE.
+
+
+Though very difficult to say what they will be, I thought proper, for
+the better information of my French Canadian readers, to consider some
+of the suggestions which of late years have been repeatedly made.
+
+Mr. Bourassa, in his recent pamphlets, reviewing the situation from his
+wrong and prejudiced standpoint, has decidedly come out in favour of
+Canadian Independence. The least that can be said is that the time was
+very badly chosen to raise the question. To select the moment when the
+Motherland was engaged in a fight for life or death, to propose to run
+away from the assailed home where we had lived many happy years, was
+certainly not an inspiration of loyal devotion and gratitude. I am glad
+to say that the wild proposition met with no countenance on the part of
+our French Canadian compatriots.
+
+To the point raised in England, some years ago, that it was not to be
+supposed that the British Empire was destined to exist forever, one of
+the leading British statesmen of the day, then a member of the Cabinet,
+answered that, though it was likely to be true that the British
+Commonwealth would not be eternal, like many other great political
+societies of times gone by, it was surely not the particular duty of a
+British minister to do his best to hasten the day of the final downfall
+of the country he was sworn to maintain. The rejoinder was no doubt
+peremptory. It can very properly be used in answer to Mr. Bourassa's
+plea for the independence of Canada.
+
+However, the question having been so unwisely raised, to say the least,
+for the obvious purpose of disheartening the French Canadians from their
+present situation and raising in their minds extravagant hopes of a
+change for the better, I believed it advisable to tell them not to be
+carried away by dreams of a too far distant possible realization.
+
+In all frankness, I must say that I have never taken any stock in the
+suggestion made from time to time, for the last fifty years, in favour
+of Canadian Independence. It always seemed to me that our destinies were
+not moving along that way. In my opinion, which nothing has happened to
+alter, the steady growth of the consolidation of the Empire was yearly
+working against the assumption of the prospective independence of the
+Dominion.
+
+But even supposing that the course of events would change and put an end
+to British connection, could we pride ourselves with having at last,
+though in a very peaceful way, achieved our national independence? I am
+more and more strongly impressed by the paramount consideration that,
+nominally independent, Canada would be very little so in reality.
+Situated as she would be, she could not help being under the
+protectorate of the United States. I have always thought so. I think it
+more firmly than ever, when I see looming larger every day on the
+American political horizon the fact that the neighbouring Republic will
+come out of the present war with flying Colours, taking rank as one of
+the most powerful nations on earth.
+
+Be that as it may, there is every certainty that the question of
+Canadian Independence is not within the range of practical politics. Mr.
+Bourassa's proposition is doomed to the failure it deserves.
+
+Consequently, it is much better to try and foresee what the future
+political conditions of Canada are more likely to be after the close of
+the hostilities. And this must be done with the only purpose of wisely,
+and patriotically,--in the larger sense of the word--contributing our
+due share to the sound and solid framing of the changes, if any, which
+the best interests of the Empire, generally, and of all her component
+parts, in particular, may require.
+
+We have not, and I most earnestly hope and pray that we shall not have,
+to consider what new political conditions would be as the consequence of
+the defeat of the Allies, or even as necessitated by a peace treaty due
+to a compromise. We must only look ahead for the encouraging days to
+follow the victory won by the united efforts and heroism of the nations
+who have rallied to put an end to Prussian militarism.
+
+One certainty is daily becoming more evident. All loyal British subjects
+will applaud the triumphant close of the war with the desire to do their
+best to maintain and consolidate the Empire they will have saved from
+destruction at the cost of so much sacrifices of heroic lives and
+resources.
+
+
+NO TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION.
+
+The great objection raised by Mr. Bourassa against the participation of
+Canada in the wars of the Empire is that the Dominion is not represented
+in the Parliament to which the British ministers, advising the Sovereign
+on all matters of foreign relations, are responsible. He draws the
+conclusion that the Colonies are called upon to pay for the war
+expenditures of Great Britain in violation of the constitutional
+principle:--NO TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION. The principle is no
+doubt true. But it is altogether wrong to pretend that so far it has
+been violated to coerce the Dominion to participate in the wars which
+England has been obliged to wage. Our "Nationalists" would be right in
+their opposition if the Imperial Parliament had attempted to pass laws
+compelling the autonomous Colonies to contribute men and money to a
+conflict. Had they claimed the right to raise revenues in Canada by an
+Imperial statute, we would certainly have been entitled to affirm that
+not being represented in the British House of Commons, we could not be
+taxed in any way for any Imperial purpose--war or others.
+
+Nothing of the kind has ever been done, ever been attempted, even ever
+been hinted at.
+
+The argument falls entirely to the ground, shattered to pieces, from the
+fact that Canada has only participated in the wars of the Empire of her
+own free will, in the full enjoyment of her constitutional rights.
+Whatever sums of money the Dominion has to pay for the conflicts into
+which we have freely and deliberately decided to intervene, are
+perceived by the Canadian treasury in virtue of laws passed by our
+federal Parliament upon the advice of our responsible Cabinet.
+
+Last year, the people of Canada were called upon to elect new members of
+our House of Commons. The citizens of the Dominion had the undoubted
+constitutional right to pass condemnation on the ministers and on the
+members of Parliament who had voted for the participation in the war
+with men and money. They could have elected a new House of Commons to
+discontinue such participation and recall our army from Europe. But had
+they not the equally undoubted right to do what they have done by such a
+solemn expression of a decided and matured opinion:--approve and order
+to fight until victory is won?
+
+In accepting with deep gratitude the noble and patriotic support we,
+Canadians, were giving her in the most terrible crisis of her Sovereign
+existence, was England in any way violating any of our cherished
+constitutional privileges? No sensible, no reasonable, no unprejudiced
+man can so pretend. The case being such as it is, there is not the
+shadow of common sense in the assertion that Canada is taxed without
+representation for Imperial war purposes.
+
+
+COLONIAL REPRESENTATION.
+
+If the question of Colonial representation is raised at the special
+Imperial Conference to be held as soon as possible after the war, Mr.
+Bourassa and his friends will not be welcomed to cry if it is settled
+very differently from their wishes, after their unwise clamour for an
+excursion into the unknown.
+
+The question of the readjustment of the constitutional relations of the
+component parts of the Empire, when duly brought up, will very likely
+take a wide range, so far at least as consideration goes. What will be
+the conclusions arrived at, nobody knows.
+
+Pending that time, any one is allowed to express his own views. I
+thought proper to explain mine in my book dedicated to the French
+Canadians. I now summarize them as follows:--
+
+Would it be advisable to have the Colonies represented in the present
+Imperial Parliament? After full consideration of the question, I must
+say that I have finally dismissed it from my mind as utterly
+impracticable. Can it be supposed for a moment that the electors of
+Great Britain would agree to have the Dominions overseas and India
+represented in their House of Commons, to participate in the government
+of the United Kingdom for all purposes? With representation in the
+present British House of Commons, would the Colonies be also represented
+in the British Cabinet, to advise the Crown on all matters respecting
+the good government of England?
+
+Would the Colonies be represented according to their population in the
+British House of Commons? If they were, India alone would have a number
+of representatives five times larger than all the other parts of the
+Empire.
+
+Is it within the range of possibility that the people of Great Britain
+would consent to colonial representatives interfering, even controlling
+the management of their internal affairs, whilst they would have no say
+whatever in the internal government of the Colonies?
+
+Would the colonial ministers in the British Cabinet be constitutionally
+responsible to the people of the United Kingdom without holding their
+mandate from them?
+
+Such a system would be so absurd, so radically impossible, that it is
+not necessary to argue to prove that it would not work for one single
+year.
+
+In my opinion, Colonial representation would be practicable only with
+the creation of a new truly Imperial Parliament, the present British
+Parliament to continue to exist but with constitutional powers reduced
+to the management of the internal affairs of the United Kingdom. If such
+is the scheme of the "Nationalists," then they are converts to that
+Imperial Federation which they have vehemently denounced for years, and
+to the largest measure possible of that Imperialism which has been
+cursed with their worst maledictions.
+
+If ever complete Imperial Federation becomes an accomplished fact, how
+will it be organized? Will the new Imperial Parliament consist of one
+Sovereign, one House of Lords--or Senate--one House of Commons?
+
+Would the Sovereign be King or Emperor? I, for one, would prefer the
+word EMPEROR. He might be titled His Majesty the Emperor of the British
+Commonwealth and the King of Great Britain.
+
+With Imperial Federation--a regime of complete Imperial autonomy--the
+word "colonies" would no longer apply. Would Canada, Australia, South
+Africa, India, New Zealand be called Kingdoms, like Prussia, Bavaria,
+Saxony, Wurtemberg, of the German Empire?
+
+Evidently, the constitutional powers of the new Parliament would be
+limited to external relations, to strictly Imperial affairs.
+
+The new constitutional organization of the British Empire would combine
+Imperial, National and Provincial autonomy, each operating within the
+well defined limits of their respective privileges and attributions.
+
+Under such a regime, there would be three sorts of responsible Cabinets:
+The Imperial Cabinet responsible to the whole Imperial electorate; the
+National Cabinets of the component Kingdoms of the British Empire
+responsible to the electorate of each one of those Kingdoms
+respectively; the Provincial Cabinets responsible to the electors of
+each province respectively.
+
+The Royal--or rather Imperial--Prerogative to declare war and to make
+peace would be exercised upon the responsibility of the Imperial
+Cabinet.
+
+To the new Imperial Parliament would undoubtedly be given the right and
+the duty to provide for Imperial defense. They would have to organize an
+Imperial army and an Imperial navy for the protection of the whole
+Empire.
+
+The whole of the reorganized Empire would have to pay the whole of the
+expenditures required for Imperial purposes, defense and others, on land
+and sea, out of revenues raised by laws of the Imperial Parliament.
+
+Under the new Imperial constitutional regime, would the Imperial
+Parliament be given the authority to regulate Imperial trade and
+commerce, the Imperial postal service, &c.?
+
+Would the new Parliament have the exclusive right to approve commercial
+treaties sanctioned by His Majesty the Emperor, upon the advice of his
+responsible Imperial Cabinet, without reference whatever to the National
+Parliaments of the component Kingdoms?
+
+How easily is it ascertained that numerous questions of paramount
+importance are at once brought to one's mind the moment the vast problem
+of a new and greater Imperial Commonwealth is considered. Shortsighted
+and inexperienced are the politicians and the publicists who imagine
+that it could be given a satisfactory solution after hasty and
+insufficient deliberations. It is very reassuring to know that the
+matter necessarily being suggested for consideration at the Imperial War
+Conference, last year, it was immediately decided, by a "Resolution,"
+adopted on the proposition of the Canadian Prime Minister, "THAT THE
+READJUSTMENT OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL RELATIONS OF THE COMPONENT PARTS OF
+THE EMPIRE IS TOO IMPORTANT AND INTRICATE A SUBJECT TO BE DEALT WITH
+DURING THE WAR."
+
+What would be the real meaning of such a radical change? It is worth
+while to enquire at once.
+
+The British Empire would no longer comprise a Metropolis holding
+autonomous Colonies and Crown Colonies, but would be organized in a new
+Sovereign State with an Imperial Parliament to which all the component
+parts--or Kingdoms--would send representatives.
+
+Indeed it would be a grand, a magnificent, political edifice. But to
+find shelter under it, Canada would have to renounce her right to decide
+alone, and freely, to participate, or not, in the wars of the Empire, to
+determine alone what her military organization should be, to raise
+ourselves, without the intervention of a superior Parliament, the
+revenue which we consider proper to apply to Imperial purposes.
+
+I, for one, do not foresee that such an important constitutional change,
+if ever it is made, will be suddenly brought about, in the dark, as the
+result of the machinations of a most mischievous Imperialism inspiring
+our "Nationalists" with shivering terror. It is positively sure that no
+one holding a responsible political position, or having a responsible
+standing in the British political world, will ever be mad enough to
+propose, suggest, or even hint, to build a new Imperial structure
+without the solid foundation of the deliberate consent of all the
+Colonies, of all the would-be component parts of such a vast
+Commonwealth.
+
+How many years of serious discussion, of earnest consideration, did it
+not take to bring about the creation of the Canadian, Australian and
+South African Dominions. It cannot be reasonably imagined that the
+creation of the new and greater Imperial Commonwealth will be a much
+easier task to accomplish with the necessary conditions of successful
+durability.
+
+I also thought proper in my French book to write a few lines on the
+important question respecting the mode of ascertaining the deliberate
+consent of the Colonies to any intended readjustment of the
+constitutional relations of the component parts of the Empire, specially
+if it was proposed to rear a new and larger political fabric. I did so
+because of late it has been frequently suggested to use the _plebiscit_
+or the _referendum_ as the most opportune way to consult public opinion.
+
+I must say that, without going to the length of denying that a public
+consultation may, in a particular case, be advantageously made by way of
+a _plebiscit_ or _referendum_, I am not a strong believer in the
+efficiency of either proposition, and why? Because I cannot help
+considering them as more or less contrary to the solid constitutional
+principle of ministerial responsibility which they would gradually
+undermine if frequently appealed to.
+
+I feel specially adverse to the _plebiscit_, because History proves
+that, by nature, it engenders DESPOTISM, CAESARISM. Contemporary history
+offers two striking examples never to be forgotten.
+
+Napoleon the First, whose power was the legitimate result of his
+wonderful genius and of his eminent services to France, wanted his
+dynasty to rest on the _plebiscitary_ foundation. Millions of
+votes--almost the unanimity of French public opinion--answered
+enthusiastically to his call. He was not such a man as to refuse the
+chance offered him to exercise a supreme power so manifestly tendered
+to him. All know that he very soon unbridled his devouring ambition and
+ruled France with all the might of an absolutism strengthened by the
+glories of military campaigns truly marvellous. To any attempt at
+freedom of criticism, he could reply that his Imperial power--mightily
+supported by his commanding genius--was strongly entrenched on the
+unanimity of opinion of the French nation expressed by the result of the
+plebiscit.
+
+Napoleon III, favoured by the immortal prestige of his glorious uncle,
+but far behind him in genius, though intellectually well gifted, as he
+proved it during his Presidential term of the second French Republic and
+during the first years he occupied the Imperial Throne of France, used
+the plebiscit to have his famous _coup d'Etat_ of the second day of
+December 1851, prepared with consummate skill and carried out with great
+energy, ratified by the nation by an overwhelming majority of several
+millions of votes. He lost no time in drawing the final result of this
+first great success and in reaching the term of his ambition. The tide
+of popular enthusiasm was all flowing his way, carrying him to the
+Throne elevated for his uncle who had lost it after the hurricane which
+exhausted its strength at Waterloo. On the second of December of the
+following year--1852--the second French Empire was proclaimed to the
+international world. Following the example and the precedent of the
+first Bonaparte, Napoleon III also decided to use the plebiscit to
+legitimate his Imperial power. He triumphantly carried the day by some
+seven millions of votes--almost the unanimous voice of the French
+people.
+
+Thus, in less than half a century, after having twice tried the
+Republican system of government, and, in both cases, having overdone by
+deplorable excesses the experiment of Political Liberty--more specially
+during the years of terrorism of the first Republic--France, by a
+regular reaction, went back to the other extreme, and reestablished
+arbitrary power not, in the two instances, upon the principle of the
+Divine Right of the ancient Monarchy, but on that of the Sovereignty of
+the people, as expressed by the certain will of the whole nation. But
+ABSOLUTISM, whether the outcome of Divine Right or of popular
+sovereignty, is always the same and steadily works against the true
+principles of Political Liberty.
+
+It is a great mistake to suppose that ABSOLUTISM is possible only under
+monarchical institutions. The terrorist republican epoch, in France,
+from 1792 to 1795, was ABSOLUTISM of the worst kind, really with a
+vengeance. As much can be said of the present political situation in
+Russia, which has substituted REVOLUTIONARY ABSOLUTISM to that of the
+decayed Imperial regime, suddenly brought to a tragic end by the
+pressure of events too strong for its crumbling fabric, shaken to its
+foundation by a most unwise reactionary movement which only precipitated
+its downfall, instead of averting it, as extravagantly expected by the
+Petrograd Court, which betrayed Russia in favour of Germany, and
+unconsciously opened the road which led the weak and unfortunate Czar to
+his lamentable fate.
+
+In my humble opinion, PLEBISCITARY CAESARISM is not compatible with a
+system of ministerial responsibility for all the official acts of the
+Sovereign.
+
+The frequent use of the plebiscit would certainly tend to diminish in
+the mind of political leaders the true sense of their responsibility. It
+would too often offer an easy way out of an awkward position without the
+consequence of having to give up power.
+
+If I understand right the real meaning of the two words: _plebiscit_ and
+_referendum_, the first would be used to try and ascertain how public
+opinion stands upon any given question of public policy, of proposed
+public legislation: the second would be employed for the ratification by
+the electorate of a law passed by Parliament. I have less objection to
+the second system which, in reality, is an appeal from Parliament to the
+Electorate. But to the well practised, the adverse vote of a majority of
+the electors should have the same result as a vote of the majority of
+the House of Commons rejecting an important public measure upon the
+carrying of which the Cabinet has ventured their existence.
+
+Without the immediate resignation of the ministers meeting with a
+reverse in a _referendum_, I consider that ministerial responsibility
+would soon become a farce destructive of constitutional government. The
+defeat of a Cabinet in a _referendum_ would be equivalent to one in
+general elections and should bear out the same consequence.
+
+Surely, no one having some clear notions of what MINISTERIAL
+RESPONSIBILITY means, will pretend for a moment that a Cabinet who, on
+being defeated in the House of Commons, advises the Sovereign--or his
+representative in Canada--to dissolve Parliament for an appeal to the
+people, could remain in power if the Electorate approved of the hostile
+stand taken by the House of Commons.
+
+I can see no difference whatever in the meaning of an hostile referendum
+vote and that following a regular constitutional appeal from an adverse
+majority of the popular House of representatives. In both cases, the
+downfall of the defeated ministers should be the result.
+
+From the above comments, I draw the sound conclusion, I firmly believe,
+that any important readjustment of the constitutional relations of the
+Colonies with Great Britain, should be first ratified by the actual
+Parliaments of the Dominions and subsequently by the electors of those
+Dominions. But I am also strongly of opinion that the ratification by
+the electorate should be taken upon the ministerial responsibility of
+the Cabinet who would have advised the Sovereign and asked Parliament
+to approve the proposed readjustment. It would be the safest way to have
+the Cabinet to consider the question very seriously before running the
+risk of a popular defeat which would have to be followed by their
+resignation.
+
+Another most important reason to quiet the fears of our "alarmists" at
+an impending wave of flooding Imperialism, is that any radical change in
+the constitutional relations of England with her Colonies for the unity
+and consolidation of the Empire, should be adopted by the Parliaments
+and the Electorates of all the Colonies to be affected by the new
+conditions.
+
+Consequently, from every standpoint the Dominions and the Empire herself
+are guaranteed against the dangers of rashness in changing the present
+status of the great British Commonwealth.
+
+
+THE FAR OFF FUTURE.
+
+Though it may be of little use, and perhaps perplexing, to look too far
+ahead to try and foresee what the distant future has in store for the
+generations to come, still a simple call to common sense tells one that
+the political destinies of any Commonwealth are, in a long course of
+time, largely and necessarily shaped by the increases in population and
+wealth, irrespective of the actual more or less harmonious working of
+present and immediately prospective constitutional institutions.
+
+Broadly speaking, was it to be supposed, for instance, that the two wide
+continents of America would have, when peopled by hundreds of millions,
+continued in a condition of vassalage to the European continent, though
+owing their discovery and early settlements to European genius and
+enterprise? No doubt the growing national families of the New World
+would have liked a much longer stay under the roofs where they were
+born, had they received better and kinder treatment from their fatherly
+States. But at best the hour of separation would only have come later,
+postponed as it would have been by the bonds of enduring affection made
+more lasting by mutual good relations. Do we not see, almost daily,
+desolated homes often the sad result of senseless misunderstandings, or
+of guilty outbursts of intemperate passions? Yet, family home life, even
+when blessed by the inspiring smile of a lovely wife, the sweet voice of
+a devoted mother, the manly and Christian example of a good father, the
+affectionate sentiments of well bred children, is far too short under
+the most favourable circumstances. And why? Because it has to follow the
+Divine decree ordering separation for the building of new homes, to keep
+Humanity advancing towards the final conclusion of her earthly
+existence.
+
+Had the American colonies been favoured by the constitutional liberties
+the Dominion of Canada enjoys, they would not have revolted and British
+connection would have endured many years longer. Still, one cannot
+conclude that those British provinces, realizing the marvellous
+development all can witness, would have for ever agreed to be satisfied
+with their colonial status. When they would have grown taller and bigger
+than the mother-country, most likely Great Britain herself would have
+taken the initiative of a friendly separation followed by a close
+alliance which would have perpetuated the familial bond actually so
+happily restored.
+
+As prophesied by Sir Erskine May, more than half a century ago, in
+speaking of the probable future of the then British colonies, the
+American Republic would _have grown out of the dependencies of the
+British Empire_.
+
+And to-day, when the United States are doing such a gigantic effort,
+conjointly with the whole British Empire, to save Humanity from German
+cruel domination, England, to use the very words of the distinguished
+writer and historian just cited, "MAY WELL BE PROUDER OF THE VIGOROUS
+FREEDOM OF HER PROSPEROUS SON THAN OF A HUNDRED PROVINCES SUBJECT TO THE
+IRON RULE OF BRITISH PRO-CONSULS."
+
+The possibilities of the material development of the Dominions of
+Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa--without counting India
+and the lesser colonies--on account of their immense natural resources,
+are such as to justify very great hopes for their future. The time will
+come when they will number together a much larger population than the
+United Kingdom. Will the British Empire, as foreseen by one of the
+greatest political minds Canada has produced, declared by his chief and
+worthy opponent the equal to the celebrated William Pitt, then develop
+into a grand Commonwealth of nations.
+
+If so, as wrote Sir Erskine May, England "_will reflect, with
+exultation, that her dominion ceased, not in oppression and bloodshed
+but in the expansive energies of freedom, and the hereditary capacity of
+her manly offspring for the privileges of self-government_."
+
+Several generations will certainly rise and disappear before such an
+important question, looming far off in the future, is likely to be--if
+ever--raised requiring a practical solution. But foreseeing such a
+distant possibility, it is still more our bounden duty to be true to our
+present and prospective obligations for many years to come, as
+foreshadowed by the actual course of events shaping themselves in the
+sense of the consolidation of the Empire which may never be really
+dissolved even by the separation of her manly _offspring_. Family bonds,
+strengthened by deep affection, are not broken because the faithful boy,
+grown up a healthy and strong man, leaves to go under his own blessed
+roof, taking with him to his last day the cherished recollections of the
+happy days he has passed in the equally blessed parental home.
+
+One of our most ardent desires must be that our successive generations
+of children be so well trained to the intelligent and patriotic use of
+Political Liberty, as to accumulate, in due course of time, an admirable
+heritage of sound principles of self-government enriched by the
+honourable examples of our faithful loyalty to the Mother land never
+grudged to her, but given with overflowing measure, not only as a matter
+of duty, but also as a reward from grateful subjects for the regard and
+respect always paid to their constitutional rights and privileges.
+
+If such is ever the natural outcome of our political achievements, the
+vast Empire reared with such a great success would truly survive
+separation, being merely transformed into a splendid galaxy of
+independent States still bound together by the strong ties created by
+centuries of reciprocal devotedness. It would constitute a real league
+of nations working in concert and with grandeur for the peace and the
+prosperity of the whole world.
+
+
+A MACHIAVELLIAN PROPOSITION.
+
+On reading Mr. Bourassa's pamphlet entitled:--_Yesterday, To-day,
+To-morrow_, I discovered what I have qualified a _Machiavellian
+proposition_. What _Machiavellism_ means is well known. It expresses the
+views of that most corrupt and contemptible politician and publicist,
+called MACHIAVEL, born at Florence, in 1649.
+
+At page 140 of the above mentioned pamphlet, Mr. Bourassa wrote:--
+
+"I WILL SPEAK MY MIND OPENLY--_JE VOUS LIVRE TOUTE MA PENSEE_--: IF IN
+DEFAULT OF INDEPENDENCE, I CLAIM IMPERIAL REPRESENTATION, IT IS BECAUSE
+IT WOULD WEAKEN THE MILITARY ORGANIZATION OF ENGLAND,--_l'armature de
+guerre de l'Angleterre_--PRECIPITATE THE DISSOLUTION OF HER EMPIRE,
+HASTEN THE DAY OF DELIVERANCE, FOR US AND FOR THE WHOLE WORLD."
+
+Such are the loyal sentiments expressed by the "Nationalist" leader. He
+clamours for the Imperial representation of the Colonies, for the
+solemnly avowed object to use the privilege for the destruction of the
+Empire. To achieve this end he declares that the military power of
+England must first be weakened.
+
+No wonder then that he started his "Nationalist" campaign by fighting
+with all his might the two successive proposals of contribution to the
+great military naval fleet of Great Britain.
+
+No wonder that he opposed Canada's intervention in favour of England in
+the South African war.
+
+No wonder that from the outbreak of the hostilities, in 1914, until the
+day when he was shut up by the Order-in-Council censuring all disloyal
+speaking and writing detrimental to the winning of the war, he has tried
+to move heaven and earth to prevent Canada's participation in the
+conflict.
+
+He tells his countrymen that if he has become a convert to Imperial
+representation--in other words, Imperial Federation--it is because he
+considers it would be the best way of ruining the Empire and of
+delivering, not only Canada, but the whole world from British
+domination.
+
+For fear that the French Canadians, whom he especially wished to
+influence, would not be very easily caught in the disloyal trap, he
+tries hard to prevail upon them by the following reasons:--
+
+"_If we are not sufficiently clear-sighted and energetic to work for
+this salutary object by the most constitutional, the most British, means
+at our disposal, others, happily, will do it for us._
+
+"_The English-Canadians, the Australians, the New Zealanders persistingly
+claim representation in the government of the Empire. When the war is
+over, their claims will be reaffirmed with increased ampleness and
+energy. The Indians (les Hindous) themselves will do the same. Shall we
+remain alone to rot stupidly (croupir beatement) in colonial
+abjection._"
+
+Without the slightest doubt, there are many English-Canadians,
+Australians, New Zealanders, South Africans, Indians, in favour of
+Colonial Imperial representation. The number is increasing and likely to
+increase. But Mr. Bourassa is absolutely, I might as well say, absurdly,
+mistaken, if he really believes that they do so for his own purpose of
+destroying the British Empire. They want the very reverse: their object
+is TO CONSOLIDATE THE EMPIRE, not TO DISSOLVE HER. They will not accept
+as a very flattering compliment Mr. Bourassa's charge that their desire
+to strengthen the British Commonwealth proves that they prefer to
+continue _stupidly rotting in colonial abjection_ rather than work for
+their deliverance from British domination.
+
+But what in the world has brought the "Nationalist" leader to the
+conclusion that the surest way to save Canada from the peril of
+Imperialism was to secure Imperial representation for the treasonable
+purpose, on entering the fort, to pull down the flag and destroy the
+whole Empire? To frighten his French Canadian compatriots with terror at
+the slightest move in favour of an increased Imperialism, he waves
+before them, with wild gesticulation, any and every extravagant writings
+he lays his hand on preaching a ridiculous expansion of Imperialist
+aspirations. He is perhaps the only man in Canada who has read a most
+absurd work which he pretends to have been written by a General named
+Lea, and from which, in horror stricken, he summarized a few
+unbelievable views.
+
+Mr. Bourassa said that General Lea, _gifted with an astonishing
+foresight, predicted all that was happening in Europe and in the world.
+The General_, again affirms Mr. Bourassa, _has proved in a striking way
+that if England wishes to maintain her Empire and to continue exercising
+her domination over the world she must make the sacrifice of her
+political liberties and of those of her Colonies, abolish the
+Parliamentary and Representative Governments and resolutely adopt the
+ironed regime of the Romans of old, of the Germans of the present day_.
+
+Once so brilliantly inspired, General Lea went on in a splendid manner.
+He added, says Mr. Bourassa, _that England must transform her Empire
+into a vast armed camp, must keep in her own hands all the powers of
+command, must subdue all the non-British races to the supremacy of the
+Anglo-Saxons united together by the unique thought of dominating the
+world by brutal force_.
+
+These views--so says Mr. Bourassa--are to be found in a book entitled:
+"_The Day of the Saxon_." If they have been really expressed with the
+full sense given to them by Mr. Bourassa's translation into French, I
+cannot say less than that they are most absurd, most extravagant. The
+Nationalist leader would have proved himself a much more sensible, a
+wiser man, if, laughing at such senseless notions, he had refrained from
+quoting those lines for the purpose of telling the French-Canadians that
+like all non-British races on earth they were doomed to be
+devoured--flesh and bones--by the voracious Anglo-Saxons bent on
+swallowing humanity. And to save them from such a cruel fate, he
+implores them to clamour for Imperial representation with the criminal
+intent of betraying their trust, and to use the honourable privilege
+they would be granted to ruin the Empire they would swear to maintain
+and defend. So far as the political program of General Lea is
+concerned, we have not yet learned that its benevolent author was doing
+much in the war to carry it out. If I had the honour to meet the
+General, being presented, I presume, by Mr. Bourassa, I would ask him,
+first, when and where he has discovered that England was _dominating the
+world_.
+
+I know that there exists a great England holding a large situation on
+earth. Her Empire extends to almost a fourth of the globe. Her
+Sovereignty reigns over nearly four hundred million of human beings; a
+truly beneficient Sovereignty, because it rules according to the wishes,
+to the opinions of its subjects, managing their own affairs in virtue of
+the freest political institutions in the whole world.
+
+I know of no England dominating, or even aspiring to dominate, the
+world. Such an England only exists in the heated imagination of that
+General Lea and in the minds of all those, like the Nationalist leader,
+who are, or feign to be, tortured by the bugbear of military Imperialism
+of the old Roman ironed type.
+
+As long as three-fourths of the earth will remain independent of the
+British Empire, under numerous sovereignties, England's pretended
+domination of the world will ever only be an extravagant dream.
+
+Wishing England _to continue her domination of the world_, General Lea,
+no doubt to please Mr. Bourassa, was bound to suggest the means to do
+so. Let us analyze them.
+
+1.--England _must make the sacrifice of her political liberties and of
+those of her Colonies_.
+
+2.--She _must abolish parliamentary and representative governments_.
+
+It is beyond conception that Mr. Bourassa should have for one minute
+seriously considered such absurd notions.
+
+I would enjoy attending large public meetings in Great Britain, where
+General Lea would propose to British free men the sacrifice of all their
+political liberties, to witness the rather warm reception he would be
+favoured with. I am sure he would have to rush out of the halls much
+faster than he would have walked in.
+
+Where is the sane man who really believes that, dreaming of a domination
+of the world by _brute force_, British free men would consent to do away
+with their Parliamentary system _to transform the whole of the Empire
+into an armed camp_? Such a proposition was sheer madness, a most
+foolish talk, unworthy of the slightest attention from sensible people.
+Mr. Bourassa was very wrong in giving it publicity, and very unwise, to
+say the least, in using it to frighten his French-Canadian compatriots
+by blandishing before their eyes that ridiculous specimen of the phantom
+of Imperialism.
+
+Is it to be supposed for one single instant that the British people, so
+rightly proud of their political liberties, and of their representative
+government, which after centuries of efforts and trials they have
+successfully brought to such perfection, basing its future permanency on
+the solid rock of ministerial responsibility, would consent to sacrifice
+them for the sake of a vain, a ridiculous, an odious and impracticable
+scheme _to dominate the world by brute force_?
+
+It is ten times worse than madness to believe that the British people
+who have torn away from the British soil the last root of ABSOLUTISM,
+would, for any earthly reason, renounce their most legitimate conquests,
+to rebuild, on the burning ruins of their most sacred rights, an ironed
+political regime of the old Roman or present German type! Is it to be
+believed that they would agree to replace, on the glorious Throne which
+they protect with all the might of their loyal affection, their present
+constitutional Sovereign by a new Nero or another Wilhelm II?
+
+If it is with the purpose of preventing such a dire calamity that the
+Nationalist leader became a convert to Imperial Federation, he is
+absolutely losing his time and his energy in promoting such a regime.
+If ever Imperial Federation becomes a fact, we can all rest perfectly
+assured that the new Imperial Parliament will not vote their own
+destruction to be replaced by an autocratic and tyrannical government.
+
+I hope that Mr. Bourassa is the only believer, all over Canada, in the
+assertion of General Lea that England's aspirations is _to dominate the
+world by brute force_. It is a most injurious, I can say, calumnious,
+charge. All know, or should know, that England was the first nation to
+completely abolish slavery over all her Empire; that has granted, in the
+largest possible measure, Political Liberty to all her Colonies; that
+guarantees to all races the same rights and privileges, never
+interfering in colonial internal management. He is wilfully guilty of a
+calumnious charge the man who accuses the British race to aspire to
+dominate the world by an _ironed regime_, when he should know that Great
+Britain ran the risk of a crushing defeat, in refusing to organize a
+standing army of several millions of trained officers and men.
+
+
+A TREASONABLE PROPOSAL.
+
+The Nationalist leader wants the French-Canadians to support his scheme
+in order _to work for the salutary object of demolishing the British
+Empire by the so very constitutional means of Imperial Federation_. How
+he has failed to realize the infamous kind of suggestion he was making
+will always be a wonder to all those reading it.
+
+If, sooner or later, Great Britain and her Colonies are politically
+organized as an Imperial Federation, the Province of Quebec will have
+several French-Canadian representatives in the new Greater Imperial
+Parliament. The Nationalist leader wants those French-Canadian Members
+to go to London pledged to destroy the Empire to which they will have
+to swear allegiance and fealty before crossing the threshold of the
+House of Commons and taking their seats. Does he not understand that any
+French-Canadian doing what he wishes and recommends would deliberately
+perjure himself? Does he not comprehend that he was paying a rather poor
+compliment to his British countrymen from Canada, Australia, New Zealand
+and India, when he affirmed, without the shadow of truth, that they
+would elect to the Imperial Parliament members holding the mandate from
+them to work for the dissolution of the Empire?
+
+I notice, with surprise, that in the enumeration he has drawn of the
+future destroyers of the future federated British Empire, he has not
+convened his friends, the Boers, to his holy task. Does he not consider
+them as _farsighted_ and _energetic_ as the others he has pompously
+mentioned with such childish illusion. Or, has he not, unconsciously,
+paid them the high compliment to suppose that they would be unable to
+accomplish the treasonable act which, with confidence, and even
+certainty, he expects from the others. Our countrymen, the Boers of
+South Africa, have, by a large majority, become so loyal to the Crown,
+to the Empire,--and they have so gloriously proved it since the outbreak
+of the war--that it is manifestly evident that they are very well
+satisfied with their present position, that they have dispelled from
+their minds all bitter recollections of the struggle which, a few years
+ago, finally brought them within the Empire they are doing such a noble
+effort to maintain and save from the German tyrannical grasp.
+
+The following views, recently expressed, in London, by Mr. Burton,
+Minister of Railways and Harbours in the Government of South Africa, a
+leading public man of the far away sister Dominion, is refreshing
+reading after Mr. Bourassa's outrageous outburst above quoted. He
+said:--
+
+"_One of the motives which prompted South African support of the British
+cause was the fact, which appealed not only to the English-speaking
+population, but moved the Dutch population--the fact that the British
+cause had embraced all the progressive peoples of the world. It was not
+Britain's wealth, or influence, or power that appealed to them; it was
+the priceless privilege of the maintenance of our constitutional
+liberties. He could illustrate their attitude by a single incident which
+had come within his own experience in connection with a Transvaaler,
+born and bred, whom he had questioned as to his future in the military
+service in which he was an officer. The officer replied that he had been
+through the German South-West African campaign, that he was going
+through the German East African campaign, and when that was done he
+intended making for Flanders. He added: "I mean that as a man I could
+not act otherwise in view of the treatment dealt out to us by Great
+Britain. If she had not done what she did for us I should not have
+stirred hand or foot._""
+
+No one need be surprised that the South African Dominion is suffering a
+little from the "Nationalist" fever, a disease infesting many countries,
+in various degrees, and with time cured by the safe remedy of the sound
+common sense of the people. We know too much about it ourselves, after
+nearly eighty years of free responsible government, to wonder at the
+fact that a small minority of the Dutch South Africans--from the Boer
+element--is not yet fully reconciled with their lot under the British
+Crown. They apparently dream of Republicanism, in sullen recollection of
+a recent past which only some of the present generation still regret,
+but which the next will strive to cherish only as the stepping stone to
+their actual status so full of good promises for their future. The few
+South Africans suffering from this virus are almost exclusively
+recruited amongst the populations of the late Republics of South Africa.
+The people of the provinces of Natal and Cape Colony, with a long
+experience of British rule, have no faith in the "republican
+nationalism" desired by some, which does not in the least appeal to
+their good sense and their sound political foresight. Mr. Burton
+believes "_that the instigators of the movement are looking for votes
+more than for anything else_."
+
+Mr. Burton, moreover, truly said:--
+
+"_It was part of the history of all countries that what was called
+"Nationalism" made a powerful appeal to the finer classes of young men.
+It was an admirable sentiment, but what was complained of in South
+Africa was that the sentiment was expended upon a wrong conception of
+"nationalism" and what nationhood should be. In South Africa it was
+restricted, it was sectional, and practically racial. The energy and
+activity displayed were being spent upon a mistaken cause._"
+
+Every word of this quotation applies with still greater force to the
+"nationalism" of the Province of Quebec.
+
+Mr. Burton goes on saying:--
+
+"_It was the cause of South Africa first--as it should be--but it was
+more than that. It was South Africa first, last, and all the time, and
+South Africa alone. He and those who were associated with him could not
+accept that view. It would mean ruinous chaos in South Africa. They had
+obligations to Great Britain. It was not merely that they had received
+recognition from the beginning that their Constitutional cause was just.
+It was not merely that Great Britain in its relation with South Africa
+had been actuated by that beneficent influence which the British system
+of liberty effected under the sway of its flag throughout the world, but
+it was that the people of the Union realized the true inward
+significance of the struggle in which the Empire was engaged. They knew
+that the world's freedom was at stake, and with it their own. The people
+in South Africa had long ago awakened to this great fact, and they were
+realizing it more and more as the war went on. When he had spoken of
+putting "South Africa first" as the motto of a party he wished it to be
+understood that he and the people of South Africa generally accepted it,
+as every nation was bound to accept it. But they also realized that
+their future as a nation and their freedom as a nation were at stake,
+and that their interests were bound up with those of the British
+Empire._
+
+"_It was because they realized that fact that the Government of the
+Union had in these troublous times nailed its flag to the mast. It was
+the honourable course, the right course, and they had stuck to it
+through good report and ill report, and through much trial and
+sacrifice. His last message as representative of the Union Government
+was: Upon that attitude of the Union Government they might depend to the
+very last. They might be forced--he did not see any present prospect of
+it--to abandon office, but so long as they were in office they would
+adhere absolutely in the letter and in the spirit to the undertaking
+they had given and would continue in the path they had followed
+hitherto._"
+
+Sensible, truly political and patriotic, noble words, indeed. Are they
+not the complete expression of the powerful wave of enthusiasm which
+spread throughout the length and breadth of the whole British Dominions
+overseas, when, after exhausting to the last drop her efforts to
+maintain peace, Great Britain, in honour bound, threw her gallant sword
+in the balance in which the destinies of the world were to be weighed
+during the frightful years of the most terrific thundering storm ever
+witnessed by man?
+
+How weighty those words are is evident. They are still more so by the
+fact that they positively and firmly express the views and sentiments of
+the two most trusted and illustrious leaders of the Boers, who, both of
+them, took a very prominent part in the South African war, as generals
+commanding the forces of the South African Republics: General Botha and
+General Smuts.
+
+General Botha is, and has been for several years, the Prime Minister of
+the South African Dominion. General Smuts is minister of Defence in
+General Botha's Cabinet. He is the representative of the Government of
+the Union of South Africa in the Imperial War Cabinet. In June, 1917, he
+was, moreover, "invited to attend the meetings of the British War
+Cabinet during his stay in the British Isles."
+
+Both General Botha and General Smuts have often spoken about the present
+relations of their great Dominion with England. The press of the whole
+British Empire has published their speeches, most favourably commented
+by that of the Allied nations. In every case, they were brilliant with
+true and staunch loyalty, worthy of the real statesmen the speakers are,
+in every sense fully up to what could be expected from the illustrious
+military and political leaders of a valiant race deserving the respect
+of all by her heroism of the past and her loyalty of present days.
+
+If ever Mr. Bourassa, as I hope he will, reads the above quoted lines, I
+am sure he will find therein every reason to be satisfied with his
+decision not to call upon the South Africans to join with him and those
+he has summoned, in the unworthy task of bringing on Imperial Federation
+for the very treasonable purpose of destroying the British Empire. For
+once, his judgment did not fail him.
+
+Nobody knows if representatives from the whole present colonial
+Dominions and India will ever sit, in London, as members of a new
+Imperial Parliament. It is most unlikely, at all events, that any one,
+merely to please Mr. Bourassa, will help building such a political
+structure with the criminal and treasonable purpose of throwing it at
+once to the ground with a tremendous crash. But we can all safely join
+in the affirmation that in the event of such a great historical fact
+being accomplished as that of a federated British Commonwealth, the
+representatives of the Colonies overseas will meet in the Imperial
+Capital to do their duty with loyalty and honour. I have no hesitation
+whatever to pledge my word that the French Canadian representatives in
+London would be amongst the most loyal to their Sovereign and to the
+Empire, the most true to their oath.
+
+I solemnly protest against the injurious imputation the Nationalist
+leader has addressed to my French Canadian compatriots in charging them
+with the desire _to rot stupidly in colonial abjection_. Let us
+repulse the unfounded accusation from an elevated standpoint. I feel the
+utmost contempt for all kinds of narrow prejudices, of blind fanaticism.
+Nations, like individuals, all pursue Providential destinies in this
+human world. There is no more abjection in the colonial status than in
+any other. Canada is a British colony by the decree of Providence. Every
+nation--like every individual--has duties to perform in any situation
+she may occupy in the course of historical events. Abjection is not the
+result of the faithful discharge of duty, however trying the
+circumstances may be. It would be in its violation with the guilty
+intent to betray.
+
+A hundred times better it is to remain a colony as long as the Supreme
+Ruler of the world will so order, than to attempt to break through by
+the dark plot of an infamous conspiration.
+
+Let our destinies follow their natural development, striving to the best
+of our ability and patriotism to have them to achieve the happy
+conditions which we enjoy. Any man aspiring to a legitimate influence on
+the mind of our compatriots, must encourage them, by words and deeds, to
+faithfully accomplish their daily task in showing them the advantages of
+their position. Inconveniences are the outgrowth of any political
+standing. In the true Christian spirit, trials are everywhere to be met
+with. Sacrifice, when necessary, ennobles national as well, and as much,
+as individual life.
+
+It is very wrong on the part of any one to trouble the mind of our
+compatriots in purposely exhibiting to their view discouraging pictures
+of the difficulties of their situation. Their national existence is not,
+never will, never can be, exclusively rosy. Be it as it may, who can
+pretend, in good faith, that there exists, on the surface of the globe,
+a population, all things considered, happier than our own. Our race
+freely grows on a fertile and blessed soil which she cultivates with her
+vigorous and intelligent daily toils, which she waters from the sweat of
+her brow, to which she clings by all the affections of her heart, by the
+noblest aspirations of her soul. On week days, proudly working on her
+domains; on Sundays, kneeling before the Altars of her Church, fervently
+thanking Him for past graces and gifts, she prays to the Supreme Giver
+of all earthly goods to continue to favour her with peace, with order,
+in the legitimate enjoyment of her liberties, together with the moral,
+intellectual and material progress she is striving to deserve.
+
+Guilty is the man who tortures them with chimerical aspirations, who
+advises them to conspire against the legitimate authority which she
+must, and will, respect in spite of the seductions attempted to have her
+to fail in her duty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+OUTRAGES ARE NO REASONS.
+
+
+The failings of human nature, the differences of temper, of the
+qualities and defects of heart and soul, are such that harmony and
+good-will amongst men in private life are too often difficult to secure.
+The Divine precept, so frequently broken, should, however, always rule
+the relations between man and man. It should, with still more constant
+application, rule the relations between different races Providentially
+called to live together on the same soil, under the same Sovereign
+authority, enjoying the same institutions, the same liberties, protected
+by the same flag. That the house divided against itself is sure to fall
+is true of the nation as well as of the home. National and family
+happiness and prosperity are alike dependent on the feelings of real
+brotherhood which prevail in both. Any good hearted man appreciates how
+much kindness of speech, courtesy of dealings, cordiality of manners,
+contribute to reciprocal good-fellowship, brotherly in the home,
+inspiring in the daily intercourse of citizens, patriotic in the nation
+at large. The more a Sovereign State is inhabited by numerous ethnical
+groups, like the British Empire and the American Republic, the more
+important it is that the freedom of expressing one's opinion on all
+matters of public interest should be used with fairness, with respect
+for those holding different views, with due regard for the feelings
+which are the natural outcome of racial developments, of cherished
+recollections, of legitimate hopes.
+
+Such are the principles, I am most happy to say, that I have admired and
+try to practice in the exercise of my rights as a citizen of the
+Province where I saw the light of day, of Canada where I have lived and
+hope to live all my years, of the British Empire whose loyal subject I
+have been and am determined to remain to my last moment.
+
+How then could I have helped being shocked when I came to read the
+following lines I translate as follows from page 121 of Mr. Bourassa's
+pamphlet:--"_Yesterday, To-day, To-morrow_":--
+
+"_Were the French Canadians to persist in their obstination to rot in
+colonialism and to consider that it is for them the happiest and the
+most glorious condition of existence, the English Canadians would force
+them out of it. Our countrymen of the British races have grave defects:
+they are_ IGNORANT, PRETENTIOUS, ARROGANT, SHORT-SIGHTED, DOMINEERING.
+_They are, more than ourselves_, ROTTEN WITH MERCANTILISM. _They seem to
+have lost some of the best qualities of the English people, to have
+developed their faults and acquire many of the_ VICES NATURAL TO THE
+WORST CATEGORY OF YANKEES. _But they have not_, LIKE US, _totally_
+ABDICATED _the_ PROUD CHARACTER _and the_ PRIMORDIOUS RIGHTS _of the
+British peoples. When the war is over, they will claim, like the
+Australians, the New Zealanders, and the Indians (les Hindous), a
+readjustment of the powers of government_."
+
+Thus, in a few lines the Nationalist leader, in appealing to his
+disordered imagination, has succeeded in slapping, in one single stroke,
+with dynamical outrages, the faces of the English-speaking Canadians of
+the three great British races, of our neighbours, the Yankees, and of
+his own compatriots, the French-Canadians. How could he expect that such
+vitriolic language would promote, in the Dominion, that harmony of
+feelings never before so essential as at the very time he was writing
+that injurious paragraph of his work, surely not intended to help
+winning the war so full of the greatest consequences, for good or ill,
+for the World, the British Empire, Canada, and our own Province of
+Quebec.
+
+So far, Mr. Bourassa, having gone back on the admiration he was wont to
+profess for England, in his early youth, had reserved all his assaults
+for the English people. But the heart of man, once under the sway of an
+unlimited and unsatisfied ambition, is bound to drop to the lowest
+depths of the extremist's aberration. In the above quotation, he fires
+his battery of _Kruppic_ dimensions--loaded with poisonous invectives,
+at the THREE GREAT BRITISH RACES, ENGLISH, SCOTCH AND IRISH, living in
+Canada.
+
+Had his charge been intended for the English race alone, he would have
+been very particular in so saying. But, let there be no mistake about
+it, he deliberately wrote _our countrymen of the British races_.
+Wanting, I suppose, to prove his impartiality, he remembered that the
+United Kingdom is peopled by three illustrious races represented all
+over the globe by many millions of worthy sons, everywhere to be found
+hard at work for the intelligent development of the resources of the
+countries they live in and are rearing their children. More than four
+millions of them are Canadians by birth or born in Great Britain. Many
+more numerous they are in the United States where they form the solid
+stock upon which the future of the Republic is firmly grounded.
+
+With the same thrust, Mr. Bourassa strikes at the Yankees who, we may
+hope, have not trembled too much at the blow. He charges them with
+having infested his poor _countrymen of the British races_ with _many of
+the vices natural to the worst category of_ "YANKEEISM." Kind, cordial,
+courteous, indeed he was in such a mood of tender sympathies for the
+Canadian British races and their contagious cousins the Yankees of the
+most corrupted class!
+
+However, the finest flower of the whole _bouquet--the rose par
+excellence_--is the one he has gallantly presented to his
+French-Canadian compatriots. He tells them with the sweetest tones of
+his charming voice that they are pleased and happy to rot in
+"_colonialism_." But, evidently wishing to speak to them a few
+encouraging words, he mildly reminds them _that they are less rotten
+with "mercantilism" than their countrymen of the British races_.
+
+A man can be suffering less than his more sickly brother without, for
+all that, being in very good health. It is a poor consolation for the
+French Canadians to hear from the Nationalist leader that they are less
+infested with the mercantile virus than their brothers of the British
+races.
+
+All those who have followed with some attention Mr. Bourassa's course
+for the last twenty years, know that he is an equilibrist of the first
+class. Having favoured the French Canadians with the flattering
+compliment as above, he turns about and lashes them with the sweeping
+slap that, contrary to the stand the Canadians of the British races
+cling to with an obstination which he deigns to approve, they, the
+degenerated French Canadians whom he pities so much, "_have totally
+abdicated their proud character_ of old _and the primordial rights of
+British subjects_."
+
+So, in Mr. Bourassa's opinion, his French Canadian compatriots are
+infested to a high degree both with the _colonialist_ and _mercantile_
+corruptions. Hence, his fear that they are threatened with a premature
+national death if they do not at once listen to his brotherly warnings.
+
+I have already answered the Nationalist leader's charge that the French
+Canadians are stupidly rotting in "COLONIAL ABJECTION." The same reasons
+refute his assumption that "COLONIALISM" is an abject status for a
+people.
+
+A people, a race, who would enjoy living under the German autocratic
+colonial rule--for which the Nationalist leader has so little
+dislike--would indeed prove some disposition to _rot stupidly in
+abjection_. But the divers peoples, the different races, who appreciate
+all the beneficent advantages of the present British colonial rule, are
+of very superior stock. They know, from the clearest conception, that
+Monarchical democratic institutions are as much different from Imperial
+autocratic tyranny, as true broad patriotism is far above narrow and
+fanatical "Nationalism."
+
+I have only to say a few words about the "ROTTENNESS OF MERCANTILISM"
+against which, according to Mr. Bourassa, the French Canadian are not
+sufficiently protected.
+
+Going back to my recollections of the last sixty years, if there is a
+complaint which through all my life I have heard almost daily, with deep
+regret, it is that the French Canadians were not striving with
+sufficient energy and perseverance to achieve a better and larger
+position in the business world. Their leaders, religious, political and
+civil, to induce them to increased exertions, have always pointed to the
+example given them by their countrymen of the British races: by the
+clear headed and far-seeing English business man, the sturdy and hard
+working Scotch, the enterprising and witty Irish. Thank God, I have well
+enough understood my duty to do my humble but patriotic share to favour
+this progressive movement. Never, in so wisely advising the French
+Canadians, any one supposed for a minute that he was leading them to the
+infested pond of _mercantile corruption_. The change wished by all was
+becoming more urgent. All were looking for the best means to carry it
+out. Our leaders, having at their head, by right and merit, our
+religious chiefs under the authority of a prince of our Church, his
+Eminence the Cardinal-Archbishop of Quebec, took the initiative with an
+ever increasing interest in the success they considered so important.
+
+The establishment of a permanent school of high commercial education and
+of several technical schools was most favourably approved. Political
+economy is even, in a certain measure, taught in several of our
+classical colleges for secondary education. The necessity for our young
+men of knowing the English language, to succeed in commercial,
+industrial and financial pursuits in Canada and in the neighbouring
+Republic, is more and more generally admitted. The French Canadians,
+fully enjoying the undoubted right to do so, aspire to achieve an
+advantageous and honourable position in commerce, in industry, in
+finance, in transportation, in mine working. The more we realize this
+goal of our legitimate ambition, the more we are also intensifying our
+efforts to promote agricultural progress and the improvement of our
+country roads.
+
+If, in all the branches of our national activity, we obtain the success
+we hope for, one single man alone amongst us shudders at the idea that
+the French Canadians will blindly destroy their race with a mortal dose
+of the cursed "MERCANTILISM" so dishonourable to the British races.
+
+And Mr. Bourassa, instead of heartily joining with all the leaders of
+his race--Cardinal, Archbishops, Bishops, priests, statesmen, political
+men, judges, professional men, merchants, manufacturers, financiers,--to
+favour, as much as possible, the commercial and technical training of
+his compatriots, sneers at such efforts which, in his candid opinion,
+are only plunging them in the irremediable depths of "MERCANTILE
+CORRUPTION"!
+
+Are not such abominable teachings a curse to all those of the race to
+which they are addressed with an unsurpassed cynicism?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+HOW MR. BOURASSA PAID HIS COMPLIMENTS TO THE CANADIAN ARMY.
+
+
+With a most admirable unanimity--_nemine contradicente_, as
+Parliamentary procedure says--the Canadian Parliament decided at once,
+at the very outbreak of the hostilities, to organize a great army to go
+and defend the Empire of which the Dominion is an important component
+part, and Civilization in peril from the Teutonic crushing wave of
+barbarism, let loose over Belgium and France. In the most evidently
+constitutional ways, the Canadian people, as a whole, as they had the
+right and the bounden duty to do, approved the decision of Parliament.
+
+When Mr. Bourassa issued the pamphlets referred to, some four hundred
+thousands volunteers had already enlisted. A large number of them--over
+one hundred and sixty thousands had reached the western front--some the
+eastern--where they fought valiantly, heroically, on French soil,
+against the German hordes. Thousands of them had fallen on the field of
+honour, resting with imperishable glory, for them and for us all, in
+that ancestral land which we, and ever will, cherish.
+
+More than one hundred and twenty-five thousands were on British soil,
+being trained for the military operations of the following spring.
+
+The rest of the army, in numerous thousands, was still with us, getting
+organized for the noble task, and waiting to cross over the Atlantic to
+go on the field of battle.
+
+The Canadian army had in every way merited the respect and the
+admiration of all their countrymen who were very happy to so testify.
+
+However, in this admirable concert of praise and grateful
+congratulations, a very discordant note was one day heard resounding
+from the lowest inspiration of the human heart vibrating with feelings
+of shameful contempt. It is found at page 105 of the pamphlet previously
+quoted, and reads as follows in its naked outrageous language:--
+
+"_In Canada, a militarism is being forged unparalleled in any civilized
+country, a depraved and undisciplined soldiery, an armed scoundrelism,
+without faith nor law, as refractory to the call of individual honour as
+to the authority of its parading or patronage officers._"
+
+For all the treasures of the world, I would not agree to bear before my
+countrymen the responsibility of such injurious words addressed to the
+Canadian army whose valour is doing so much for our national honour.
+
+In one single masterly stroke of his poisoned pen the Nationalist leader
+decrees that the Canadian army is far below the worst type of German
+and Turkish soldiery, that no other civilized country is cursed with
+such a degraded, undisciplined, dishonoured militarism.
+
+For God's sake, whence and where has such an outrageous outburst
+originated? From what dark corner has the electric current been poured
+out with such infernal fury?
+
+I shall not pretend that all our volunteers, from first to last, had
+reached the saintly state of soul of their inexorable judge. As a rule
+poor mortals do not jump, by a single effort, up to that degree of
+Christian perfection shining with the great virtues of humility,
+charity, justice--by words and deeds. We must not suppose that many of
+our heroic volunteers had deserved, like their trusted friend and
+admirer, Mr. Bourassa, to be canonized during their life time. That some
+of them, whose past was perhaps not a very strong recommendation, have
+enlisted with the laudable purpose to rehabilitate themselves in their
+own self-estimation and in that of their countrymen, it is very likely.
+Far from blaming them for so doing, we must congratulate them and
+encourage them to persevere in the glorious task which will entitle them
+to the everlasting gratitude of their country. Such has been the case in
+the armies of all nations for many centuries past.
+
+Fortunately, far better and much more authorized judges of the devotion,
+courage and patriotism of the volunteers of the great Canadian army, as
+well as of the cause for the triumph of which they have offered, and in
+so many cases, given their lives, were easily found. They wrote and
+spoke with no uncertain voice.
+
+In a letter approving the publication of a very interesting pamphlet,
+entitled:--"_War controversy between Catholics_"--"_La controverse de
+guerre entre Catholiques_,"--His Eminence Cardinal Begin, Archbishop of
+Quebec, said:--
+
+"_Attentively read, as it deserves to be, this work will help to
+understand and to love to the limit of devotion, (jusqu'au devouement)
+the beauty and the sovereign importance of the great cause--the
+protection of the world threatened by Germanism--for which our soldiers
+are so valiantly fighting together with those of England, France and
+Belgium._
+
+"_I pray God to bless those brave warriors and to grant peace to the
+Christian world by the reestablishment of Justice and Right._"
+
+What an encouraging contrast! On the one hand, a publicist, with the
+fury of its resounding organs, so widely used, vowing to eternal
+damnation, _the armed scoundrelism which Canada is_ forging, with
+conditions inferior to Teutonic and Turkish barbarism, considering that
+it has reached the lowest depth of "_a degradation unparalleled in any
+civilized country_."
+
+On the other, the Head of the Catholic Church in Canada, Cardinal Begin,
+blessing in the name of God Almighty _our brave warriors who fight so
+valiantly with those of England, France and Belgium_, because _they
+love with true devotion the beauty and the sovereign importance of the
+great cause_ to the triumph of which they sacrifice _their lives--the
+protection of the world threatened by Germanism_.
+
+On Thursday, October 26, 1916, Archbishop Bruchesi, of Montreal, present
+at a funeral service, in Notre-Dame Church, attended by many thousands,
+for the glorious victims of the sacred duty of defending the cause of
+the Allies, eloquently said in part:--
+
+"_They (our heroes) had voluntarily enlisted. Two years ago, they
+organized their Battalion, the glorious 22nd. They enlisted, conscious
+that they were defending the most just of all causes, that of
+Civilization, of Right, of Humanity. They enlisted with the conviction
+that they would serve the interests of their country, for, when oversea,
+they knew that they were defending Canada. They were young and strong;
+one could not see them without admiration._
+
+"_They have made their country's name and their own grand. They have for
+all times immortalized themselves in History, and, by them, Canada has
+been immortalized._
+
+"_The war is not over; it goes on horribly, but our hearts are hopeful.
+It is impossible that they should triumph the men who, during forty
+years, have prepared for the greatest war and who, during two years,
+have torn the world asunder and flooded the earth with blood.
+Impossible that they should triumph the men who have declared this war
+without a right to avenge, without a grievance to redress, without being
+menaced in any way. Impossible that they should triumph those who have
+torn, like a scrap of paper, a pact upon which the nations relied,
+having faith in the pledged word. Impossible that they should triumph
+those who have invaded the territory of valiant Belgium, whose only
+fault was_: TO REMAIN TRUE TO HER HONOUR. _They shall not triumph those
+who, on account of their military service, have made this war a carnage
+and a butchery without precedent in History. I believe in God of all
+Justice. Humanity wanted a suffering which purifies, but when mothers
+shall have wept long enough, God will have His Divine word heard._
+
+"_When this great work is accomplished, and when we shall sing the_ TE
+DEUM _of thanksgiving, we will be able to say that Canada, that all the
+Provinces of Canada, that our Province of Quebec, have deserved their
+share of glory_."
+
+On Tuesday, November 28, 1916, at a funeral service in the Quebec
+Basilica, addressing the large audience rallied to pray for the dead
+heroes, Reverend Mr. Camille Roy, one of the most distinguished
+professors of the Quebec Seminary, said in part:--
+
+"_They went, our officers and soldiers, to serve a great cause. Several
+reasons, perhaps intermingled in their conscience, have inspired their
+courageous decision...._
+
+"_But dominating, penetrating them all, purifying what in them was too
+personal and restricted, was the thought that in doing all this they
+were going to fight with heroic brothers and employ their strength to
+defend what is most venerable on earth: outraged justice._
+
+"_Perhaps they ignored historical secrets and diplomatic complications,
+but they knew the war brutally declared, the treaties torn away, Belgium
+violated, and agonizing, France mutilated and invaded, England, herself,
+chased over the moving frontier of her oceans invaded; they knew the
+destroyed homes, the profanated Cathedrals, the brutally murdered old
+men, women and children, and the flood of barbarians rushing in
+tumultuous waves over the fields of the sweetest country. They knew
+that, over there, two nations to whom we are attached by our political,
+or by our national, life, wanted the support of their sons far away,
+that they had to battle for sacred interests in a war requiring an
+endurance commanding an incessant renewal of our energies; and then,
+without halting to consider if they were obliged to it by laws, they
+have answered the most pressing call of their souls, and have freely
+made the devoted sacrifice._"
+
+What other edifying contrast between the appreciation of the part played
+by the Canadian army by three intellects, one overpowered by an
+inexplicable hostile passion, the two others, inspired by the noblest
+sentiments, rising to the sublime conception of the great sacrifice
+accepted by our brave volunteers, which they express by eloquent words
+who moved the hearts and brought _abundant and warm tears to the eyes of
+those who_ heard or read them.
+
+Where one only sees _depraved_ beings more contemptible _than all those
+which any other country_ could produce or _forge_, the two others, so
+much superior in every way, admire, the first, THOSE WHO WENT TO DEFEND
+THE MOST JUST OF ALL CAUSES, THAT OF CIVILIZATION, OF RIGHT, OF
+HUMANITY; the second, THE SUPERNATURAL BEAUTY OF SACRIFICE THAT THEIR
+BROTHERS IN ARMS HAVE MADE OF THEIR LIVES TO THE JUSTICE OF GOD.
+
+The pamphleteer cruelly attacks those who, to-morrow, will face with
+unfaltering courage the guns of the enemy to defend Civilization and
+avenge the martyrs of barbarity.
+
+The sacred orator blesses the mortal remains of our sons who have fallen
+on the field of honour, on the soil of France, where our forefathers
+were born and bred, with the fervent prayer of their grateful country
+that knows they died heroically "FOR A GREAT CAUSE" TO DEFEND WHAT IS
+MOST VENERABLE ON EARTH: "OUTRAGED JUSTICE."
+
+The following pages from a very eloquent Pastoral Letter by Bishop
+Emard, of the diocese of Valleyfield, will, I am sure, be read with most
+respectful interest by all. They are as follows:--
+
+ "Dear Brethren, we certainly have the right, and we even
+ consider that it is for us all, citizens of Canada, loyal
+ subjects of England, a duty to demand from God the success of
+ the arms of our Mother-country and of her Allies in the present
+ war. If we are not called upon, as a matter of faith, to pass
+ judgment on the true causes of the war, and to divide the
+ responsibilities respecting the calamity which covers Europe
+ with blood, we are surely allowed to think and to say that all
+ the circumstances actually known sufficiently prove that right
+ is on the side of the peoples who have checked the invasion, and
+ discouraged the overflowing of the enemy from his territory, in
+ order that the sentiment of justice may serve to support the
+ devotion of our soldiers, in this great conflict, called the
+ struggle of Civilization against barbarism.
+
+ "The Church of Christ, always the same by her doctrine, has been
+ marvellously constituted by the Divine Wisdom, to adapt her
+ externally everywhere and always, to the infinitely varied
+ circumstances consequent on the diversity of peoples, of
+ governments, of social relations. She has never ceased to
+ practice, by Her Pastors and her faithful children, the great
+ lesson given by Christ: "=Render therefore to Caesar the things
+ that are Caesar's and to God the things that are God's=," and to
+ claim with the Apostle all the rights as well as accept all the
+ duties of citizens and subjects."
+
+After recalling that from the day _Divine Providence, in Her mysterious
+designs_, allowed Canada to pass from the French to the English
+Sovereignty, _the Church, by Her Bishops, has declared that, henceforth,
+it was the duty of the French Canadians to transfer to the British
+Crown, without reserve, the cordial allegiance which the King of France
+had hitherto received from them_, and that since then until the present
+days, the Canadian Episcopate has remained true to his course, Bishop
+Emard proceeds as follows:--
+
+ "We are then, very dear Brethren, in perfect communion of
+ sentiments, action and language, with our venerable predecessors
+ of the Canadian Episcopate, in asking you to-day to address to
+ Heaven fervent prayers for the complete and final success of
+ England and her Allies in the frightful war which is covering
+ the earth with such unheard of horrors."
+
+ The Clergy, never forgetting Peter's word respecting the
+ submission all are in duty bound to practice towards Kings as
+ well as towards all those holding civil power, was always
+ faithful in obeying the Episcopal directions never ceasing to
+ deserve the eulogium which the Bishops expressed to the Pope in
+ their favour.
+
+ "The French-Canadian people, so taught by words and examples,
+ have given in all our history the admirable spectacle of a
+ constant fidelity which circumstances more than once rendered
+ highly meritorious. Such are the true religious and national
+ traditions of our country. They have in our own days, as in the
+ past, found the exact expression suggested by the situation.
+
+ "On the other hand, it appears to us a well established fact,
+ and the most serious minds so proclaim everywhere, that the
+ British Empire, together with France, martyred Belgium and their
+ Allies are actually struggling for the defence of the peoples'
+ Rights and true Liberty. (Card. Begin.) Therefore, very dear
+ Brethren, it must be acknowledged that Canada, herself
+ threatened by the possibilities of a war fought with conditions
+ heretofore unknown, has acted both wisely and loyally in giving,
+ in a manner as generous as it was spontaneous, all the support
+ in her power to the mother-country, England.
+
+ "The Catholics, and especially those of French origin, have not
+ remained behind in this manifestation of true patriotism. If it
+ was well to make a comparison between the other groups, from the
+ standpoint of the free and generous participation of all to the
+ European war, it would be necessary, in the respective figures
+ obtainable, to take into account several elements which are
+ perhaps not sufficiently considered.
+
+ "But this is not the real question. It is sufficient to show and
+ to note for historical authenticity that, with the encouragement
+ and the blessings of their Pastors, and true to their constant
+ tradition, the Canadian Catholics, as a whole, have, in this
+ frightful conflict proved the perfect loyalty which is the sound
+ expression of true patriotism, and which is blessed by the
+ Church and by God.
+
+ "Thousands and thousands of our young men, for a large number of
+ them at the cost of particular and most painful sacrifices, and
+ in many cases, without being able to give to their race the
+ benefit of their chivalrous devotion, have gone, oversea, to
+ fight and die for the cause which was proved to them noble and
+ urgent.
+
+ "Moreover, all over the country, the courage of our soldiers was
+ echoed and answered by many active and important works
+ characterized by charitable solidarity, and this universal
+ co-operative and sympathetic movement must be supported by the
+ sentiments of faith and piety.
+
+ "Since we are, at all costs, engaged in a disastrous war, the
+ causes of which we have not to discuss and judge, but the
+ consequences of which will necessarily reach our country, and
+ since our Canadian soldiers are battling under the British flag,
+ with the clear conscience of an honourable duty loyally and
+ freely accepted, it is just, it is legitimate that our prayers
+ do accompany them on the very fields of battles to support their
+ courage, and that these prayers ascend to Heaven to implore
+ victory for our armies."
+
+Evidently the venerable Bishop of Valleyfield is far from believing,
+like the publicist whose errors we must all deplore, that in organizing
+a powerful army "_to go overseas to fight and die for the noble and
+urgent cause so proved to them_," the Canadian Parliament "_were forging
+for us a militarism without parallel in any other civilized country, a
+depraved and undisciplined soldiery, an armed scoundrelism, without
+faith nor law_."
+
+The blessings of the Head of the Canadian Church and those of the whole
+Episcopate have consolated our brave volunteers for the outrages thrust
+at them, and have inspired them with the great Christian courage to
+forgive their author. The only revenge they have taken against their
+accuser has been to defend himself and his own against the barbarous
+Germans.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+RASH DENUNCIATION OF PUBLIC MEN.
+
+
+A long experience of public life, whether by daily observation, begun in
+my early youth, when the Union of the Provinces was finally discussed,
+carried and established, or, subsequently, during many years of active
+political life as a journalist and member of the Quebec and Ottawa
+representative Houses, has taught me to judge the actions of responsible
+men, whether ministerialists or oppositionists, with great fairness and
+respectful regard. At all times the government of a large progressive
+country peopled by several races, of different religious creeds, is a
+difficult problem. It should not be necessary to say that in days of
+warlike crisis, of previously unknown proportions, like the present one,
+the task becomes almost superhuman. Anyone taking into serious
+consideration the very trying ordeal through which, for instance, the
+rulers of Great Britain and France have been, and are still passing,
+since early in 1914, cannot help being indulgent for those who have the
+weighty and often crushing burden of the cares of State. Let so much be
+said without in the least contesting the right of free men to their own
+opinion about what is best to be done. But it was never more opportune
+to remember that the honourable privilege of constitutional criticism
+must have for its only superior object the good of the country by
+improved methods.
+
+We have reason to congratulate ourselves that this sound view has widely
+prevailed rallying almost as units great nations,--our own one of
+them--previously much divided in political thoughts and aspirations, for
+the noble and patriotic purpose of winning a disastrous war they were
+forced to wage, in spite of their most determined efforts to prevent it.
+
+Public men, nations rulers, like all others are human and liable to fail
+or to be found wanting. Unconscious inefficiency, however desirable to
+remove, cannot be fairly classed on the same footing as guilty failures.
+The first may, more or less, injure the bright prospects of a country;
+the second stains her honour which an exemplary punishment can alone
+redeem.
+
+But it is said with much truth that there are always exceptions to a
+general rule. That of the human heart to be fallible in public life, as
+well as in other callings, has met with only one solitary exception in
+Canada: the saintly Nationalist leader who will never have his equal,
+"nature having destroyed the mould when she cast him."
+
+Considering the outrageous language he thrusted at the Canadians of the
+three British races and at our heroic volunteers, it is not to be
+supposed that he was so tender-hearted as to spare the public men, not
+only of Canada, but of all the Allied Nations.
+
+When he affirmed that the real and only cause of the war had been, and
+was still, the voracious greed of capitalist speculators, especially of
+the two leading belligerents, Great Britain and Germany, united together
+to profit to the tune of hundreds of millions out of the production of
+warship building and materials of all sorts, was he not charging all the
+statesmen and leading politicians of all the peoples at war, of having
+bowed either consciously to the dictates of traitors to their countries,
+or of having been stupidly blind to the guilty manipulations of
+financial banditti?
+
+It would take many pages only to make a summary of the injurious words
+he has addressed to the Canadian public men of all shades of
+opinion--with the only exception of the Nationalist--on account of the
+support they have given, in one way or another, to the Dominion's
+participation in the war. He qualified as a _Revolution_ the policy by
+which we willingly decided to take part in the wars of the Empire
+whenever we came to the conclusion that England was fighting for a just
+cause.
+
+On the 23rd of April, 1917, he wrote as follows:--
+
+"_Very often we have shown the evident revolutionary character of the
+Canadian intervention in the European conflict._"
+
+After repeating his absolutely absurd pretention, according to the sound
+principles of Constitutional Law, that Canada could have intervened in
+the war as a "_nation_" he found fault with all and every one because
+"_we are fighting to defend the Empire_." He went on and said with his
+natural sweetness of language:--
+
+"_The politicians of the two parties and the whole servile and mercenary
+press have applied themselves to this revolutionary work.... For a long
+time past the party leaders are the tools of British Imperialism and of_
+BRITISH HIGH FINANCE."
+
+And not satisfied with having thus slashed all the party leaders, all
+the chiefs of the State, he turns round, in an access of passionate
+indignation, and charges not only all the leading social classes, but
+even the Bishops, the worthy leaders of the Church, as the accomplices
+of the Imperialist revolution. He thrusts the terrible blow as
+follows:--
+
+"_But what the war has produced of entirely new and most disconcerting,
+is the moral support and complicity which the_ "IMPERIALIST REVOLUTION"
+_has found in all the leading social classes_. BISHOPS, _financiers,
+publicists and professionals went into the movement with a unity, an
+ardour, a zeal which reveal the effective strength of the laborious
+propaganda of which Lord Grey has been the most powerful worker prior to
+the war_."
+
+So that there should be no mistake about its true meaning, he favoured
+his readers with a very clear explanation indeed of what, in his
+opinion, has transformed our meritorious and loyal intervention in the
+war into a guilty revolutionary movement. He wrote as follows:--
+
+"_But what the Imperialists wanted, and what they have succeeded in
+obtaining, was to bind Canada to the fate of England, in the name of the
+principle of Imperial solidarity and--as we shall see in a moment--to
+the cause of_ 'UNIVERSAL DEMOCRACY'."
+
+Thus, in the Nationalist leader's opinion, it is a great crime to help
+England and her Allies to win a war the loss of which would most likely
+have destroyed the British Empire, involving our own ruin in the
+downfall of the mighty political edifice to be replaced, in the glorious
+shelter it gives to human freedom, by the triumphant German autocratic
+rule and its universal domination. It is, to say the least, an
+extravagant notion to pretend that the war has afforded the Imperialists
+the opportunity--eagerly seized--"_to tie Canada_" hand and foot, "_to
+the fate of England_."
+
+If I am not mistaken--and I am positively sure I am right in so
+saying--Canada was bound to the fate of England the very day when--by
+Providential decree, in that instance as well as with regard to
+everything earthly--she passed under British Sovereignty. The worthy
+leaders of our Church so considered--and have since unanimously
+considered--at once taking the sound Christian stand that the French
+Canadians were, in duty bound, to accept their new political status in
+good faith, and to loyally support their new mother country whenever
+circumstances would require their devoted help, whilst revering the old
+as every child must do, if he is blessed with a good heart, when
+separated by unforeseen events from the home of his happy youth.
+
+I must acknowledge that with some of our French Canadians of the first
+class and standing, the word "Democracy" savours with soreness. Well
+read in all that pertains to the great epoch of the first French
+tremendous Revolution, they abhor, with much reason, the extravagant and
+false principles of the BOLSHEVIKISM of those days, which culminated in
+the frightful period of the "terrorism" which, for three long years and
+more, kept its strong knee on France's throat, her fair soil flooded
+with the innocent blood of her children. They are apt to be laid to the
+confusion that democratic government is in almost every case, if not
+always, synonymous of revolutionary institutions, in as much as it
+cannot, they believe and say, be otherwise than destructive of the
+principle of "Authority," certainly as essential as that of "Liberty,"
+both as the necessary fundamental basis of all good governments.
+
+Knowing this, the Nationalist leader, who has evidently abjured his
+liberalism of former days, which he was wont to parade in such
+resounding sentences, multiplies his efforts to capture the support of
+the few members of our most venerable Clergy whom he supposes labouring
+under the aforesaid delusion. He would not lose the chance of trading on
+their feelings and sincere conviction, in boldly declaring that his good
+friends, the cursed Imperialists, had managed to drag the Dominion
+through the mire of the European war by blandishing before the eyes of
+the Canadian people, so enamoured of their constitutional liberties, the
+supposed dangerous spectre of "_universal democracy_."
+
+If, in reality, democratic government could not help being either the
+"French revolutionary terrorism," of 1792-95,--which even frightened
+such a staunch friend of Political Liberty as Burke--or the Russian
+criminal bolshevikism of our own trying days, we would be forced, in
+dire sadness, to despair of the world's future, as Humanity would be
+forever doomed to ebb and flow between the sanguinary "absolutism"
+either of "autocratic" or "terrorist" tyrants.
+
+Happily, we can, in all sincerity, affirm that such is not the case. Is
+it not sufficient, as a most reassuring proof, to point at the wonderful
+achievements of free institutions, first, under the monarchical
+democratic system of Great Britain and her autonomous Dominions; second,
+under the republican regime of the United States.
+
+After many long years of earnest study and serious thinking, I cannot
+draw the very depressing conclusion that the two basic principles of
+sound government--Authority and Liberty--cannot be brought to work
+harmoniously together for the happiness and prosperity of nations, as
+far as they can be achieved in this world of sufferings and sacrifices.
+Such a conclusion would also be contrary to true Christian teachings,
+the Almighty having created man a free being with a responsible and
+immortal soul.
+
+Nations who, forgetful of the obligations of moral laws, indulge in
+guilty abuse of their liberties, are, sooner or later, as individuals
+doing alike, sure to meet with the due Providential punishment they have
+deserved. But, also like individuals, they can redeem themselves in
+repenting for their past errors, due to uncontrolled passions, and by
+resolutely and "FREELY" returning to the path of their sacred duty.
+
+The Nationalist leader also deplores, as one of their guilty
+achievements, the fact that the "_war had ended all equivocals and
+consummated the complete alliance of the two parties_," to favour, as he
+asserts, of course, the enterprises of the dreaded Imperialism.
+
+True to the kind appreciation he has pledged himself to make of the
+inspiring dark motives actuating the conduct of public men, he sweetly
+added:--
+
+"_The truce arrived at in 1914 could not, it is true, resist the thirst
+for power. "Blues" and "Reds" have recommenced tearing themselves about
+patronage, places, planturous contracts and "boodle." But with regard to
+the substantial question itself, and to the Imperialist revolution
+brought on and sanctioned by the war, they have remained in accord._"
+
+It could not strike such a prejudiced mind as that of the Nationalist
+leader, that political chieftains, and their respective supporters,
+could conscientiously unite to save their country, their Empire and the
+world from an impending terrible disaster, and yet freely and
+conscientiously differ as to the best means to achieve the sacred object
+to the success of which they have pledged, and they continue to make,
+their best and most patriotic efforts.
+
+The public men, and even the private citizens, who, not believing that
+he speaks and writes with Divine inspiration, dare to differ from the
+Nationalist leader, cannot, in his opinion, do so unless influenced by
+unworthy corrupt motives. And he further draws the awful conclusion
+"_that it is his duty to note the ever increasing revolutionary
+character that the European war, as a whole, is assuming on the side of
+the Allies_."
+
+To support this last and absolutely unfounded charge, he positively
+asserts that the joint "_policy of the statesmen, politicians and
+journalists, has much less for its object to liberate oppressed nations
+like Belgium, Servia_, IRELAND, _Poland and Finland, from a foreign
+yoke, than to overthrow in all the countries, allies or enemies, the
+monarchical form of government_."
+
+And then follows a most virulent diatribe by which he points, in
+support of his wild conclusion aforesaid, to the Russian revolution,
+charging "_the officious and reptile press of the Allied countries to
+have joined in spreading the legend that it had been precipitated by
+German intrigues at the Court of the Czar, and to have accused the
+ill-fated Emperor to have been the spy and the accomplice of the enemies
+of his country_."
+
+At this hour of the day, in the turmoil of flashing events perhaps never
+before equalled in suddenness, pregnant with such alarming, or
+comforting, prospective consequences, it is much too early to attempt
+passing a reliable judgment on the true causes which produced the
+Moscovite revolution so soon and so dastardly developed into criminal
+"bolshevikism." The question must be left for History to settle when
+peace is restored and the sources of truth are wide opened to the
+impartial investigations of high class historians.
+
+However, enough is known to prove that Mr. Bourassa's charge is
+altogether unfounded. Anyone conversant with Russian history for the two
+last centuries, is aware that German influences and intrigues have
+always played a great part in the Capital of that fallen Empire. From
+the very beginning of the war, it became evident that they were actively
+at work at the Petrograd Court, thwarting the Emperor's efforts and
+those of his advisers, military and civil, he could trust, to be true to
+the cause he had sworn to defend with France and England.
+
+The Nationalist leader, I hope, is the only man still to wonder at this,
+after all that has been discovered proving what Germany has tried to
+bribe the political leaders and the press of the Allies, with too much
+success in France, England and the United States.
+
+Russia has been for too many years the favourite soil where Germany was
+sowing her corrupt intrigues, to let any sensible man suppose that she
+would kindly withdraw from the preferred field of her infamous
+operations, at the very time she was exerting herself with such energy,
+and at the cost of so many millions, to extend her vast spy system
+almost all over the earth,--Canada included--debauching consciences
+right and left.
+
+Is it unfair to say, for instance, after the event as it developed, that
+Roumania was prematurely brought into the war in consequence of the dark
+German machinations at Petrograd, with the evident understanding that
+the military operations, both on the Teutonic and Moscovite sides, were
+to be so conducted as to rush poor Roumania into a most disastrous
+defeat, in order to feed the Central Empires with the products of the
+fertile Roumanian soil?
+
+No representative man of any consequence has pretended that the
+unfortunate Czar was himself a party to that treason of the Allied
+cause. He has likely been the victim of his own weakness in not using
+what was left to him of his personal autocratic power to silence the
+sympathies of the friends of Germany at his Imperial Court, and even in
+his most intimate circle, rather than exhausting it in a supreme, but
+doomed, attempt at checking the rising tide of popular aspirations sure,
+as always, to overflow to frightful excesses, if unwisely compressed.
+
+Almost daily witnessing the successive miscarriages of so many of the
+Russian military operations, too often by the failure of the
+ammunitions, supplied to such a large extent by the Allies, to reach the
+Russian soldiers, or by other inexplicable causes, it is not surprising
+that the people at large became suspicious of their government which
+they soon believed to be under German tutorage.
+
+The rapid, almost sudden, overthrow of the Russian autocratic Empire can
+be accepted as evidence that the movement in favour of a change which
+would more efficiently conduct Russia's share of the conflict, was
+widespread. The goal it aimed at, once reached, and Russia proclaimed a
+Republic, with a regular _de facto_ government under the leadership of
+abler men, whose patriotism was proved by their words, but more surely
+by their deeds, France, England, Italy and the United States cannot be
+reasonably reproached with having unduly opened diplomatic relations
+with the new Moscovite authorities.
+
+Unfortunately, once successful in her intrigues at the Petrograd Court,
+soon to fall under the weight of popular exasperation, Germany tried her
+hand in a triumphant, but shameful, way with the fiery sanguinary and
+treasonable element always to be found operating in the darkest corners
+for their own criminal purposes. The calamitous outcome has been
+"bolchevikism" betraying their country in the light of day, without
+blushing, without hiding their faces in eternal shame, and signing, with
+their hands stained with the blood of their own kin, the infamous treaty
+of Brest-Litovsk dismembering poor Russia, scattering to the winds her
+fond hopes of a grand future at the very dawn of the better days
+promised by a free constitution, and plunging her in the throes of
+German autocratic domination.
+
+With regard to the Nationalist leader's rash denunciation of public men,
+I have only a few more words to say. My personal recollections going
+back to the early sixties of the last century, for several years free
+from all party affiliations, unbiassed by any sympathies or prejudices,
+I consider it my duty to say that, on the whole, Canadian public life,
+as well as British public life, is honourable and entitled to the
+respect of public opinion. Out of hundreds and thousands of politicians,
+both in the Motherland and in our own Dominion, there may have been
+failings. It would be useless, even pernicious, to point at them. The
+revulsion of public feeling towards the fallen for cause, and the severe
+judgment of misdeeds by the impartial historian, has been the deserved
+punishment of the few who have prevaricated. I prefer by far to take my
+lofty inspiration from the galaxy of faithful public servants who, from
+all parties, and from various standpoints, have given the fruits of
+their intelligence, of their learning, of their hard work--and in many
+cases--of their private wealth, for the good of their country. In the
+course of the last fifty-five years, I have known hundreds of our public
+men who lived through, and came out of, a long political life getting
+poorer every day without being disheartened and retiring from the public
+service to which they were devoted to the last. Need I point, as
+examples, to the cases of several men who, departed for a better world,
+Parliament, irrespective of all party considerations, united to a man to
+vote a yearly allowance of a few hundred dollars to save their surviving
+widows and children from actual want and destitution!
+
+Just as well as the Canadians of the three British races, and the
+gallant volunteers of our heroic army, Canadian and British public men
+can rest assured that from the high position they occupy in the world's
+estimation, they are far above the fanatical aspersions of the
+Nationalist leader blinded by the wild suggestions of an inexhaustible
+thirst of rash condemnation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+MR. BOURASSA'S DANGEROUS PACIFISM.
+
+
+Two historical truths, undeniable, bright as the shining light of the
+finest summer day, which have triumphantly challenged the innumerable
+falsehoods to the contrary constantly circulated by Germany, even prior
+to the outbreak of the hostilities, are:--
+
+First, that all the countries united under the title--the Allies, have
+been energetically in favour of MAINTAINING THE PEACE OF THE WORLD, when
+it became evident, for all sensible people, that Germany was eagerly
+watching her opportunity to strike the blow she had prepared for the
+previous forty years on such a gigantic scale.
+
+Second, that, once engaged in the conflict against their deliberate
+will, and in spite of their noble efforts to prevent the war which they
+clearly foresaw would be most calamitous, they have always remained the
+staunch supporters of the RESTORATION OF PEACE upon the two _sine qua
+non_ conditions of JUSTICE and DURABILITY.
+
+To achieve these two objectives, they have been fighting for now more
+than four years, at tremendous cost of men and treasures, and they are
+determined to fight until victorious.
+
+They would all lay down their arms to-morrow, if the results so
+important for the future of Humanity could be secured with certainty.
+
+Like all great causes, PEACE WITH JUSTICE AND DURABILITY has had its
+TRUE and its FALSE friends.
+
+The TRUE friends of PEACE were those who realized from the very
+beginning of the frightful struggle that it was perfectly useless to
+expect it, if the disastrous Prussian Militarism was to be maintained
+and allowed to continue threatening Civilization.
+
+The TRUE friends of PEACE were those who pledged their honour not to
+sheathe the sword they had been forced to draw before Germany would
+acknowledge that she had no right to violate solemn treaties, and would
+agree to redeem the crime she had committed in invading the neutral
+territory of Belgium which she trampled under her ironed heels and
+crucified.
+
+The TRUE friends of PEACE were those who determined to bring Germany to
+renounce the abominable principles she has professed, training the mind
+of her peoples to believe and proclaim that MIGHT is RIGHT and the only
+sound basis of INTERNATIONAL LAW.
+
+The TRUE friends of PEACE were those who, however anxious they were to
+have it restored as soon as possible--fervently praying the Almighty to
+that purpose--, knowing what are the principles of International Law
+recognized by all truly civilized nations, could not forgive Germany,
+UNLESS SHE SINCERELY REPENTED, the barbarism she displayed in her
+murderous submarine campaign, and practised in Belgium, Northern France
+and in every piece of belligerent territory her armies occupied.
+
+The TRUE friends of PEACE were those who clearly understood that to meet
+the two essential conditions of JUSTICE and DURABILITY, it was
+PRACTICALLY IMPOSSIBLE to secure it by a compromise which could not, by
+any means, protect the world against further German attempts at
+universal military domination.
+
+The FALSE friends of PEACE were those who said and wrote, in sheer
+defiance of truth, that the Allies, more especially England and Russia,
+were as much responsible for the war as Germany herself.
+
+The FALSE friends of PEACE were those who falsely alleged that the
+Allies were preventing it by their repeated declarations that their
+principal war aim was to destroy, not only the German Empire, but also
+the German race, thus wilfully and maliciously pretending that to battle
+for the abolition of Teutonic militarism, weighing so heavily on all the
+nations, was equal, in guilty knowledge, to fighting for an enemy's race
+destruction.
+
+The FALSE friends of PEACE were those who were ready to sanction, at any
+time, a compromise between HEROIC and criminal war aims, which would
+leave future generations to the tender mercies of a Sovereign Power
+straining every nerve to dominate the world by the foulest means ever
+devised.
+
+The FALSE friends of PEACE were those whose daily effort was to
+dishearten their countrymen from the noble and patriotic task they had
+bravely undertaken with the strong will to accomplish it at all costs,
+knowing, as they did, that it was a question of life or death for human
+Civilization.
+
+"Defeatists," as they are called, to mean the shameless supporters of
+PEACE negotiations to be opened by the Allies acknowledging their defeat
+and the victory of Germany, there were, and there are, in all the
+"Allied" belligerent nations. No one need be too much surprised at the
+hideous fact. In all countries, at all times, under the direst
+circumstances, when it is most important, in very distressing hours,
+that all be of one mind, of one heart, to save the nation's existence,
+are to be found heartless, low minded, cowardly beings, ready to betray
+their countrymen rather than stand the strain of their due share of
+sacrifices, or, which is still far worse, for corrupt motives, to
+deliver them over to the enemy.
+
+"Defeatists" we have had, we have yet, in Canada, in the Province of
+Quebec. Most happily, they are few and far between.
+
+Imbued with the false notions he has so tenaciously ventilated
+respecting Canada's participation in the war, it is no wonder that the
+Nationalist leader was sure to be found at the head of the small group
+of PACIFISTS, at almost any cost, mustered amongst the French
+Canadians. A sower of prejudices, he was bound to watch with eagerness
+the growing crop of ill-feelings he was fostering.
+
+Those of us who oppose all, and any, participation by the Dominion in
+the wars of the Empire, be they even so just, so honourable, so
+necessary, under Mr. Bourassa's deplorable leadership, were naturally
+supporters of any kind of "PACIFISM."
+
+I will not classify the Nationalist leader and his dupes as
+"_defeatists_," who were ready to accept peace as the consequence of
+defeat. The real "_pacifists_," so far as it is possible to ascertain
+their views, unable, consciously or not, to see any difference in the
+respective responsibilities of the belligerents in opening the war,
+consider that they are equally guilty in not closing it.
+
+Most happily, such a disordered opinion is shared only by a small
+minority. It can be positively affirmed that public opinion, the world
+over, outside the Central Empires and their swayed allies, is almost
+unanimous that Germany, through her military party and the junkers
+element, is responsible for the dire calamity she has brought on
+Humanity. The question of the restoration of "PEACE" must be viewed from
+this starting point--the only true one.
+
+The standpoints of the TRUE and the FALSE friends of PEACE being so far
+apart, the conclusions they draw are naturally widely different.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+A MOST REPREHENSIBLE ABUSE OF SACRED APPEALS TO THE BELLIGERENT NATIONS.
+
+
+I cannot qualify in milder words the use Mr. Bourassa has made of the
+solemn appeals His Holiness the Pope of Rome has, at different dates,
+addressed to the belligerent nations in favour of the restoration of
+peace. I bear to the Head of the Church I am so happy to belong such a
+profound respect and devotion that I will scrupulously abstain from any
+comment of the Sovereign Pontiff's writings and addresses. I have read
+them several times over with the greatest attention and veneration, so
+sure I was that, emanating from the highest spiritual Authority in the
+world, they were exclusively inspired by the ardent desire to promote a
+recurrence to good-will amongst men, in obedience to the Divine precept.
+
+Having to reproach the Nationalist leader with having abused of the
+weighty words of His Holiness, to support his own misconceptions of duty
+as a loyal British subject and a Christian publicist, I will refrain
+with great care from writing a sentence which might be construed as the
+shadow of an attempt to do the same.
+
+I will take from Mr. Bourassa's own comments of the Sovereign Pontiff's
+appeals, the two conclusions upon which he lays great stress, and which
+clearly summarize the convictions of His Holiness Pope Benedict XV.
+
+Praying with all the powers of His heart and soul for the orderly future
+of the world, the Sovereign Pontiff implored, in the most touching
+terms, the belligerent nations to agree to a "JUST AND DURABLE PEACE."
+
+As it was certain, even if He had not said so with such pathetic
+expressions, His Holiness drew the saddest possible picture of the
+untold misfortunes war, carried on in such vast proportions, was
+inflicting upon the peoples waging the struggle.
+
+I will only quote the few following words from the first letter of His
+Holiness, dated July 28, 1915:--
+
+"_It cannot be said that the immense conflict cannot be terminated
+without armed violence._"
+
+No one can take exception to this truism, authoritatively expressed
+under circumstances greatly adding to its importance and to its solemn
+announcement. It is just as true to-day as it was,--and has been ever
+since,--when the whole world was passing through the crucial ordeal of
+the days during which England and France were almost imploring Germany
+not to plunge the earth into the horrors of the war she was determined
+to bring on.
+
+The questions at stake could then have been easily settled without
+"ARMED VIOLENCE," if the Imperial Government of Berlin had listened to
+the pressing demand of Great Britain in favour of the maintenance of
+peace.
+
+It is scarcely believable that the Nationalist leader has abused of
+those weighty words to the point of attempting to persuade the
+French-Canadians that the Allies, even more than the Rulers of the
+Central Empires, have refused to listen to the prayers of the Pope. In
+January last, he published a new pamphlet, entitled "THE POPE, ARBITER
+OF PEACE," in which he reproduced from "Le Devoir" his numerous
+articles, from August 1914, on the intervention of the Sovereign Pontiff
+in favour of the cessation of the hostilities, and on the current events
+of the times.
+
+The oft-repeated diatribes of Mr. Bourassa against England were bound to
+be once more edited in the above pamphlet. Their author, in a true
+fatherly way, not willing to allow them to die under the contempt they
+deserve, would not lose the chance to have them to survive in tackling
+them with his comments on His Holiness' letters.
+
+This pamphlet, the worthy sequel of its predecessors which, for the good
+of Mr. Bourassa's compatriots, should never have seen the light of day,
+would call for many more refutable quotations than I can undertake to
+make in this work. A few will suffice to show the deplorable purport of
+the whole book.
+
+In his letter dated, July 28, 1915, the Pope wrote:--
+
+"_In presence of Divine Providence, we conjure the belligerent nations,
+to henceforth put an end to the horrible carnage which, for a year,
+dishonours Europe._"
+
+Positively informed about the horrible crimes committed by command of
+the German military authorities in Belgium, and Northern France, and by
+the ferocious Turks in Armenia, well might His Holiness say that Europe
+was being dishonoured by such barbarous deeds. If the military
+operations had been conducted by the nations of the Alliance in
+conformity with the principles of International Law, most likely the
+Pope would not have used the same language. For, however much to be
+regretted are the sufferings inseparable from a military conflict
+carried on with the utmost regards for the fair claims of human feelings
+and justice, it could not have been pretended that such a war was a
+dishonour for the belligerents on both sides, especially when fighting
+with an equally sincere conviction that they are defending a just cause.
+
+Referring to recent history, none asserted, for instance, that the
+Russo-Japanese war was a dishonour to Europe and Asia. It was fought out
+honourably on both sides. Peace was restored without leaving bitter and
+burning recollections in the minds of either peoples. And when Germany
+dishonoured herself and stained Humanity with blushing shame, both
+Russia and Japan joined together to avenge Civilization.
+
+Let us now see how Mr. Bourassa distorted the words of the Pope so as to
+use them for his own purpose of misrepresenting the true stand of the
+Allies, and more especially of England.
+
+The first sentence of his article dated, August 3, 1915, to be found at
+page 11 of the pamphlet, under the title: "_The Pope's Appeal_," reads
+thus:--
+
+"_The anniversary of the hurling of the sanguinary fury which makes of
+Europe the shame of Humanity has inspired the Rulers of peoples with
+resounding words._"
+
+And after eulogizing the Pope's intervention, he adds:--"_that men will
+not hear his voice, drunk as they are with pride, revenge and blood_."
+
+This may be cunningly worded, but it should deceive nobody.
+
+One cannot help being indignant at the contemptible attempt to place the
+Allies on the same footing as the Central Empires with regard to the
+responsibility _in hurling the sanguinary fury in 1914_.
+
+The plain, incontrovertible, truth is that the outbreak of the war was a
+shame, not for Humanity, the victim of Teutonic treachery, but for
+Germany herself; whilst the sacred union of Belgium, France, England and
+their allies to resist the barbarous onslaught hurled at them all, was
+an honour for Civilization and the promise of an heroic redemption.
+
+At page 12 of the pamphlet, he closes the first paragraph with the
+following words:--"_since the fatal days when peoples supposed to be
+Christian hurled themselves at one another in a foolish rage of
+destruction, of revenge and hatred_." In French, it reads
+thus:--"_depuis le jour fatal ou les peuples soi-disant chretiens se
+sont rues les uns contre les autres, dans une rage folle de destruction,
+de vengeance et de haine_."
+
+Read as a whole, with the full meaning they were intended to convey,
+those words constitute a daring falsehood. Historical events of the
+highest importance cannot be construed at will. There are facts so
+positively true, and known to be such, that they should preclude any
+possibility of deceit.
+
+It is absolutely false that, _on a fatal day_ of mid-summer, 1914,
+_peoples hurled themselves at one another_. What really took place, in
+the glaring light of day, was that Germany, fully prepared for the fray,
+_hurled_ herself at weak Belgium, throwing to the waste basket the
+scraps of the solemn treaties by which she was in honour bound to
+respect Belgian neutrality. She had first opened the disastrous game by
+_hurling_ her vassal, Austria, at weak Servia.
+
+Rushing her innumerable victorious armies over Belgian trodden soil, she
+_hurled_ herself at France with the ultimate design to _hurl_ herself at
+England.
+
+That in so doing, Germany was _raging_ with a _foolish_ thirst of
+_destruction, of revenge and hatred_, is certainly true. But Mr.
+Bourassa's guilt is in his assertion that the victims of Germany's
+_sanguinary fury_ were actuated by the same criminal motives in
+heroically defending their homes, their wives, their children, their
+all, against the barbarians once more bursting out of Central Europe,
+this time bent on overthrowing human freedom.
+
+Is the respectable citizen who bravely defends himself against the
+ruffian who _hurls_ himself at his throat, to be compared with his
+murderous assailant?
+
+But England was not alone in _hurling_ herself at Germany, as Mr.
+Bourassa so cordially says. Without a word, even a sign, by the only
+momentum of her _furious outburst of foolish destruction_, she was
+followed by the whole of her Empire. How much we, Canadians, were, for
+instance, deluded, the Nationalist leader is kind enough to tell us in
+his ever sweet language.
+
+When the Parliament of Ottawa unanimously decided that it was the duty
+of the British Dominion of Canada to participate in the war; when
+Canadian public opinion throughout the length and breadth of the land,
+almost unanimously approved of this loyal and patriotic decision, we,
+poor unfortunate Canadians, thought that we were heartily and nobly
+joining with the mother-country to avenge "OUTRAGED JUSTICE," to rush to
+the rescue of violated Belgium, of France, once more threatened with
+agony under the brutal Teutonic ironed heels, of the whole world--Mr.
+Bourassa's commanding personality included--menaced with the HUNS'
+DOMINATION.
+
+How sadly mistaken we were, Mr. Bourassa tells us. According to this
+infallible judge of the righteousness or criminality of historical
+events, we were labouring under a paroxysm of passion--_of a rage of
+foolish destruction, of vengeance and hatred_.
+
+Once overpowered by this vituperative mood of calumnious accusations,
+the Nationalist leader slashes England, as follows,--page 18--:--
+
+"_England has violently destroyed more national rights than all the
+other European countries united together. By force or deceit, she has
+swallowed up a fourth of the earthly globe; by conquest, and more
+especially by corruption and the purchase of consciences, she has
+subjugated more peoples than there were, in the whole human history,
+ever brought under the same sceptre._"
+
+Thus, in Mr. Bourassa's impartial estimation, the depredations and
+slaughters of the hordes commanded by Attila, the savagery of the Turks
+of old and present days, the crimes of Germany in this great war, are
+only insignificant trifles compared with the horrors of British history.
+Shame on such outrageous misrepresentation of historical truth.
+
+Mr. Bourassa accuses England to have _by force or deceit swallowed up a
+fourth of the earthly globe_. Considering the happy and flourishing
+condition of the vast British Empire, the Nationalist leader, as every
+one else, must admit that England is endowed with great digestive
+powers, as she does not show the least sign that she suffers from
+national dyspepsia from having swallowed up a fourth of the universe.
+Her national digestion is evidently sound and healthy, for instead of
+weakening and decaying, she grows every day in strength, in stature, in
+freedom, in prestige, and, above all, in WISDOM.
+
+The Nationalist leader has thought proper to express his formal hatred
+of militarism. One would naturally suppose that, in so doing, he should
+have pointed at the worst kind of militarism ever devised--the German
+type of our own days. Let no one be mistaken about it. At page 58 of his
+pamphlet, Mr. Bourassa bursts out as follows in the top paragraph:--
+
+"_As a matter of fact, of all kinds of militarism, of all the
+instruments of brutal domination, the naval supremacy of England is the
+most redoubtable, the most execrable for the whole world; for it rules
+over all the continents, hindering the free relations of all the
+peoples._"
+
+Was I really deluded when I felt sure that in peaceful times, British
+naval supremacy on the seas was not interfering in the least with the
+freest commercial intercourse of all the nations, whose mercantile ships
+can, by British laws, enter freely into all the ports of Great Britain?
+Mr. Bourassa's assertion to the contrary, I shall not, by the least
+shadow, alter my opinion which is positively sound.
+
+From the above last quotation, I have the right to infer that Mr.
+Bourassa is very sorry that, in war times like those we have seen since
+July 1914, British naval supremacy is sufficiently paramount to protect
+the United Kingdom from starvation, to keep the coasts of France opened
+to the mercantile ships of the Allies and of all the neutral nations, to
+"rule the waves" against both the German military and mercantile fleets,
+chased away from the oceans by the British guns thundering at the
+Teutonic pirates on land and sea. If he is, he can be sure that he is
+alone to cry and weep at a fact which rejoices all the true and loyal
+friends of freedom and justice.
+
+Mr. Bourassa cherishes a wish that will certainly not be granted. He
+will not be happy unless England agrees to give up her naval supremacy
+to please Germany. Let him rest quietly on his two ears; the dawn of
+such a calamitous day is yet very far distant.
+
+At the end of page 12, Mr. Bourassa asserts that _the Germans proclaim
+their_ RIGHT _to "Germanize" Europe and the world, and that the English
+imperiously affirm their_ RIGHT _to maintain their Imperial power over
+the seas and to oppose "Anglo-Saxonism" to "pan-Germanism."_--
+
+I have already refuted the Nationalist leader's pretention, and informed
+him that England, no more than any other country, has no "Sovereign
+rights" on the seas outside the coastal limits as prescribed by
+International Law. He appears totally unable to understand the simple
+truth that Great Britain's sea supremacy is nothing more nor less than
+the superiority of her naval strength created, at an immense cost, out
+of sheer necessity, to protect the United Kingdom from the domination of
+a great continental power.
+
+Does he not know that, in the days prior to England's creation of her
+mighty fleet, she has been easily conquered by invaders? Is he aware of
+the great British historical fact called the Norman Conquest? Has he
+never heard that before starting on his triumphant march across Europe,
+culminating at Austerlitz, the great Napoleon had planned an invasion of
+England, with every prospects of success, if he had not been deterred
+from carrying it out by the continental coalition which, calling into
+play the resources of his mighty genius, he so victoriously crushed and
+dispersed? Has he never read anything about panic stricken England until
+she was relieved from the dangers of the projected invasion?
+
+Does he not realize that, unless they were madmen, no British ministers
+will ever consent to renounce their "UNDOUBTED RIGHT" to be ever ready
+for any emergency, to save their country from enslavement by would-be
+dashing invaders? It is the height of political nonsense to suppose that
+responsible public men ever could be so blind, or so recreant to their
+most sacred duty, as to follow the wild course recommended by
+extravagantly prejudiced "Nationalists."
+
+The man who would throw away his weapons of defense would have nothing
+else to do but to kneel down and implore the tender mercy of his
+criminal aggressor. Truly loyal subjects of the Empire cannot clamour to
+bring England down to such an humiliating position. They know too well
+that if ever matters came to so disastrous a pass, Great Britain could
+easily be starved into irremediable submission with the consequent and
+immediate destruction of the whole fabric of the Empire. A Nationalist,
+yawning for such an end, may suggest the best way to reach it. But no
+loyal man, sincerely wishing the maintenance of the great British
+Commonwealth, will ever do so.
+
+No wonder that he who came out openly in favour of Imperial Federation
+for the express purpose of ruining the Empire, endeavours to achieve his
+most cherished object in first destroying British naval supremacy on the
+seas. Imperial Federation would then no longer be necessary for the
+consummation of his longing wishes.
+
+Freedom of the seas and British naval supremacy are not antagonistic by
+any means, as I have previously well explained. It is an unanswerable
+proposition--a truism--to say that supremacy on the ocean will always
+exist, held by one nation or another. The Power commanding the superior
+naval fleet will for ever be supreme on the seas. It is mere common
+sense to say so. Mr. Bourassa would vainly work his wind-mill for
+centuries without changing this eternal rule of sound sense.
+
+If, by whichever cause, England was to lose her sea supremacy, it would
+at once, as a matter of course, pass on to the next superior naval
+Power.
+
+In a subsequent chapter on the after-the-war military problem, I shall
+explain the way or ways, by which, in my opinion, the question of the
+freedom of the seas, so much misunderstood, could be settled to the
+satisfaction of all concerned.
+
+With regard to the supposed conflict of "anglo-saxonism" and
+"pan-germanism" I will merely say that it is only another sample of Mr.
+Bourassa's wily dreams.
+
+As I have already said, this last pamphlet of the Nationalist leader is,
+for a large part of it, but the repetition of his diatribes so often
+_hurled_ at England. I will close this chapter by quoting from page 57,
+the following paragraph which summarizes, in a striking way, the charges
+Mr. Bourassa is so fond to _hurl_ at the mother-country. It reads
+thus:--
+
+"_What has allowed England to bring Portugal into vassalage? to dominate
+Spain and keep Gibraltar, Spanish land? to deprive Greece of the Ionians
+and Cyprus Islands? to steal Malta? to foment Revolution in the Kingdom
+of Naples and the Papal States? to run, during thirty years, the foreign
+policy of Italy and to throw her in Austria's execrated arms? to take
+possession of Suez and to make her own thing of it? to chase France from
+the Upper Nile, and subsequently from the whole of Egypt, to intervene
+in the Berlin treaty to deprive Russia of the profits of her victory,
+to galvanize dying Turkey, to delay for thirty years the revival of the
+Balkan States and to make of Germany the main spring of continental
+Europe? In a word, what has permitted England to rule the roost in
+Europe and to accumulate the frightful storm let loose in 1914? Who?
+What? if it is not the "naval domination" of England ever since the
+destruction of the French and Spanish fleets at Trafalgar._"
+
+It would be most difficult to condense more erroneous historical
+appreciations and political absurdities in so few lines.
+
+Many will be quite surprised to learn, from Mr. Bourassa's resounding
+trumpet, that England had been for many years gathering the storm which
+broke out in 1914. So far all fairminded men were convinced that this
+rascally work had been done by Germany, in spite of England's
+exhortations to reduce military armaments.
+
+In all sincerity, I am unable to understand how Mr. Bourassa can expect
+to successfully give the lie to such incontrovertible truths as the
+guilt of Germany in preparing the war she finally brought on more than
+four years ago, and as the unceasing determination of England to
+maintain peace.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+A CASE FOR TRUE STATESMANSHIP.
+
+
+Whatever the TRUE and the FALSE friends of PEACE may hope and say, it is
+perfectly useless to close our eyes to the glaring fact that its
+restoration can only be the result of military effort combined with the
+highest practical statesmanship. After all what has happened, and the
+oft-repeated declaration of the Rulers of the belligerent nations, it
+would be a complete loss of a very valuable time to indulge any longer
+in the expression of views all acknowledge in principle, but which no
+one, however well disposed he may be, is actually able to traduce in
+practical form.
+
+When writing my French book, in the fall of 1916, reviewing the
+situation as it had so far developed, I said:--
+
+ "All are most anxious for peace. However it is infinitely better
+ to look at matters such as they are. It is evident that the
+ military situation does not offer the least hope that the war
+ can be immediately brought to an end. Successes have been
+ achieved on both sides. But nothing decisive has yet happened.
+ The armies are facing one another in defiant attitude. The
+ belligerent nations, on both sides, have yet, and for a long
+ time, great resources in man-power and money."
+
+ "If Germany, which should first give up the fight in
+ acknowledging her crime, is obdurate to final exhaustion, how
+ can it be possibly expected that the Allies who were forced to
+ fight, will submit to the humiliation and shame of soliciting
+ from their cruel enemy a peace the conditions of which, they
+ know, would be utterly unacceptable. Consequently they must with
+ an indomitable courage and an invincible perseverance go on
+ struggling to solve, for a long time, the redoubtable problem to
+ which they are pledged, in honour bound, to give the only
+ settlement which can reassure the world."
+
+I am still and absolutely of the same opinion. The present military
+situation has certainly much improved in favour of the Allies since
+1916. However, looking at the question, first, from the standpoint of
+the developing military operations, there is no actual, and there will
+not be for many months yet--more or less--practical possibility of a
+satisfactory peace settlement.
+
+Secondly, looking at the question from the standpoint of true
+statesmanship, it is very easy to draw the inexorable conclusion that,
+again, there is not actually the least chance of an immediate
+restoration of peace.
+
+Statesmen, responsible, not only for the future of their respective
+countries, but, actually, for that of the whole world, are not to be
+supposed liable to be carried away by a hasty desire to put an end to
+the war and to their own arduous task in carrying it to the only
+possible solution:--A JUST AND DURABLE PEACE.
+
+A broad and certain fact, staring every one, is that the Berlin
+Government will not accept the only settlement to which the Allies can
+possibly agree as long as her armies occupy French and Belgian
+territories. If Mr. Bourassa and his "pacifists" friends--or dupes--have
+really entertained a faint hope to the contrary, they were utterly
+mistaken.
+
+Present military events, however proportionately enlarged by the
+increased resources, in man-power and money, of the belligerents, are
+not without many appropriate precedents. History is always repeating
+itself. Great Powers having risked their all in a drawn battle, do not
+give in as long as they can stand the strain, considering the importance
+of the interests they have at stake.
+
+For the same reason above stated, but reversed, the Allies will not
+negotiate for peace before they have thrown the German armies out of
+French and Belgian soil, and repulsed them over Teutonic territory. I do
+not mean to say that peace must necessarily be proclaimed either from
+Berlin or from Paris. But it will only be signed as the inevitable
+result of a final triumphant march on the way either to Berlin or to
+Paris. There is no possible escape from the alternative. In such
+matters, there is no halfway station.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+AFTER-THE-WAR MILITARY PROBLEM.
+
+
+Two of the most important propositions of His Holiness the Pope more
+especially deserve earnest consideration. They are indeed supported by
+the Allies who are purposely fighting for their adoption.
+
+In his note of the first of August, 1917, addressed to the Rulers of the
+belligerent nations, the Pope says in part:--
+
+"AT FIRST, THE FUNDAMENTAL POINT MUST BE TO SUBSTITUTE THE MORAL FORCE
+OF RIGHT TO THE MATERIAL FORCE OF ARMS."
+
+No truer proposition could be enounced. If Germany had put this
+principle into practice, she never would have violated Belgian
+territory.
+
+When England protested against the proposed invasion of Belgium, she did
+so in obedience to the sacred principle enunciated by the Sovereign
+Pontiff. She strongly insisted to the last minute that _the moral force_
+of solemn treaties should prevail upon _the material force of arms_.
+
+In a letter dated October 7, 1917, His Eminence Cardinal Gasparri,
+Secretary of State to His Holiness, addressing the Archbishop of Lens,
+wrote as follows respecting conscription:--
+
+ "The Holy See, in his Appeal of the first of August, did not
+ consider, out of deference for the leaders of the belligerent
+ peoples, that he should mention it, preferring to leave to
+ themselves the care of determining it, but for him, the only
+ practical system and, moreover, easy to apply with some good
+ will on both sides, would be the following: to suppress, with
+ one accord between civilized nations, military obligatory
+ service; to constitute an arbitration tribunal, as already said
+ in the Pontifical Appeal, to settle international questions;
+ finally, to prevent infractions, to establish universal
+ "boycottage" against any nation attempting to reestablish
+ military obligatory service, on refusing either to lay an
+ international question before the arbitration tribunal, or to
+ abide by its decision."
+
+Cardinal Gasparri then points to the ante-war British and American
+systems of military "voluntarism", in the following terms:--
+
+ "As a matter of fact, omitting other considerations, the recent
+ example of England and America testifies in favour of the
+ adoption of this system. England and America had, in effect,
+ voluntary service, and, to take an efficient part in the present
+ war, they were obliged to adopt conscription. It proves that
+ voluntary service well supplies the necessary contingent to
+ maintain public order (and is public order not maintained in
+ England and America just as well, if not better, than in the
+ other nations?) but it does not supply the enormous armies
+ required for modern warfare. Consequently in suppressing, with
+ one accord between civilized nations, obligatory service to
+ replace it by voluntary service, disarmament with all the happy
+ consequences above indicated would be automatically obtained
+ without any perturbation of public order."
+
+ "For the last century, conscription has been the true cause of
+ calamities which have afflicted society: to reach a simultaneous
+ and reciprocal suppression will be the true remedy. In fact,
+ once suppressed, conscription could be reestablished only by a
+ law; and for such a law, even with the present constitution of
+ the Central Empires, Parliamentary approbation would be required
+ (which approbation would be most improbable for many reasons and
+ above all on account of the sad experience of the present war);
+ in this way, what is so much desired, for the maintenance of
+ agreements, would be obtained: the peoples' guarantee. If, on the
+ other hand, the right to make peace or war was given to the
+ people by way of =referendum=, or at least to Parliament, peace
+ between nations would be assured, as much at least as it is
+ possible in this world."
+
+It should be very gratifying indeed to all the loyal subjects of the
+British Empire to ascertain, from the declarations of Cardinal Gasparri,
+that the Pope is in so complete accord with England on this the most
+important question to be settled by the future peace treaty.
+
+As proved in one of the first chapters of this work, the Government of
+Great Britain, supported in this course by almost the unanimous opinion
+of the peoples of the United Kingdom, was the first to suggest the
+holding of the Hague conferences to consider the best means to adopt to
+favour the world with the blessings of permanent peace. Their own view,
+which they forcibly expressed, was that the surest way to reach that
+much desired result was to limit the military armaments, both on land
+and sea. For more than twenty years previous to the war, they pressed,
+and even implored, for the adoption of their program.
+
+I have also proved how obdurate Germany was in resisting England's
+propositions, and her successful intrigues to thwart Great Britain's
+efforts to have them adopted and put into practice.
+
+England's policy has not changed. On the contrary, it is more than ever
+favourable to the limitation, and even to the complete abolition, of
+armaments, if one or the other can be achieved. It is the principal war
+aim of Great Britain, only coming next after her determination to
+avenge Belgium.
+
+The future peace of the world could no doubt be well guaranteed by a
+large measure of disarmament. But it would certainly be much more so, if
+complete abolition could be obtained by an international agreement
+binding on all nations, with, of course, the allowance of the necessary
+forces required for the maintenance of interior public order.
+
+The whole world can safely depend on the strenuous support of England
+for either the limitation or the abolition of armaments whenever the
+question is seriously taken up for consideration.
+
+Evidently the problem will be difficult to solve. However, it should not
+be beyond the resources of statesmanship which, assuredly, ought to rise
+superior to all prejudiced aspirations after the terrible ordeal
+Humanity will have experienced during the present war.
+
+The maintenance of internal public order, and permanent preparedness for
+foreign wars, are two very different questions to examine. The first can
+safely be left to the care of every nation sure to attend to it if
+willing to maintain her authority. The second has a much wider scope and
+will tax the ability of statesmanship to the utmost limit.
+
+Will the great civilized nations decide, when the war is over, to
+completely abolish conscription to return to voluntary military service
+within a very limited organization, thus doing away by a bold and
+single stroke with a system which, for more than a hundred years, has
+been the curse of continental Europe?
+
+Or will they, at least as an initial attempt, come to the conclusion to
+only limit armaments, maintaining compulsory service for the reduced
+strength of the armies?
+
+If armaments are either abolished, or merely reduced, will they be so on
+sea as well as on land? I would answer at once:--of course, they should.
+
+Looking at the question from the British stand-point--and I can also say
+from that of the United States--it should be easily solved.
+
+Public opinion in Great Britain and all over the British Empire, as well
+as in the United States, has always been against conscription in peace
+times, until the present war.
+
+Not exactly foreseeing the full extent of the effort she would be called
+upon to make, England entered into the conflict determined to meet the
+requirements of her military situation out of the resources of voluntary
+enlistment. Canada, joining in the struggle, did the same. Both have
+done wonderfully well during the three first years of the prolonged war.
+
+I can, without the slightest hesitation, positively assert that public
+opinion, in the whole British Empire, and, not only in the United
+States, but in the whole of the two American continents, is, as a matter
+of principle, as much hostile to compulsory military service as it was
+before the present war, and would exult at its complete abolition as one
+of the happiest results of the gigantic contest still going on.
+
+It is to be deplored, but still it is a fact, that great questions of
+public interest too often cannot be settled solely in conformity with
+the principles they imply.
+
+If Great Britain, if the United States, if Canada, could consider the
+question of conscription exclusively from their own stand-point, they
+would most surely decide at once, and with great enthusiasm, to abolish
+the obligatory military service they have adopted only as a last resort
+under the stress of imperious necessity.
+
+Moreover, I have no hesitation to express my own opinion that whatever
+will be the military system of continental Europe after the war, the
+British Empire and the United States will certainly not be cursed with
+permanent conscription. They are both so happily situated that, in peace
+times, they cannot be called upon to go very extensively into the costly
+preparedness which the European continental nations will have again to
+submit themselves to, if they are not wise enough to put an end forever
+to the barbarous militarism they have too long endured for fear of
+Teutonic domination.
+
+Under the worst European situation, England, with a territorial army of
+a million of men ready to be called to the Colours, or actually flying
+them, backed by her mighty fleet maintained to its highest state of
+efficiency, could always face any continental enemy. And such an army of
+a ready million of well trained officers and men, voluntary service
+would easily produce.
+
+If future conditions would require it, Canada herself could do her share
+to prepare for any emergency by reverting to voluntary enlistment, but
+in improving the service so as to produce more immediate efficiency.
+
+Very apparently, the United States will come out of the present conflict
+with flying Colours and will dispense with compulsory service under any
+circumstances in the peace days to follow.
+
+What then will the continental powers do? Blessed they will be, if they
+make up their mind to do away, once for all, with a system which has
+crushed the peoples so unmercifully.
+
+To speak in all frankness, I believe it would be almost vain, however
+much desirable it is, to indulge in fond hopes of the complete abolition
+of militarism on the European continent. The canker is too deep in the
+flesh and blood of nations to be extirpated as if by magic. Such a
+reversal of conditions grown to extravagant proportions, during more
+than a century, will not likely be accomplished at the first stroke. Let
+us all hope that, at least, a good start will be made by a large
+limitation of armaments which may, with time, lead to the final
+achievement for which the whole world would be forever grateful to the
+Almighty. I have positively stated that extravagant militarism should
+be discontinued on sea as well as on land. Such has been the policy of
+England for many years past. I have proved it by the diplomatic
+correspondence between Great Britain and Germany, and the solemn
+declarations of all the leading British statesmen for the last quarter
+of a century. How persistingly England has implored Germany to agree
+with her in stopping that ruinous race in the building of war vessels,
+we have seen.
+
+So, the assent, nay more, the determination of England to adhere to her
+old and noble policy, is a foregone conclusion.
+
+The closing sentence of the last quoted paragraph of Cardinal Gasparri's
+letter expresses the opinion that "_the right to make peace or war
+should be given to the people by way of referendum, or at least to
+Parliament_."
+
+The system preconized by the Eminent Cardinal has been in existence in
+England for a number of years; ever since the day when complete
+ministerial responsibility was adopted as the fundamental principle of
+the British constitution. That system was carried to the letter by Great
+Britain with regard to her intervention in the present war.
+
+The right to declare war and to make peace is one of the most important
+prerogatives of the British Crown. This prerogative of the Crown, like
+all the others, is held in trust by the Sovereign for the benefit of
+the people and exercised by Him ONLY UPON THE ADVICE AND RESPONSIBILITY
+OF HIS MINISTERS.
+
+In conformity with this great British constitutional principle, what
+happened in London, in August, 1914? The then Prime Minister, Mr.
+Asquith, in his own name and in those of his colleagues, advised His
+Majesty King George V. to declare war against Germany because she had
+invaded Belgian territory in violation of the treaties by which these
+two countries were, in honour bound, to protect Belgium's neutrality.
+They were constitutionally responsible to the Imperial Parliament and to
+the people of the United Kingdom for their advice to their Sovereign.
+
+In his admirable statement to the British House of Commons, Sir Edward
+Grey, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, said:--
+
+"_I have assured the House--and the Prime Minister has assured the House
+more than once--that if any crisis such as this arose, we should come
+before the House of Commons and be able to say to the House that it was
+free to decide what the British attitude should be, that we would have
+no secret engagement which we should spring upon the House, and tell the
+House that, because we had entered into that engagement, there was an
+obligation of honour upon the country._"
+
+The British House of Commons, had they considered it to be their duty,
+had the right to disapprove the foreign policy of the Cabinet and to
+censure the ministers for the advice they had given, or had decided to
+give, to the Sovereign. On the other hand, the House of Commons had the
+right to approve the stand taken by the Government. They did so
+unanimously, and were most admirably supported by the people.
+
+I must say that I consider it would be very difficult, if not absolutely
+impracticable, to have questions of war or peace dealt with by way of
+"_Referendum_." Crises suddenly created lead almost instantly to
+declarations of war. But this outcome could hardly be so rapidly
+produced that Parliament could not be called to deal with the emergency.
+
+How could France have been able to oppose the crushing German invasion,
+in 1914, if her Government and her representative Houses had been
+obliged to wait for the result of a "_Referendum_" whether she would
+fight or kneel down?
+
+But the whole world--outside the Central Empires and their
+Allies--witnessed with unbounded delight the spontaneous and unanimous
+decision of the heroic French nation to fight to the last. She threw
+herself with the most admirable courage against the invading waves of
+Teutonic barbarism, and succeeded by the great and glorious Marne
+victory in forcing them to ebb, thus giving England and the other Allies
+the time necessary to organize and train their armies which, by their
+united efforts will save Civilization from destruction and the world
+from the threatened German domination.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+THE INTERVENTION OF THE UNITED STATES IN THE WAR.
+
+
+The hostilities, once opened as the direct consequence of Germany's
+obduracy, many of the most influential leaders of public opinion in the
+United States foresaw that the conflict taking such a wide range, the
+great American Republic was most likely to be, sooner or later, involved
+in the European struggle. They were of two classes. Those out of office,
+holding for the time no official position, were, of course, not bound to
+the same careful discretion in judging the daily developments of the
+military operations, and their far reaching consequences, as those who
+were at the helm of State.
+
+In appreciating the course followed by the United States since the war
+commenced, it must never be forgotten that if an autocratic Empire,
+trampled upon by a domineering military party, can be thrown in a minute
+into a great conflict, a Republic like that of our powerful neighbours
+cannot be dragooned into any hasty action. In a free country, under a
+responsible government, public opinion is the basis of the success of
+any important official decision.
+
+The political men and the numerous publicists who incessantly called the
+attention of our neighbours to what was going on in Europe and on the
+seas, have rendered a great service in moulding public opinion for the
+grand duty the Republic would eventually be obliged to accomplish.
+
+Having ourselves decided to participate in the war at once after its
+outbreak, and deeply engaged in the task, we, Canadians, felt somewhat
+uneasy about the apparent determination of our neighbours to stand
+aside, and let the European Powers settle the ugly question. As a rule,
+we were all wishing to see the United States joining with the Allies in
+the fray.
+
+Once again, we had some black sheep with us. Whilst all the loyal
+Canadians were anxiously waiting for the day when they would applaud the
+American Republic's declaration of war against Germany, our Nationalists
+were getting more nervous at the increasing signs of the growth of
+public opinion amongst our neighbours against the criminal German cause
+and the crimes by which the Teutons were supporting it. Their leader,
+Mr. Bourassa, was doing his best to persuade the Americans that they had
+much better to remain out of the struggle. He expected he would succeed,
+as he had done in the Province of Quebec, in influencing, by his
+erroneous theories, many of the French Canadian element in the United
+States.
+
+The wish being always father to the thought, Mr. Bourassa easily came to
+the conclusion that Mr. Wilson, the president of the United States, was
+decidedly opposed to any intervention of the Republic in the war, and
+would prevent it at all hazards. How prodigal he was of his eulogiums,
+of his advices, to the American "pacifists," with the President as their
+leader, to know one has only to read his newspaper "_Le Devoir_."
+
+How disappointed, how crest-fallen, he was when he discovered how much
+mistaken he had been!
+
+When Mr. Wilson, who had long been waiting for the right hour to strike
+the blow at the Teutonic autocratic attempt at domination, rising
+grandly to the rank of a great statesman, supported by the splendid
+strength of the public opinion he had wisely and skilfully rallied in
+favour of the decision he had taken, was a sad day for our Nationalists
+and their heart-broken leader. Blind, prejudiced, as they were, meekly
+pandering to pan-Germanism which they considered as the best antidote to
+the Anglo-Saxonism they abhor, they could not understand that the
+Lusitania horror, the slaughtering of hundreds of American citizens in
+violation of all the principles of International Law, the crimes of the
+Teutonic submarine campaign more than justified the intervention of the
+United States in the war.
+
+What our neighbours have done since they have joined with the Allies,
+what they are doing and promise to do, is worthy of all admiration. Like
+the British Empire, like France, the United States have given the
+inspiring example of a most enlightened patriotism, of a splendid unity
+of purpose, of a boundless confidence in the triumph of the cause of
+Justice and Right.
+
+Such a grand spectacle of true national unity offered a striking
+contrast with the sad exhibition of the narrow Nationalism Canada has
+had to endure without, however, hindering to any appreciable extent our
+loyal and patriotic effort to help winning the war.
+
+Mr. Bourassa, who had been out of his natural vituperative tune in
+complimenting Mr. Wilson on his supposed peace proclivities, was sure to
+turn his guns against the President of the Republic the moment he boldly
+and energetically took his stand against German barbarism as exhibited
+since the beginning of the war. Mr. Wilson had especially protested
+against such outrages as were perpetrated on the seas by Teutonic
+orders. He had repeatedly warned the Berlin Government what the
+inevitable consequences of such proceedings would be, and going to the
+full length of what friendly relations between two Sovereign States
+could permit, had demanded that an end be put to a kind of warfare most
+formally condemned by International Law, contrary to all justice, to all
+human notions of civilization.
+
+When the cup of German iniquities overflowed with new crimes, American
+reprobation was also raised to the high water mark. Indignation was at
+the height of its exasperation. Public opinion had rapidly rallied and
+ripened at the horrible sight of so many American citizens, women and
+children, murdered in mid-ocean, their dead bodies floating over the
+waves, and their souls from above crying for vengeance.
+
+Then the President, Congress, statesmen, politicians, publicists, loyal
+Americans numbering almost a hundred million, all of one mind, of one
+heart, pledged their national honour to avenge the foul deeds of
+Teutonic barbarity, and to do their mighty share in rescuing Freedom and
+Civilization from the threatening sanguinary cataclysm which was cruelly
+saddening our times and darkening the prospects of our children.
+
+How powerfully, how grandly, how admirably they have kept their word,
+all know. The laws necessary to prosecute the war with the utmost vigour
+were unanimously passed by Congress. The organization of the man-power
+of our neighbours has been made on a grand scale. The calls to the
+financial resources of the Republic have been patriotically answered by
+the people who poured out billions and billions of their hard earned and
+prudently saved money to support the national cause so closely
+identified with that of the Allies. Besides spending innumerable
+millions for their own gigantic military effort, the United States are
+lending billions of dollars to their associates in the great struggle to
+curb down German autocratic criminal ambition.
+
+The universe, as a whole, gratefully applauded the magnificent effort
+of the leading nation of the New-World in defending the old continents
+of Europe, Asia and Africa against the new invasion of the Huns.
+
+The only shadow to this ennobling picture is that which our
+Nationalists, from this side of the boundary line, try to breathe on it,
+expecting that their treacherous whisper will find some echo amongst the
+French Canadian and the German elements of the Republic.
+
+The following lines are a sample of the kind words Mr. Bourassa has
+addressed to Mr. Wilson--the warrior--not the pacifist. On August 30,
+1917, respecting the answer of the President of the United States to the
+Pope's appeal in favour of peace, he wrote in a gentle mood:--
+
+"_Truth and falsehood, sincerity and deceit, logic and sophism are
+sporting with gracefulness in this singularly astonishing document. One
+would imagine that the President, persuaded that the European
+Governments are playing an immense game of "poker" having the life of
+the peoples at stake, wanted to go further and to prove to them that at
+such a game the great American democracy is their master. Perhaps did he
+believe that the "bluff" outbidding would succeed in tearing to pieces
+the mask of falsehoods, of ambiguities and hypocrisy, by which the
+national Rulers are blinding the peoples in order to lead them more
+readily to be slaughtered._"
+
+On perusing such outrageous writing, one cannot help being convinced
+that Mr. Bourassa considers all the distinguished and most patriotic
+political leaders who, for the last four years, have guided with so much
+talent and devotion France, the British Empire, and their Allies through
+the unprecedented crisis they have had to face, are a criminal gang of
+murderers.
+
+So, in Mr. Bourassa's kind opinion, when Mr. Wilson and all the members
+of the two Houses of Congress, with a most admirable unanimity of
+thought and aspirations, called upon the American nation to avenge their
+countrymen, countrywomen and children, murdered on the broad sea, they
+were criminally joining with European Rulers in a game of "bluff", going
+further than all of them in order to tear to pieces the falsehoods and
+hypocrisy they were using to blind their peoples to the facile
+acceptance of the slaughtering process. A very strange way, indeed, of
+unmasking others' hypocrisy by being more hypocritical than them all.
+
+The next day, in a second article on the same subject, the Nationalist
+leader said:--
+
+"_Since the outbreak of the war, more especially since the exhausted
+peoples have commenced to ask themselves what will be the result of this
+frightful slaughter, the supporters of war to the utmost have tried hard
+to create the legend that Germany wants to impose her political,
+military and economical domination over the whole universe. To this
+first falsehood, they add another one, still more complete: the only way
+to assure peace, they say, is to democratize Germany, Austria and all
+the nations of the Globe._"
+
+Two falsehoods no doubt there are, but they are not asserted by those
+who affirm Germany's aspiration at universal domination, and who believe
+that if true free democratic institutions were to replace autocratic
+rule in many countries, peace could be much more easily maintained. They
+are circulated by those who deny that such are the two cases.
+
+Whose fault is it if the almost universal opinion, outside the Central
+Empires and their few allies, is that Teutonic ambition, for many years
+past, has been to dominate the world?
+
+Whose fault is it if, for the last forty years, autocratic rule has once
+more proved to be the curse of the nations which it governs, and of the
+peoples it subjugates?
+
+Has not Germany only herself to blame? If she had respected the eternal
+principles of Divine Morals; if she had been contented of her lot and
+mindful of the rights of other nations; if she had been guided by the
+true law that Right is above Might; if she had followed the ever
+glorious path of Justice, she would not be presently under the ban of
+the civilized world rising in a mighty effort to crush her threatening
+tyranny out of existence.
+
+So much the worse for her, if she falls a victim to her insane ambitious
+dreams and to the atrocious crimes they have inspired her to commit. In
+her calamity, the Nationalists' sympathies will avail her very little,
+as they will everywhere meet with the contempt they fully deserve.
+
+At page 116, in a virulent charge, Mr. Bourassa says that Mr. Wilson
+_though a passionate and obstinate pedantic of democracy, is as much of
+an autocrat as William of Prussia_.
+
+Blinded by his fanatical antipathies towards every one and every thing,
+directly or indirectly, favouring England, the Nationalist leader fails
+to see any difference between the man who blasphemously claims by Divine
+Right the power to hurl his whole Empire at the throat of staggering
+Humanity, to satisfy his frenzied lust of domination, denying to his
+subjects any say whatever in the matter, and the responsible chief of
+State who, holding his temporary functions from the expressed will of
+the people who trusted him, calls upon that same nation to avenge the
+murder of a large number of her citizens, of her women and children, and
+the barbarous crimes committed in violation of her Sovereign Rights.
+
+If Mr. Bourassa is conscious of the enormity of the stand he has taken,
+and of the views he has expressed, he is indeed much to be blamed; if he
+is not, he is greatly to be pitied.
+
+At page 109 of his pamphlet--entitled:--"_The Pope, arbiter of peace_,"
+Mr. Bourassa has written the following monstrous proposition, after
+having said that peace must be restored "_without victory_":--
+
+"_The more the results of the war are null, for both sides, the more
+chances there are for the peoples, astounded at the frightful
+uselessness of those monstrous slaughters, to protect themselves against
+a new fit of furious folly. To become odious to men, war must be
+barren._"
+
+So Mr. Bourassa has emphatically proclaimed that the war must be barren
+of any practical results, that the extraordinary sacrifices of lives, of
+resources of wealth, must be without reward of any kind; that the world
+must return to the ante-war conditions. And this, he asserts, would be
+the best means of preventing a renewal of the monstrous slaughters which
+have been the outcome of Germany's horrible attempt at dominating an
+enslaved Humanity.
+
+In all sincerity, it is very difficult to suppose that the exponent of
+such outrageously abominable views is conscious of what he says.
+
+A red hot "pacifist," Mr. Bourassa clamoured as best he could for "PEACE
+WITHOUT VICTORY," claiming that it was _the only kind of peace that
+could be "just and durable."_ The time was when he pretended--surely
+without any show of reason--that such was the sort of peace Mr. Wilson
+wanted and suggested.
+
+Even as far back as December 31, 1915, Mr. Bourassa, no doubt desirous
+of giving full vent to his new year's wishes to all, had written:--
+
+"_In spite of the lies, of the impudent "bluff," of the sanguinary
+appeals and of the false promises of victory of the partisans of war to
+excess, in all the warring countries, popular good sense commences to
+discern truth.... The more victory_ (the issue) _will be materially null
+and sterile for all the nations at war, the more chances there will be
+that peace will be lasting and that the peoples will be convinced that
+war is not only an abominable crime but an incommensurable folly_."
+
+Evidently it had already become a hobby on the brain of the Nationalist
+leader. He dogmatically proclaims that war between peoples--not the wars
+formerly fought by mercenary armies,--is a _crime_,--_abominable_,--and
+a _folly_,--_incommensurable_.
+
+True it is on the part of a State tramping upon all the principles of
+Justice and of International Law to gratify her guilty ambition.
+
+But honourable, glorious, is war on the part of peoples rising in their
+patriotic might to resist a sanguinary enemy, to defend their countries,
+their homes, their mothers, their wives and their children from
+oppression, to stem the conquering efforts of barbarous invaders.
+
+No doubt it was a crime on the part of Germany to break her pledged
+honour by solemn treaties, and to violate Belgium's territory.
+
+No doubt it was a crime for Germany--and one abominable--to overrun
+Belgium, spreading everywhere desolation, devastation, incendiarism,
+murder.
+
+But can it be said that the admirable and heroic resistance Belgium has
+opposed to her tyrannical invaders was a dastardly crime?
+
+No doubt it was a crime--and one most abominable--for Germany to order
+the sinking of the Lusitania and hundreds of merchant ships, without the
+warning required by the Law of Nations, murdering by hundreds
+non-combatants, children, women, and old men.
+
+But can any one be justified in asserting that, after exhausting, for
+the redress of such abominable wrongs, all the resources of diplomacy,
+the United States were committing a crime when they accepted the
+criminal teutonic challenge and decided to join with the British Empire,
+with France, Italy and their Allies, to rescue human Freedom and
+Civilization from the impending destruction?
+
+It is an aberration of mind--incommensurable in depth--for a publicist,
+or any one else, to be so blinded by prejudices, so lost to all sense of
+justice, as to place on the same footing, on the same level, the
+assailant and he who defends his all, the murderer and the victim.
+
+I positively affirm that I am not actuated by the least ill-will or
+ill-feeling against the Nationalist leader, in judging his course and
+his views as I do. Thank God, I know enough of the teachings of
+Christianity to wish good to all men. But I cannot help being deeply
+sorry and deploring that one of my French Canadian compatriots is buried
+in such mental darkness as to be unable to perceive the
+difference--incommensurable--there is in the present war between the
+hideous Teutonic guilt, and the commendable and meritorious defence by
+the Allied nations of the most sacred cause on earth:--outraged Justice.
+
+And with all sincerity, I express the profound wish that during the
+prolonged recess the timely war measure adopted to censure and prevent
+all utterances detrimental to the best Canadian effort in the conflict,
+the Nationalist leader has the pleasure to enjoy, he will reconsider the
+whole situation and his opinions--too much widely circulated. Is it yet
+possible to hope that, at last, he will see the dawn which will lead him
+to the full light with which the great and noble cause of his country
+and of the world is shining?
+
+It is no surprise that such opinions utterly failed to have any echo
+amongst the liberty loving people of the neighbouring Republic. They
+died their merited shameful death before crossing over the boundary
+line, buried deep under the heap of the profound feelings of reprobation
+they provoked.
+
+The Nationalist leader even missed the mark where he felt sure his shot
+would strike. We can rest assured that the large majority of the United
+States Germans, by birth or origin, would not change the responsible
+President of their new country for the autocrat Kaiser from whose
+absolutist power so many of them fled to breathe freely in the new land
+of promise it was their happy lot to enter.
+
+Mr. Bourassa met with a complete failure in his expectation to arouse
+the feelings of his compatriots over the frontier against the
+intervention of the Republic in the war.
+
+It has been a profound satisfaction for us, French Canadians, to learn
+that from the very moment war was declared by the Republic against
+Germany, the French Canadian element in the United States has been to
+the forefront of the most loyal of our friendly neighbours in fighting
+the common enemy.
+
+The French Canadians of the United States, either by birth or origin,
+have wisely turned a deaf ear to the Nationalist leader's seductive but
+prejudiced theories, to the wild charges he was wont to level at all the
+national rulers of the Allies, and, as a final attempt, at those of the
+American Republic. They have rallied to their Colours with enthusiastic
+patriotism.
+
+They have nobly done their duty. They are doing it, and will continue to
+do so to the last: to the final victory for which they are fighting with
+the patriotic desire to share in the glory of the triumph of their
+country.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+THE ALLIES--RUSSIA--JAPAN.
+
+
+Since its outbreak the great war has, and, before it is over, will have,
+played havoc in many ways in the wide world. Criminal aspirations have
+been quashed, extravagant hopes shattered, an ancient throne overthrown
+almost without a clash, an autocrat sovereign murdered, another forced
+to abdicate and go into exile.
+
+In the open airs, on land, over the waves, under sea, the fighting demon
+has been most actively at work, ordering one of the belligerent, eager
+to obey, to spare no one, young, weak or old. Death has been dropped
+from the skies on sleeping non-combatants, assassinating right and left.
+On the soil Providentially provided with the resources necessary to
+human life, homes have been ruined, their so far happy owners brutally
+murdered. On the ocean the treacherous and barbarous submariner,
+operating in the broad light of the day, or in the darkness of the
+night, has sent, without remorse, to the fathomless bottom, thousands
+and thousands of innocent victims, children, women, old men, wounded
+soldiers spared on land but drowned at sea.
+
+Viewed from the height of a much nobler standpoint, the war has
+developed a superior degree of heroism perhaps never equalled. Belgians,
+Serbians, Poles, Armenians have endured, and are still suffering, their
+prolonged martyrdom with a fortitude deserving the greatest admiration.
+
+The nations united to withstand the torrent of German cruel and depraved
+ambition are writing, with the purest of their blood, pages of history
+which, for all times to come, will offer to posterity unrivalled
+examples of the sound and unswerving patriotism which has elevated them
+all to the indomitable determination to bear patiently, perseveringly,
+all the sacrifices, in lives courageously given, in resources profusely
+spent, in taxation willingly accepted and paid, in works of all kinds
+cheerfully performed, which the salvation of human Liberty and
+Civilization shall require.
+
+The collapse of the ancient and hitherto mighty Empire of Russia will
+undoubtedly be one of the most startling events of the "Great War." For
+the present, I shall not comment, on the causes of this momentous
+episode, incidental to the wonderful drama being played on the worldly
+stage, more than I have done in a previous chapter. Still the important
+change it has made in the respective situation of the belligerents, with
+the prospective consequences likely to follow, one way or the other,
+calls for some timely consideration.
+
+Evidently, the downfall, first, of the Imperial regime, second, of the
+_de facto_ Republican government by which it was replaced, throwing the
+great Eastern ally of Great Britain, France and Italy under the
+tyrannical sway of the "bolchevikis" terrorists, most considerably
+altered the relative strength of the fighting power of the belligerents.
+Very detrimental to the Allies, it was largely favourable to the Central
+Empires. The "Triple Entente" as first constituted, was much weakened by
+the desertion of one of the great partners in the heavy task they had
+undertaken, whilst the "Triple Alliance" was strengthened in a relative
+proportion, at least for the time being and the very near future.
+
+Evidence, incontrovertible, is coming to light, proving what had been
+soundly presumed, that "bolchevikism" was not merely the result, as in
+other instances, of the violence of sanguinary revolutionists
+overpowering a regular progressive movement of political freedom and
+reform, but that it has been the outcome of German intrigue easily
+succeeding in corrupting into shameless treason the "bolchevikis"
+leaders.
+
+As a Sovereign State, as an independent nation, Russia was, in honour
+bound, pledged not to consent to a separate peace, and to make peace
+with Germany only with conditions to which all the Allies would agree.
+Acceptance of, and concurrence in, all peace agreements, were the
+essential clause of the pledge Great Britain, France and Russia had
+reciprocally taken in going to war with the Central Empires. With this
+sacred pledge Italy concurred fully on joining the Allies.
+
+To that solemn pledge, the American Republic has emphatically assented
+when she threw her weighty sword in the balance against blood stained
+and murderous Germany.
+
+The "bolchevikis'" treacherous government repudiated the solemn
+engagement of their country, threw her honour to the winds, sold her
+dearest national interests by the infamous Brest-Litovsk treaty.
+Betrayed Russia was out of the war, leaving her Allies to their fate.
+
+From a military point of view, the consequences were easily foreseen.
+Freed from the danger of further attacks on the eastern front, both
+Germany and Austria could send their eastern armies, the first, on the
+western front in France, the second, on the Italian front. Germany, only
+requiring a sufficient force to keep down trodden Russia under the yoke
+treacherously fastened on her neck by the traitors who had ignominiously
+sold their country to her enemy, and anxious to profit to the utmost by
+her success in coercing the Russians to agree to dishonourable peace
+conditions, hurried more than a million men over to the western front.
+Austria did likewise, sending a large force with the hope of smashing
+the Italians out of the fight.
+
+Those were no doubt very anxious days. All remember how the Italian army
+lost in a very short time all the ground they had so stubbornly
+conquered.
+
+Germany made formidable preparations to strike, in the very early spring
+of the present year, a decisive blow by which she fully expected to
+reach and take Paris. We shall never forget the feverish hours we lived
+when came the successive reports of the crushing advance of the Teutonic
+hordes so close to the illustrious capital of France.
+
+For a while, it seemed to be--and really it was--a renewal of the first
+terrific invasion of northern France, in 1914. Fortunately, it was
+Providentially decreed that the second onslaught was to meet with a
+second Marne disaster. The Huns were forced to retire after a tremendous
+loss of men and war materials, the allied armies, brilliantly led and
+fighting heroically, redeeming all the lost territory and, at the moment
+I am writing, moving steadily towards the German frontier.
+
+The great good luck of the Allies, treasonably sacrificed by the Russian
+bolchevikis terrorist government, was the solemn entry of the United
+States into the European conflict.
+
+Preparing for the grand effort which she confidently expected would be
+final, Germany rashly decided to resume her barbarous submarine
+campaign, positively determined to criminally violate all the principles
+of International Law regulating warfare on the seas. That outrageous
+decision was her fatal doom.
+
+Its direct result was to bring the American Republic into the war. And
+then the whole world was called upon to witness, with unbounded delight,
+the very impressive spectacle of millions of fighting free men being
+successfully transported over the sea, and landed on the French soil, to
+join the grand army which, for the last four years, had been resisting
+the full might of the autocratic forces.
+
+However difficult it is to foretell what the political developments of
+the present deplorable Russian situation will be, still it is not
+illusory to believe that, history once more repeating itself, the
+present sanguinary Russian regime will hasten its well deserved
+ignominious downfall by the very brutal excesses it multiplies in its
+delirious tyranny. There are too many elements of the immense population
+of Russia favourable to an orderly and sensible government, to suppose
+that they will long fail to gather their strength in order to redeem
+their country's honour, and to remove from power the traitors who are
+the shame of their fair land. When the infallible reaction sets in, it
+will increase the more in momentum that it will have been longer
+repressed by foul means.
+
+The most important point of the present Russian situation to consider is
+that of the best initiative the Allies could, and ought to, take
+respecting the military question.
+
+Many are of opinion that it would be possible, for the Allies, to help
+Russia out of the present difficulties by an armed support. Such views
+have been more especially expressed in the United States. Could they, or
+can they be carried out? I must say that in a large measure I share the
+opinion of those who would give an affirmative answer to the question.
+
+It is well known that the matter has been most seriously considered by
+the Allies, and a favourable solution seems on the way of a satisfactory
+realization.
+
+To the armed intervention of the Allies in Russia, following closely
+upon the infamous Brest-Litovsk peace treaty, there was a very serious
+obstacle of German creation.
+
+It was evident, at the very start, that if intervention there was to be,
+the one Ally to play the most important part in the great undertaking
+would be Japan.
+
+The British statesmen who, several years ago, brought about the treaty
+of alliance between Great Britain and Japan have deserved much from the
+Empire and from the world generally. Surely they had a clear insight of
+the future. True to her treaty obligations Japan at once sided with
+Great Britain in the war. All those who have closely followed the trend
+of events since the outbreak of the hostilities, know how much Japan has
+done to assist in chasing the German military and mercantile fleets from
+the high seas, more especially from the Pacific ocean. Canada owes her a
+debt of gratitude for the protection she has afforded our western
+British Columbia coast from the raids of German war ships.
+
+Foreseeing that the proximity of Japan to eastern Russia was an
+inducement for the Allies to decide upon an armed intervention which,
+starting from Siberia, might roll westward over the broad lands leading
+back to the European eastern war front, Germany lost no time in trying
+to poison Russian public opinion against the Japanese. Her numerous
+representatives and agents told the Russians that if they allowed Japan
+to send her army on Russian territory, they would be doomed to fall
+under Japanese sway. They recalled the still recent Russo-Japanese war,
+amplifying the supposed aims of Japan so as to stir up the national
+feelings of the Russians. Such a cry, assiduously and widely spread, was
+no doubt a dangerous one.
+
+Under those circumstances, Japan wisely decided to remain in the
+expectation of further developments before moving. She took the safe
+stand that she would intervene only upon the request of the Russians
+themselves, pledging her word of honour that her only purpose would be
+to free Russia from German domination, and that she would withdraw from
+Russian territory as soon as complete Russian independence would have
+been restored and the treacherous Teutonic aims foiled.
+
+Evidences are increasing in number and importance that the Huns'
+propaganda in Russia against Japan is being successfully counteracted by
+the good sense of the people, realizing how much their vital national
+interests have been trampled upon by Germany in imposing her peace
+conditions on their country betrayed by the bolchevikis rulers.
+
+An armed Allied force has been sent to, and has been, for some weeks,
+operating, in Siberia so far with commendable results.
+
+For one, I have most at heart an expectation which I would be most happy
+to see realized. It seems to me that there ought to be a chance, nay
+more, a possibility, for the Allies to organize, between this day and
+next spring, a strongly supported intervention in Russia. In that event,
+Japan of course, would take the lead. She could rapidly send to help the
+Russians to resume their part in the war against Germany at least a
+million of men; two millions if they were needed. As a guarantee of
+Japan's good faith, the Allies, more especially the United States, could
+send over contingents to Siberia.
+
+There is no doubt whatever that so supported, the revulsion of Russian
+public feeling, once set in motion, would soon overwhelm the
+bolchevikis. A sensible and patriotic government, once at the helm of
+the state, could easily and rapidly reorganize a powerful army out of
+the numerous available millions. The financial aspect of the question
+would certainly be the most difficult for Russia to meet, after the
+exhaustive strain she has had to bear. But however great their moneyed
+effort, the United States could yet do a great deal to help Russia
+financially.
+
+Will the hopes of so many be realized, and will Russia, resuming her
+place of honour in the glorious ranks of the Allies, be found battling
+once more with them when together they will finally crush the German
+tyrannical militarism? God only knows, and time will tell.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+THE LAST PEACE PROPOSALS.
+
+
+I was writing the last pages of this work when the surprising news was
+flashed over the cable that Austria-Hungary had taken the initiative of
+suggesting peace discussion, which proposition she had communicated to
+all the belligerents, to the neutral governments and even to the Holy
+See. Without delay the rumour proved to be true. The very next day the
+full text of Austria's communication was published all over the world.
+
+I have read it with great care and, I confess, with profound amazement.
+
+From several stand-points, this document is astonishing and weighty:
+astonishing as it reveals more than ever before the astuteness of the
+inspiration which dictated it; weighty because it derives its importance
+from one of the most serious situation of the world's affairs ever
+recorded in History.
+
+It is difficult to suppose that the Austrian Government really expected
+that their move would be considered as the outcome of their own
+initiative. Not the hand, but the sword--the dominating sword--behind
+the Throne is clearly visible.
+
+The carefully drafted document, issued from Vienna, was evidently
+dictated from Berlin. It is stamped with the Teutonic seal.
+
+After the experience of the last four years--I can safely say of the
+last half century as well--over credulous is he who believes that,
+swayed as she has been by her overpowering northern neighbour, Austria
+would have dared to address such a proposition to the Allies if she had
+not been asked by Germany to do so.
+
+It is rather amusing to read the news cabled from Amsterdam, Holland, on
+the 20th of September, that an official communication issued in Berlin
+said that the German Ambassador in Vienna that day presented Germany's
+reply to the recent Austro-Hungarian peace note. The purport of the note
+was that Germany agreed to participate in the proposed exchange of
+views. This is indeed high class cynicism.
+
+The document would certainly call for somewhat lengthy and strong
+comments, but they can be dispensed with after the curt, sharp and
+decisive reply it has elicited from those it was intended to seduce and
+deceive.
+
+President Wilson was the first to answer a positive, a formidable NO,
+which, thundered out from Washington, was echoed with equal force in
+London, Paris and Rome. So that the astute attempt to deter the Allies
+from the glorious course they were forced to adopt by Germany, and by
+Austria herself, was doomed to failure, and bound to meet with the
+contempt it deserved.
+
+But a few remarks expressing the retort that strikes one's mind on
+reading the Austrian communication, are in order and had better be made.
+The whole stress of the document is that peace should be restored as
+soon as possible on account of the sacrifices and sufferings war
+nowadays entail, and in conformity with the unanimous wishes of the
+peoples engaged in the conflict.
+
+Did Austria ever suppose that, when she addressed that sadly famous and
+outrageous ultimatum to Servia, dated the 23rd of July, 1914, which she
+well knew would bring about the cataclysm she now feigns to deplore--and
+which Germany and herself were longing for--the war would be only a
+child's play, a game of golf, or something of the kind? Was Austria at
+that time cherishing the kind feelings of the German Kronprinz who, on
+being asked by an American lady, in a social event, at Berlin, why he
+was so desirous of seeing a great war, replied that "_it was only for
+the fun of the thing_?"
+
+That war, when once declared, would have terrible consequences, would
+cost millions of dear lives, would cripple many more millions for the
+rest of their earthly days, would cost innumerable millions--even
+billions--of hard earned money, would destroy an immense amount of
+accumulated wealth, would delay for years the onward march of Humanity
+towards more and more prosperous destinies, was not only long foreseen
+before it broke out, but was positively known to be pregnant with all
+such disasters.
+
+But what was not foreseen, not known, nor imagined as at all possible,
+after nearly twenty centuries of Christianity, was that, war being on,
+Germany, the Power responsible for it, guilty of the crime of having let
+loose the frightful hurricane, would multiply the horrors inseparable
+from military operations, with unconceivable barbarous acts condemned by
+all international, moral and Divine laws.
+
+It was not foreseen, nor supposed possible, that heroism would be
+challenged by murder, that the glorious defenders of their country's
+rights would have to fight against sanguinary savages obeying the
+barbarian orders of a modern Attila.
+
+It was not foreseen that hundreds of children, women, old men, wounded
+soldiers, would be assassinated on the open sea and sent to their
+eternal watery graves.
+
+So far as the horrors of regular warfare were concerned, they were, as I
+have just said, very well known. And was it not on account of this
+knowledge that Great Britain and France had exhausted all their efforts
+in favour of the maintenance of peace?
+
+Was it not out of this knowledge that England had, for more than twenty
+years, implored the Berlin Government to agree at least to partial
+disarmament, to discontinue, or, at the least, to reduce war ship
+building operations?
+
+When Austria, bowing herself down to the ground under the German
+tyrannical lash, unjustly and cruelly declared war against weak Servia,
+she knew what the horrors of the conflict could not fail to be. How is
+it that at that time she was not moved by the sympathetic feelings
+expressed in her recent appeal for peace negotiations?
+
+How is it that Austria, and her inspiring angel, Germany, are getting so
+nervous about the misfortunes of war, just at the time when they are
+forced to admit that they are utterly unable to realize the aims for
+which they brought on the frightful struggle?
+
+How is it that those who could order with clear conscience and fiendish
+delight the violation of Belgium guaranteed neutrality, the sinking of
+the Lusitania and so many other ships carrying non-combatants, children,
+women and old men, the murder of so many innocent victims, the Belgian
+deportations, the destruction of the monuments of art--the work of human
+genius--are suddenly moved to pity just as they see the hand writing on
+the wall warning them that their days of foul enjoyments are at end?
+
+How is it that the voice who dictated the following sentence was not
+silenced and choked by the abominable lie it contains? How is it that
+the hand that wrote it was not instantly dried up at the impudent
+falsehood it expresses?
+
+Austria's official communication says in part:--
+
+"_The Central Powers leave it in no doubt that they are only waging a
+war of defence for the integrity and the security of their
+territories._"
+
+But why is it that the Central Empires are now only waging a defensive
+war, if it is not because after having opened the game with the
+certainty of crushing their opponents by the tremendous power of their
+formidable military organization, they are getting beaten and
+overpowered by the unrivalled heroism called forth by their criminal
+attempt at destroying weak nations and enslaving Humanity?
+
+The Austrian and German Governments wilfully forget that the important
+point is not to consider who are the belligerents that are NOW forced by
+the fortune of arms to wage a defensive struggle. It is to ascertain who
+started the conflict of an OFFENSIVE war.
+
+To that question, the voice of the truly civilized world has answered
+with no uncertain sound. It was given, and ever since most energetically
+emphasized, the very day the first Austrian shot was fired at Belgrade,
+the first thundering German gun and the first German soldier ordered to
+cross over the Belgian frontier.
+
+The Austrian tentative peace document pretends "_that all peoples, on
+whatever side they may be fighting, long for a speedy end to the bloody
+struggle_."
+
+This is so evidently true that the writer of the communication might
+very properly have dispensed with asserting it.
+
+But have the Austrian and the German Governments forgotten that the
+peoples were equally longing for the maintenance of peace during the
+many years of intense war preparation prior to the outbreak of the
+hostilities in 1914?
+
+If they are not yet aware of it, the Central Empires must be taught that
+the Allied nations have another longing than that for peace, to which
+they have given precedence and for which they will continue to fight
+strenuously until it is fully gratified. They long for an honourable, a
+just and lasting peace. They long to see once more the old landmarks of
+Civilization and Political Liberty emerging safe and radiant from the
+waves of Teutonic Barbarism. They long, and most earnestly, for peace
+restored under such conditions as will put an end to extravagant,
+ruinous and autocratic militarism, which will henceforth relieve the
+peoples from the drastic obligation of maintaining, at a cost more and
+more crushing, an ever increasing military organization for fear of
+being suddenly subjugated by an ambitious foe bent on dominating the
+world.
+
+Using the very words of the most admirable speech addressed by President
+Wilson to the United States Congress, on the 11th of February last, the
+Allied Nations long for a peace which will provide "_that peoples and
+provinces are no longer to be bartered about from sovereignty to
+sovereignty as if they were mere chattels and pawns in a game, even the
+great game now for ever discredited of the balance of power; but that
+every territorial settlement involved in this war must be made in the
+interest and for the benefit of the populations concerned and not as a
+part of any mere adjustment or compromise of claims amongst rival
+states_."
+
+The Allied peoples are longing for a peace by which "_all well defined
+national aspirations shall be accorded the utmost satisfaction that can
+be accorded them without introducing new or perpetuating old elements of
+discord, and antagonism that would be likely in time to break the peace
+of Europe and consequently of the world_."
+
+The _pacifists_ of the Allied nations who have, like the Nationalist
+leader and his henchmen in the Province of Quebec, clamoured for peace
+by compromise, must have had a few hours of delightful enjoyment after
+reading Austria's communication. It is evidently the echo of their oft
+repeated views and has been carefully drafted to stir them to further
+exertions in favour of a settlement which will gratify their ill
+disguised Teutonic sympathies.
+
+Austria's document is a plea intended to be strong for peace by
+negotiations irrespective of the war situation and its probable result.
+
+This is the kind of peace dear to the heart of the Nationalist leader
+and his friends. The newspaper "_Le Devoir_" is their daily organ in
+Montreal. A Sunday paper called "_Le Nationaliste_" is the weekly
+edition of the daily organ.
+
+By what mysterious inspiration was "_Le Nationaliste_" able to forestall
+the publication of the Austrian peace document by an article in its
+issue of Sunday, the 13th of August, which summarizes the leading
+reasons given by the Government of Vienna to induce the Allied
+Governments to agree "_to a confidential and unbinding discussion_" of
+the conditions of peace, "_at a neutral meeting place_?"
+
+Since the official publication of the document, our Nationalists, who
+had been subdued by the Order-in-Council tightening the censure of
+disloyal writings and speaking, and reduced to the necessity of merely
+whispering their fond hopes of an early peace which would relieve the
+Central Empires, Turkey and Bulgaria from the deserved chastisement of
+their crimes, are getting again more outspoken in the expression of
+their views and of their Teutonic proclivities. The street corner
+propaganda is being resumed with more discreet vigour than formerly when
+loud talk was considered safe. New efforts, better guarded against a
+compromising responsibility, to instil the virus in the body politic,
+are tried over again. They creep in a few newspapers well known for
+their hardly disguised hostility to the cause of the Allies and to the
+participation of Canada to its defence. All this under the hypocritical
+cover of a longing for the restoration of peace and the cessation of the
+sacrifices the country is still making for the victory for which all
+loyal British subjects are praying and doing their best to secure.
+
+Germany has prudently--cowardly is the more proper word--remained
+behind, satisfied, for the time being, to play the part of prompter to
+her vassal, Austria. But, however desirous of remaining free to
+repudiate publicly, if considered more advisable, Austria's move, she
+could not help showing her hand. She betrayed herself by the peace offer
+she has had the outrageous audacity to make to Belgium she has
+barbarously crucified.
+
+And what are the terms of this astonishing proposal? I will mention only
+two of them.
+
+First: "THAT BELGIUM SHALL REMAIN NEUTRAL UNTIL THE END OF THE WAR."
+
+That Germany should have decided to address such a demand to Belgium is
+truly inconceivable. Has she forgotten the days when Belgium was
+neutral, and determined to remain so, under the joint protection of
+England, France and Germany, bound by solemn treaty to uphold Belgian
+independence? Does she not realize that if Belgium has not been neutral
+up to this day, she has been the cause of it in tearing to pieces the
+_scrap of paper_ which should have been the sacred shield of the nation
+she criminally martyred? After having violated Belgium's frontier,
+overrun her territory, destroyed her happy homes, murdered by thousands
+her children, her women, her mothers, her old men, ransomed her to the
+tune of hundreds of millions, without granting her liberty, shattered
+her monuments of arts, she has the impudence to ask her to betray those
+who hastened to her defence, and who are pledged to require the
+restoration of her complete independence with due reparation as one of
+the essential conditions of peace. A more brazen outrage cannot be
+imagined. It is on a par with that addressed to England whose neutrality
+Germany wanted to secure at the cost of her honour in betraying France.
+
+What was the true object of Germany in making such a proposition? Was it
+not to protect herself against the increasing likelihood that the Allied
+army would soon be able to enter on German soil by passing through
+Belgium. But in that event, so much to be hoped for, there would be that
+difference that whilst Germany invaded Belgium in sheer violation of her
+solemn treaty obligations, France, England and the United States would
+honour themselves in turning the guilty invaders out of the soil they
+have sullied by their hideous presence and their horrible savageness.
+
+The second German peace proposition to Belgium reads as follows:--"_That
+Belgium shall use her good offices to secure the return of the German
+colonies_."
+
+And such a request is made by the Power that, in spite of the treaties
+it was in honour bound to respect, ordered the German army to conquer
+Belgium in a dastardly rush, in order to reach France at once and crush
+her out of the conflict before she could be helped by Great Britain and
+her Colonies! Incredible indeed!
+
+Germany and Austria knew very well that their proposals would be
+indignantly and contemptuously rejected. But they had a twofold object
+in making them. First, they wanted to stir up their own peoples to
+further efforts in carrying on the struggle by throwing upon the Allies
+the apparent responsibility of refusing even a confidential and
+unbinding discussion of the question of the restoration of peace.
+
+Second, they were anxious to make a strong bid for the support of the
+_pacifists_ of the Allied countries.
+
+How much will they succeed in galvanizing the enthusiasm of their
+peoples for another grand effort, remains to be seen.
+
+So far as their attempt to move our _pacifists_ to exert themselves in
+favour of a peace by compromise, it has already met with a complete
+failure. Our Nationalist _pacifists_ are getting so few and so far
+between, that they will most likely once more disappear and give up the
+street propaganda.
+
+On completing the reading of the official communication of Austria,
+President Wilson at once gave his reply, authorizing the Secretary of
+State to issue the following statement, dated the 16th of September and
+published broadcast on the next day:--
+
+"_I am authorized by the President to state that the following will be
+the reply of this Government to the Austro-Hungarian note proposing an
+unofficial conference of belligerents_:
+
+"'_The Government of the United States feels that there is only one
+reply which it can make to the suggestion of the Imperial
+Austro-Hungarian Government. It has repeatedly and with entire candor
+stated the terms upon which the United States would consider peace and
+can and will entertain no proposal for a conference upon a matter
+concerning which it has made its position and purpose so plain.'_"
+
+On the eleventh day of February, 1918, President Wilson, instead of
+addressing as usual a message to the two Houses, went personally to meet
+the Senate and the House of Representatives, in Congress assembled, and,
+in a most admirable speech, replied to the then recent peace utterances
+of Count von Hertling, the German Chancellor, and Count Czernin, the
+Austro-Hungarian Foreign Minister, fully explaining the only principles
+by which the Government of the United States would be guided when peace
+negotiations do take place. This most important statement is published
+as an appendix to this book. It is worthy of the great statesman who
+made it, and deserves the most attentive reading on account of the lofty
+views and noble principles it expresses, of the large issues it involves
+and of the ardent patriotism it inspires.
+
+The prime ministers of Great Britain and France have signified their
+entire assent to the energetic stand taken by President Wilson in the
+above quoted reply to Austria's peace communication.
+
+The whole British Empire, France, the United States and Italy are a unit
+in refusing to consider for a moment Austria's cynical peace proposals.
+
+Belgium, from the cross of martyrdom to which the Huns' barbarity has
+nailed her, has summoned all her wonderful courage, in her long and
+cruel agony, to repudiate with scorn the infamous German proposition to
+betray those who are pledged to be her saviours.
+
+Consequently, the peace offensive, so cleverly planned by Germany and
+opened by her contemptible Austrian satellite, has met with as dismal a
+failure as the military offensive launched on the twenty-first day of
+March last, with such superior numerical forces, and unbounded
+confidence that this gigantic effort would at last smash the Allies'
+resistance.
+
+Just as the Teutonic hordes are hurled back by the matchless strategy of
+the Chief Commander of the Allied armies and their incomparable heroism,
+the Austrian peace offensive communication is returned to their authors
+a miserable "_scrap of paper_".
+
+And the grand and noble fight will go on until Germany is brought to her
+knees and forced to recognize that "THE RESOURCES OF CIVILIZATION ARE
+NOT YET EXHAUSTED."
+
+The modern Huns are doomed to a very sad awakening from their dream of
+universal domination.
+
+Germany has challenged the world to a deadly struggle. She must bear the
+consequences, however sad they may be. Four years ago, anticipating a
+crushing victory, she exulted over the early fall of her enemies, madly
+certain that in a few weeks they would kneel down crying for mercy. She
+trusted her all to the fortunes of war. They will at last go against
+her. She would have been cruelly triumphant. Will she be cowardly in
+defeat?
+
+Austria has blindly served Germany's criminal ambition. She must abide
+by the result of her blindness.
+
+Both carried away by passion, they forgot that there would be a terrible
+reckoning day for their atrocious crime. It is near at hand, and they
+cannot avoid being called to a severe account for their foul deeds.
+
+Kaiser Wilhelm II will soon find out that Divine Justice is very
+different from what he fondly believed. He will receive the proper
+answer to his blasphemous appeals to the Almighty to bless with success
+his guilty ambition to dominate the world. He will learn that from above
+the innocent victims whom he has mercilessly sacrificed to his lust of
+autocratic power, have cried for vengeance and have been heard. He bears
+the guilt of blood and sacrilegious war. He shall receive his deserts in
+due time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+NECESSARY PEACE CONDITIONS.
+
+
+It can be positively affirmed that, taking no account whatever of the
+treasonable views of the _defeatists_, and no more of the disloyal
+opinions of the _pacifists_--because they only deserve absolute contempt
+and reprobation--the peoples called the Allies have been long ago, are
+now, and will remain to the last, unanimous on the essential PEACE
+CONDITIONS without which all the sacrifices they have made and are
+making would be a total irreparable loss.
+
+It has been proclaimed with the highest authority, and universally
+approved, that henceforth PEACE MUST BE JUST AND DURABLE. Such it should
+always have been.
+
+The principle is no doubt very easily enunciated. It is applauded by all
+and every where, even by Germany and Austria. The great, the
+insuperable, difficulty is to agree upon SUCH CONDITIONS as will
+PERMANENTLY, and to the COMPLETE SATISFACTION OF ALL CONCERNED, bless
+the world with the maintenance of a TRULY JUST AND DURABLE PEACE.
+
+It is better to admit at once that the very moment the question is
+considered, the presently contending belligerents are as far apart as
+the two poles of the earthly globe.
+
+It is extremely easy to prove it.
+
+No one now ignores--or at least should fail to realize--what kind of
+peace would be accepted by Germany as JUST AND DURABLE.
+
+To be satisfied with a settlement of peace, Germany would require the
+sanction by her opponents of her right to maintain, develop and
+strengthen her MILITARISM so threatening to the universe.
+
+At the time she was exulting over the great and crushing victory which
+she was sure to have within her powerful grasp, in debating with her
+vanquished enemies, the conditions of peace, Germany, elated as she
+would certainly have been by her triumph, would have positively claimed
+the annexation of Belgium and of all the northern part of France by
+right of conquest. She would not have been less exacting than she was,
+in 1870, when in the face of indignant but powerless Europe, she
+stripped France of her two fine and wealthy provinces, Alsace and
+Lorraine.
+
+She would have claimed the right to supersede England as mistress of the
+seas,--German supremacy replacing the British and henceforth ruling the
+waves.
+
+She would have claimed the annexation of Russian Poland, and that of
+Servia to Austria.
+
+She would have claimed the recognition of her imperial paramount power
+over the Balkans, which she would have united under the direct sway of
+her ally and vassal, Bulgaria.
+
+Victorious over all continental Europe and equally over Great Britain,
+she would most likely have claimed the cession to her of the great
+British autonomous Colonies for the purpose of pouring over to Canada,
+Australia and South Africa her increasingly overflowing population. And
+to better achieve that most coveted result, she would have destroyed at
+once the free institutions they enjoy under the British Crown to replace
+them by her autocratic rule.
+
+In one of his illogical pamphlets, abounding in extravagant views, the
+Nationalist leader has denied with scorn that Germany had ever intended
+to acquire Canada by force of arms. He supported his assertion by the
+declaration made to the contrary by a German Minister. But he failed to
+explain that this German public man said so only when the Berlin
+Government had fully realized that they could not succeed in breaking
+asunder the mighty British Empire. The Teutonic declaration was
+hypocritical, intended to deceive, and to supply our Nationalist
+"_pacifists_" with what would seem a plausible argument to cover their
+sympathies for the gentle cause of the tender hearted Huns. It is very
+easy to disclaim any aspiration to possess what one is sure never to
+get.
+
+Triumphant Germany would have bargained very hard to lay her powerful
+hand on the great Indian Empire.
+
+She would have dismembered Russia, as she has effectively done--at least
+temporarily--by the infamous Brest-Litovsk treaty.
+
+She would have strongly supported Austria in destroying for ever Italy's
+legitimate aspirations to round off her national territory by the
+annexation of that part of Austria's possessions called _The Trentino_,
+which is hers by nature.
+
+Following the precedent she had laid down, in 1870, after her triumph
+over France, Germany would undoubtedly have exacted from her fallen
+enemies, billions and billions of dollars as indemnities of war.
+
+And Germany, with such a peace treaty imposed to her despairing enemies
+with her sanguinary sword at their throat ready to murder them--as she
+did at Brest-Litovsk--would have swayed the world with her UNIVERSAL
+DOMINATION.
+
+But I hear--I must say without being the least frightened--the
+thundering clamour of the Nationalist leader crying that Germany does
+not NOW claim such peace conditions as above enumerated.
+
+Very true, and why?
+
+Only because she is no longer able to exact and impose them!
+
+In 1914, Germany being victorious over all Europe, England included,
+after a four months overpowering campaign, as she expected, would
+certainly not have been satisfied with less than the conditions just
+specified. They were the goal for which she had been strenuously
+preparing for fifty years, her success, in 1870, being the preliminary
+opening of her conquests.
+
+To bring Germany to renounce--temporarily--to her fond hopes of
+domination, it has required the heroic efforts and the untold
+sacrifices, in men and money, which Great Britain, her Colonial Empire,
+France, Italy, Belgium, Japan, betrayed Russia, and, LAST BUT NOT LEAST,
+the United States, have made during more than the last four years and
+which they are pledged to make until a successful issue.
+
+The kind of peace as above would have been what can be very properly
+called--Germany's "OFFENSIVE PEACE." In Germany's opinion this would
+have been the just and durable peace dear to her so kind heart.
+
+But having failed to carry the tremendous victory for which she had so
+powerfully prepared, Germany would NOW likely agree to negotiate what
+can be as properly called a "DEFENSIVE PEACE."
+
+By "DEFENSIVE PEACE", I mean Germany negotiating NOW with her opponents
+with the determination to repulse, as much as possible, their just
+claims, to prevent them to the utmost limit to reap the legitimate
+fruits of their admirable endeavours, to thwart the realization of their
+noble aspirations to protect the world hereafter against her guilty and
+barbarous militarism.
+
+Germany--I mean, of course, the Teutonic Imperial Government--has yet
+given no sign of a change of mind on the vital points at stake in the
+consideration of the restoration of peace. If the fortune of arms was
+once more to favour her armies, her blood stained for Colours, she
+would, to-morrow, be as mercilessly exacting as she would have been, in
+1914, had she triumphantly entered Paris inside of two months after her
+challenge to the civilized world.
+
+Germany is surely not a convert to sound Christian principles. She will
+not repent for her crimes. She does not feel the tortures of remorse at
+her foul deeds. She would certainly be a relapser, in the near future,
+if the Allies, unwisely heeding the clamour of the "_pacifists_",
+imprudently gratified her ACTUAL wish for a peace compromise.
+
+And before long Humanity would be forced to go again, in much aggravated
+conditions, over the way of the cross she has been threading along for
+nearly five years, steeped to the knees in the blood of millions of her
+heroic sons, with a reorganized Germany this time straining all the
+Huns' accumulated power to lead Civilization to her Calvary.
+
+With God's grace, that shall not be. Five years of martyrdom have
+deserved and will receive JUSTICE.
+
+After having explained what Germany, from her stand-point, considers a
+JUST AND DURABLE PEACE, let us see what such a peace means from the
+Allies' stand-point.
+
+Every free man has a right to his own opinion. However, he must never
+forget that Liberty of opinion does not mean--never meant--absence of
+knowledge, ignorance of the basic principles of political society.
+
+I do not hesitate to expound what the real conditions of the coming
+peace MUST BE to make it JUST AND DURABLE.
+
+Let the inveterate opponents of Political Liberty say what they please,
+it is undeniable that the present war has rapidly developed into a
+deadly conflict between Autocratic Power and Political Freedom.
+
+Consequently a peace patched up to uphold Autocracy and destroy free
+institutions could not be JUST and DURABLE.
+
+Under the dominating circumstances of the present struggle, to bring it
+to a satisfactory conclusion, peace, to be Just and Durable, must be
+restored with all the necessary guarantees that Political Liberty will
+hereafter be safe against the foul attempts of military despotism.
+
+This _sine qua non_ condition is general in its nature and equally
+interests all the contending Allied nations.
+
+Let us now consider the peace conditions which, though of general
+importance so far as they are NECESSARY for its permanency, are
+essential from the particular stand-point of each one of the Allies
+separately.
+
+I shall begin the review by considering the particular case of Great
+Britain.
+
+To be JUST and DURABLE for the British Empire, the future peace treaty
+must not be so drafted as to supersede British sea supremacy by that of
+Germany.
+
+The question of what is to be done with the great German African
+Colonies, conquered by the South African Dominion army, is next in
+importance to England's sea supremacy, from the British Empire
+stand-point.
+
+Germany, very far from foreseeing what was to happen, deliberately
+opened that question when she precipitated the present conflict by
+coercing Austria to crush weak Servia, herself challenging Russia and
+France, and thundering at Belgium in violation of her most sacred treaty
+obligations.
+
+Great Britain, as in honour bound, standing by Belgium, was forced to
+fight with Germany. The great autonomous Colonies nobly rallying to her
+support, the South African Dominion, Boers and British admirably united
+for the purpose, undertook for her share to conquer the German African
+Colonies. She has grandly succeeded.
+
+If, as we all hope, the Allies are finally victorious, would it be just
+to relinquish Great Britain's right over the German African Colonies,
+more especially if the South African Dominion is strongly opposed--as
+there is no doubt she will be--to their retrocession?
+
+And what about Belgium and France? No peace treaty could be called JUST
+nor could be DURABLE, which would not completely restore Belgium's
+independence; which would not oblige Germany to indemnify Belgium for
+the damages wrought upon her, more especially those which were inflicted
+to the Belgian weak but heroic nation out of sheer barbarous
+destruction.
+
+To France, the northern part of her presently occupied territory,
+together with Alsace and Lorraine, MUST be restored.
+
+The Germans are loudly crying that in exacting the restoration to France
+of the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine, the Allies would be partly
+dismembering the German Empire.
+
+Quite so, and why not? Does the victim of the highway man lose the right
+to claim his property from the ruffian who has stolen it by brutal
+force?
+
+In 1870, under the circumstances all know, Prussia imposed upon France
+the cession of Alsace and Lorraine, rounding off the territory of the
+new German Empire.
+
+France naturally smarted under the cruelty of the condition which she
+could not help accepting. For many years she cherished the hope that the
+lost provinces would ultimately return to the parental home.
+
+But it is well known how TIME is an efficient cure of many ills.
+France's yearning for the restoration of Alsace and Lorraine had
+gradually subsided. The general opinion was spreading that the
+Alsace-Lorraine matter was more and more becoming a finally settled
+question.
+
+Before the war, no Power, European or American, would have countenanced
+France in any attempt to break peace to run her chance of reconquering
+Alsace and Lorraine. France knew it perfectly well and at last bowed to
+her fate.
+
+Who has reopened the closed question of Alsace and Lorraine? Is it not
+Germany herself?
+
+Great Britain, Russia, the United States and Italy, who would not have
+supported France in an OFFENSIVE WAR with the objective of getting back
+her lost provinces, are now a most determined unit in favour of the
+restoration of Alsace and Lorraine to France as a result of the
+DEFENSIVE war Germany forced her to wage.
+
+That would be JUSTICE pure and simple: the peace treaty MUST do it.
+
+Germany having run the risk of reopening the Alsace-Lorraine acute
+question, the Allies MUST close it anew but this time against the Huns.
+
+Germany MUST also pay for the devastation she has savagely spread in
+France.
+
+I stand firm for a final settlement of the Austro-Italian too long
+pending question by giving to Italy the Trentino territory to which she
+has an evident national claim supported by the best of geographical
+conditions.
+
+Servia's independence MUST be once more secured, and Poland SHOULD be
+resuscitated.
+
+The United States part in the war is truly a grand, a noble one. They
+have no particular territorial interest to serve. Their only object is
+the general public good. They will be the benefactors of Humanity in
+claiming for their Allies the above enunciated conditions without which
+no JUST and DURABLE peace can be expected nor obtained.
+
+It is most important to caution the public against the insidious
+clamours of our _"pacifists"_, trying again to deceive the people by
+asserting that Germany is ready to negotiate for peace on fair terms.
+
+The Huns will acquiesce only to such peace terms as they will be forced
+to.
+
+The Allies are better to be guided in consequence in their unfaltering
+determination to realize a JUST and DURABLE peace by a GLORIOUS
+VICTORY.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+My ardent desire to speak the plain truth and only the truth, is just as
+strong to-day as it was when, in concluding my French work, I summarized
+the situation such as it was at the end of the year 1916, to show the
+hard duty incumbent on all the Allies, Canada included. It has been
+perhaps still more intensified by the outrageous efforts of those
+amongst us whose sole object has been, since the outbreak of the
+hostilities, to discourage our people from the herculean task they had
+bravely undertaken.
+
+Two years have since elapsed--years full of great events, and of
+untiring heroism on the part of the glorious defenders of Justice and
+Right--and I do not see the slightest reason to modify the conclusions I
+then arrived at as a matter of strict duty. Unworthy of public
+confidence is the man who, pandering to the supposed prejudices of his
+countrymen, refrains out of weakness, or of more guilty considerations,
+to tell them what they are bound to do for their own country, for their
+Empire, for the world, in the supreme crisis of our time.
+
+True every one is longing for the restoration of peace. But few are
+those who, even before being tired of the war, were ready to curb their
+heads under the German yoke, are now praying for a compromise between
+the Allies and their enemies. There are some left, it is sad to admit.
+Everywhere they are chased by the indignant public opinion daily growing
+more determined that millions of heroes shall not have given their lives
+in vain, that millions of others, wounded on the fields of battles,
+shall not, until the last of them is gone for ever, be the betrayed
+victims of Teutonic dastardly ambition.
+
+True, peace is sorely wanted, and would be welcomed by the thanksgivings
+to the Almighty of grateful peoples, who have borne with undaunted
+courage such untold and admirable sacrifices to uphold their Rights and
+their Honour. But it cannot be sued for by the nations whom Germany
+wanted to enslave by the might of her crushing militarism operating
+under the dictates of a new code of International Law of her own
+barbarous creation.
+
+Thank God, the flowing tide of unlimited Teutonic ambition let loose
+over the world, more than four years ago, has met with inaccessible
+summits where love of Justice, respect of Right, devotion to human
+Civilization, obedience to Christian Law, heroism of sacrifices, were so
+deeply entrenched, that they could not be reached and conquered. From
+this commanding altitude, they not only continue to defy the tyrants
+bent on dominating the universe, but they are mightily smashing their
+power.
+
+From the overshadowing point of view which cannot be forgotten, or
+wilfully abandoned, nothing has changed since the German Empire, in her
+delirious aspirations, challenged the world to the almost superhuman
+conflict by which she felt certain to succeed in realizing her fond
+dream of universal domination.
+
+At the outbreak of the war, ever since, to-day, to-morrow, there were,
+there are and there will be but three alternatives to the restoration of
+peace:--
+
+1.--A victorious German peace imposed on beaten and cowed belligerents:
+the peace of the "_defeatists_."
+
+2.--A peace by compromise, patched up by disheartened "_pacifists_,"
+lured by cunningness, winning where force would have failed to succeed,
+to agree to conditions pregnant with all the horrors of a new and still
+greater struggle in the near future.
+
+3.--A peace the result of the indomitable courage and perseverance of
+all the nations who have joined together to put an end to Germany's
+ambition to rule the world, and to destroy the instrument created for
+that iniquitous purpose: Prussian militarism.
+
+There could be a fourth alternative to peace, but it would be possible
+only by a miracle which, we can grant without hesitation, the world has
+perhaps not yet deserved.
+
+It would be peace restored by the sudden conversion of Germany to the
+practice of sound Christian principles, acknowledging how guilty she has
+been, repenting for her crimes, agreeing to atone for them as much as
+possible, and taking the unconditional pledge to henceforth behave like
+a civilized nation.
+
+All must admit that there is not the slightest hope of such a move from
+a nation whose autocratic Kaiser, answering, in February last, an
+address presented to him by the burgomaster of Hamburg, thundered out,
+in his usual blasting manner, that the neighbouring peoples, to enjoy
+the sweetness of Germany's friendship, "MUST FIRST RECOGNIZE THE VICTORY
+OF GERMAN ARMS."
+
+As an inducement to the Allies to bow to his wishes, he pointed to
+Germany's achievement in Russia, where a beaten enemy, "_perceiving no
+reason for fighting longer_," clasped hands with the generous Huns. The
+world has since learned with appalling horror with what tender mercy the
+barbarous Teutons reciprocated the grasping of hands of defeated Russia,
+tendered to them by the "bolshevikis" traitors.
+
+The Allies had then to select one of the three above mentioned
+alternatives.
+
+They have made their choice and they will stick close to it until it is
+achieved by the victory of their arms.
+
+Knowing as they do that the future of their peoples, and that of the
+whole world, are at stake, they will not waver in their heroic
+determination to free Humanity from Germany's cruel yoke.
+
+Viewed from the commanding height it requires to be worthily
+appreciated, the joint military effort of the Allies offers a truly
+grand spectacle, daily enlarging and getting more gloriously
+magnificent.
+
+All the Allies--every one of them--are doing their duty and their
+respective share in the great crisis they are pledged to bring to a
+triumphant conclusion.
+
+Belgium and Servia were the first to be martyred, but the hour of their
+resurrection is getting nearer every day.
+
+France, the British Empire, the United States, Italy, have done and are
+doing wonders. There can, there must be no question of appraising their
+respective merit with the intention of giving more credit either to the
+one or to the other. With the greatest possible sincerity, I affirm my
+humble, but positive, opinion that each one of the Allies has done and
+is doing, with overflowing measure, all that courage could and can
+earnestly perform, all that patriotism and the noblest national virtues
+can inspire.
+
+France has been heroic to the highest limit.
+
+The British Empire--Great Britain and her Colonies--has been grand in
+her unswerving determination to fight to a finish.
+
+The great American Republic is putting forth a wonderful exhibition of
+pluck, of strength, of boldness, of inexhaustible resources.
+
+Italy has stood nobly with her new friends ever since she broke away
+from the Triple Alliance, to escape the dishonour of remaining on good
+terms with the Central Empires in the shameful depth of their
+ignominious course. She has bravely gone through days of disaster which
+she has heroically redeemed.
+
+All the Allies, bound together by the most admirable unity of purpose,
+only rivalling in the might of their respective patriotic effort,
+having nobly _"chosen their course upon principle,"_ can never turn
+back. They must move steadily forward until victorious. They are
+indomitable in their decision not to live, under any circumstances, "_in
+a world governed by intrigue and force_."
+
+Echoing the wise and inspiring words addressed by President Wilson to
+Congress, on the eleventh of February last, we can affirm that the
+"_desire of enlightened men everywhere is for a new international order
+under which reason, justice and the common interests of mankind shall
+prevail. Without that new order the world will be without peace, and
+human life will lack tolerable conditions of existence and
+development_."
+
+A most encouraging achievement was realized, a few months ago,
+emphasizing to the utmost the unity of purpose of the Allies. Every one
+of them have millions of men under arms and at the front. It is easily
+conceived how tremendous is the task of properly directing the military
+operations of such immense armies, unprecedented in the whole human
+history. Most patriotically putting aside all national susceptibilities,
+the statesmen governing the Allied nations acknowledged the necessity of
+supporting unity of purpose by unity of military command. Their decision
+was heartily approved and applauded by all and every where.
+
+It is important to note the great difference between the standing of the
+two groups of belligerents with regard to the leadership of the armies.
+Whilst the Powers dominated by Germany, and fighting with her, are
+coerced to endure the Teutonic military supremacy of command, those
+warring on the side of France have all most cordially agreed to the
+appointment of a Commander-in-Chief out of the profound conviction that
+unity of command was more and more becoming a necessity for the
+successful prosecution of the war.
+
+Since this most urgent decision has been taken, events have surely
+proved its wisdom and usefulness. Evidently, the same as unity of
+purpose, to bear all its fruits, must be wrought out by statesmanship of
+a high order, unity of military command, to produce its natural
+advantages, must be exercised with superiority of leadership.
+
+Great statesmen, in a free country, are successful in the management of
+State affairs, just as much as they inspire an increasing confidence in
+their political genius, developed by a wide experience, honesty of
+purpose, a constant patriotic devotion to the public weal.
+
+Great military leaders can do wonders when their achievements are such
+as to create unbounded reliance on their ability. Superiority of
+command, proved by victories won in very difficult circumstances, is
+always sure to be rewarded by an enlightened enthusiasm permeating the
+whole rank and file of an army, and trebling the strength and heroism of
+every combatant.
+
+Added to the widespread renewal of confidence produced by the timely
+decision of the Allies to rely on unity of military command, is the
+reassuring evidence that the Commander-in-Chief to whom has been imposed
+the grand task of leading the unified armies to a final and glorious
+triumph, is trusted by all, soldiers and others alike.
+
+The cause for which the Allied nations are fighting with so much
+tenacity and courage being that of the salvation of Civilization,
+threatened by a wave of barbarism equal at least to, if not surpassing,
+any to which Humanity has so far survived, all must admire the wonderful
+spectacle offered by those millions and millions of men, under arms,
+from so many different countries, united, under one command, into a
+military organization which can most properly be called the GRAND ARMY
+OF HUMAN FREEDOM.
+
+It has been said by one who has presided over the destinies of the
+American Republic, as the chief of State, that peace must be dictated
+from Berlin. Can we really hope to behold the dawn of such a glorious
+day? It is hardly to be supposed that Germany would wait this last
+extremity to realize that she must abandon for ever her dream of
+universal domination, relieve the world from the enervating menace of
+her military terrorism, and redeem her past diabolical course by the
+repentant determination to join with her former enemies to deserve for
+Mankind long years of perpetual peace with all the Providential
+blessings of order, freedom, truly intellectual, moral and material
+progress.
+
+When the Kaiser ordered his hordes to violate Belgium's territory, to
+overrun France in order to crush her out of existence as a military and
+political Power, preparatory to their triumphant march to St.
+Petersburg, in his wild ambition, which he made blasphemous by
+pretending that it was divinely inspired, he felt sure that his really
+wonderful army, which he believed was, and would remain, matchless,
+would in a few weeks enter Paris.
+
+What a reverse of fortune, what a downfall from extravagant
+expectations, would be a return of the tide which, after flowing to the
+very gates of Paris, spreading devastation and crimes all over the fair
+lands it submerged, would ebb, broken and powerless, to Berlin,
+bringing the haughty tyrant to his knees before his victors!
+
+If such a day of deliverance is Providentially granted the world, having
+deserved it by an indomitable courage in resisting oppression, history
+would again repeat itself but with a different result. The French
+"TRICOLORE" would once more enter proud Berlin, but this time it would
+not be alone to be hoisted over the conquered capital of the modern
+Huns, scarcely less savage than their forefathers. It would be entwined
+with the "UNION JACK" of Great Britain and Ireland, the "STARS AND
+STRIPES" of the United States, the Colours of Italy, and, I add with an
+inexpressible feeling of loyal and national pride, with the Dominion
+Colours so brilliantly glorified by the heroism of our Canadian soldiers
+who have proved themselves the equals of the bravest through the
+protracted but ever glorious campaign, unfolded with those of Australia
+and South Africa into the glorious flag of the British Empire.
+
+When after the glorious battle of Iena, the great Napoleon, who could
+have ruined for ever the rising Prussian monarchy, entered Berlin at the
+head of his victorious legions, the new Caesar, then already the victim
+of his unlimited ambition, represented, though issued from a powerful
+popular movement, triumphant absolutism.
+
+In our days, on entering Berlin, as the final act of this wonderful
+drama, the entwined Colours of the Allies would symbolize Human Freedom,
+delivering Germany herself and the whole world from autocratic rule.
+
+Such a memorable event taking place, and rank with the most remarkable
+in the world's history, the great satisfaction of all those who would
+have contributed to its achievement, would be that the joint Colours of
+the Allies would not be raised over Germany's capital to crush the
+defeated nation under despotic caesarism, but to deliver her from
+autocratic tyrannical rule. Waving with dignity over the great Empire
+they would have freed from the thraldom of absolutist militarism, they
+could be welcomed as the promise of the renewal, for her as well as for
+her victorious rivals, of the reign of Justice, of Christian precepts,
+of Right, Order and Peace, of honest and productive Labour, of science
+applied to works creative of human happiness instead of diverting the
+marvellous resources of the great modern discoveries to criminal uses
+for the calamitous misfortune of the peoples.
+
+I will close this work with the expression of two of the wishes I have
+most at heart, cherishing the confident hope that they will be realized.
+
+England, France and the United States, fighting as they do for the
+triumph of such a sacred cause, should emerge indissolubly united from
+the great struggle they have pledged themselves to carry to a successful
+issue. I cannot conceive that so many millions of their heroic defenders
+will have given their lives only for a temporary achievement, soon to be
+forgotten. They will be gone for ever. Their sacrifices will be eternal.
+They must bear permanent fruits. United in death, buried together in the
+soil of France flooded with their blood, from their glorious graves they
+will implore their surviving countrymen to remain shoulder to shoulder
+in peace as they are in war. Their holocaust should be the holy seed
+from which loyal amity ought to grow ever stronger between the future
+generations of their countrymen who could not testify in a more eloquent
+and noble way their everlasting gratitude for the glorious heritage of
+permanent freedom they will have derived from their heroism.
+
+A most enthusiastic daily witness of the immortal deeds of the millions
+of our brothers, sons and friends, fighting with such splendid courage
+in the land of my forefathers for our common cause, how often have I,
+for the last four years, ardently vowed to God from the very bottom of
+my heart, deeply moved by the reports of their noble achievements, that
+those who will rest for ever in the ground over which they fell
+heroically, may enjoy from above the inspiring spectacle of the union
+for the permanent triumph of Liberty and Christian Civilization, of the
+great nations for whose grand future they gave their lives!
+
+I also most earnestly hope that the more fortunate of our defenders who
+will return either safe from the fields of battle, or proudly bearing
+the glorious wounds which will have crippled their bodies, but not their
+hearts, will enjoy from the sanctuary of their homes, made comfortable
+by their grateful compatriots, the profound satisfaction to see the holy
+union cemented on the thundering firing line perpetuated for the lasting
+prosperity and happiness of Mankind.
+
+The last shadow of the recollections of the feuds of past ages between
+England and France should be forever sunk in patriotic oblivion, buried
+deep beneath the glory both valorous nations will have jointly reaped in
+their mighty efforts to rescue the world from the frightful wave of
+barbarism which they will have forced to recede.
+
+All the well wishers of peaceful and happy days for future generations
+are very much gratified at knowing that in joining with the Allies in
+the mighty struggle they were carrying with such undaunted courage, the
+great American Republic was also inspired by a feeling of gratitude for
+France in remembrance of what she has done to help her to achieve her
+independence. Let us behold anew the inscrutable designs of Providence.
+Nearly a century and a half has elapsed since France, England and her
+American Colonies seemed to be for all times irreconcilable opponents.
+What a change in Destiny! Years have rolled by. New and unforeseen
+conditions have been developed the world over. Gradually two great
+currents of thoughts and aspirations have been flowing with increased
+strength preparing a formidable clash which was to threaten Civilization
+with utter destruction.
+
+Autocratic ambition was for many long years challenging Political
+Liberty to a deadly conflict. At last from the cloudy sky came the flash
+of lightning, and the thunderbolt was on the earth shaking it to its
+depth by the tremendous shock.
+
+Germany, having fired the wonderful autocratic shot, fully expected that
+her rivals would be thunderstruck beyond possibility of resurrection.
+But to her great dismay, the friends of Political Liberty the world over
+rallied as one man to its defence. And Germany trembled at seeing
+England burying for ever all ill-feelings against France, her ancient
+foe, rushing to her support with millions of her brave sons, after
+having drawn around her ally the protecting chain of her matchless
+fleet.
+
+Another very discomforting surprise was in store for the cruel Huns. The
+American Republic, grateful to France for past services, was also moved
+by renovated feelings of affection for the mother-country from whom she
+had parted without disowning her. Determined to be at the forefront of
+the battle for the triumph of human Freedom--after unsuccessfully
+exhausting every means of bringing Germany to her senses--she clasped
+hands with England and France and valiantly rallied to their sides to
+share the merit and the glory of saving Political Liberty from the
+terrible Teutonic onslaught.
+
+In my humble but sincere and profound opinion, the present spectacle
+offered to the world's admiration by the sacred and mighty union of the
+British Empire, France and the United States, every patriotic home of
+theirs thrilling with undiminished enthusiasm for the success of their
+heroic efforts, is a truly grand one inspiring unbounded faith in the
+future of Humanity. Let no one forget for a moment that the present war,
+certainly NATIONAL so far as the existence of each one of the Allied
+States is concerned, is, above all preeminently a world's conflict which
+favourable issue deeply concerns the destinies of all the peoples of
+the earthly globe.
+
+The whole question is whether autocratic tyranny will henceforth rule
+the world, or if Humanity will yet enjoy the blessings of Liberty, of
+free institutions!
+
+In all hearts must abide the supreme desire that when peace is restored
+with all and the only conditions to which they can agree, the British
+Empire, France and the American Republic will forever remain united to
+promote the prosperity and the welfare of all the nations of the earth,
+large, middle-sized or small. The duty of those of Imperialist
+proportions will be as hitherto performed by England and the United
+States in their democratic way, to protect the independence of the small
+States, never aspiring to any territorial acquisitions but those
+accruing to them with the full and free consent of the new populations
+asking the protection of their aegis and the advantages of their union.
+
+When I consider the grand and magnificent part the three above named
+leading nations can play for the happy future of Humanity, by working
+hand in hand, and shoulder to shoulder, for general peace, order and
+prosperity, my heart is full with the ardent desire to witness them
+accepting that glorious task with the stern determination to
+accomplish it to its better end. In spite of the vicissitudes and the
+failings of their past, they have done a great deal for the general
+good. They can do still more in the future. Like everyman bearing with
+fortitude the trials of life with the worthy design of profiting by the
+experience thus acquired to elevate himself to a higher conception of
+his duty, the British Empire, France and the United States will
+undoubtedly emerge from behind the dark clouds of the present days with
+aspirations ennobled by the sacrifices they are making, purified by the
+sufferings and the holocaust of so many of their own, with a stronger
+will to help working out the world's destiny by maintaining permanent
+peace and good-will amongst men. If they pursue that dignified course of
+high ideals they will fully deserve the admiration and the gratitude of
+all those who will benefit by their examples, and reap the abundant
+fruits of their devoted and enlightened leadership.
+
+It is one of the blessings of true Political Liberty, when duly
+understood and intelligently practised, to produce a class of
+politicians and statesmen of wide experience, of commanding character,
+of high culture, of great attainments, with a superior training in the
+management of public affairs, who are readily acknowledged as national
+leaders by the people who confidently trust them, reserving, of course,
+their constitutional right to call new men to office whenever they
+consider in the public interest to do so. Those trusted leaders do not
+claim, as the German autocratic Kaiser, the power, by Divine Right, to
+do anything they please, asserting that in every imaginable case they do
+the will of the Almighty.
+
+When charged with the Government of their country, they understand very
+well that their duty is to manage the national affairs under their
+responsibility, first, to the Divine Ruler, as any other man in any
+other calling; secondly, to those who, having required their services,
+have the constitutional right to call them to account for their
+stewardship.
+
+Just as confidence is the basis of sound national credit, trust, on the
+part of the people, and responsibility, on that of the national leaders,
+are the two cornerstones of free institutions.
+
+Great Britain,--and her great autonomous Colonies also--for many long
+years past, have been most fortunate in the choice of the national
+leaders whom they have successively entrusted with the affairs of State.
+
+In that momentous occurrence, more than four years ago, when the whole
+question whether Great Britain would go to war, or not, was laid before
+the Imperial Parliament supported by the strongest possible reasons in
+favour of the decision to accept the challenge of Germany, and fight
+with the firm determination not to sheathe the sword before victory was
+won, no British public man would have dared, like the German Emperor, to
+claim, by Divine Authority, the right to violate the solemn treaties the
+provisions of which his country was in honour and duty bound to carry
+out to the very letter.
+
+The commanding parts national leaders play in a free country, in
+consequence of the public confidence they inspire and enjoy, can have
+their counterparts in the great society of nations.
+
+Whatever shall be the final settlement of all the difficult matters
+brought up for solution by the war, it is certain that the management of
+the world's affairs will be well served by the legitimate influence of
+great nations whose leadership will be beneficial just in proportion as
+it is itself directed by the true principles of political Freedom, and
+an uncompromising respect of the rights of weaker nations always
+entitled to the fairest dealings on the part of their stronger
+associates in the great commonwealth of Sovereign States.
+
+There cannot be the slightest doubt that the British Empire, France and
+the United States, until Providentially ordered otherwise, will
+hereafter be the three leading nations of the world. Their union
+maintained sacred in peace, as it is in war, will be the safest
+guarantee that the days of autocratic domination have ended. Henceforth
+the tide of political Freedom will flow with increased rapidity and
+strength. The only danger ahead, against which it is always wise to
+provide with due care and foresight, is that which would be the result
+of abuse and wild expectations always sure to react in favour of
+absolutist principles. Political Liberty and Order, Governmental
+Authority and Freedom, both well directed, must work hand in hand for
+the national welfare.
+
+The British Empire, France and the American Republic are free countries.
+More and better than any others they should and must, by example and
+friendly advice, lead the peoples in the successful practice of
+self-government.
+
+Considering more especially the part the British Empire will be called
+upon to play in the reorganized world, freed from autocratic terrorism,
+we must not lose sight of the much larger place England's great
+autonomous Colonies will occupy in the broadened English Commonwealth.
+We, Canadians, together with our brethren from Australia, New Zealand
+and South Africa, will have done our glorious share to win the war. We
+shall have to perform with equal devotion the new duty of sharing the
+British Empire's task in gradually elevating the nations to an
+enlightened practice of Political Liberty.
+
+Evidently to do so with the success this noble cause will deserve, we
+must first strive to utilize our admirable free institutions to the best
+advantage, for ourselves, for our own future, and for the grand
+destinies of our Empire.
+
+As an instrument of good government our constitutional charter is almost
+perfect, as much so as any thing worldly can be. Let us never forget
+that the best weapon for self-protection may become useless, or even
+dangerous for us, if not handled with the required intelligence, justice
+and skill. We would lose all claims to contribute guiding others in the
+enjoyment of free institutions if we, ourselves, were mistaken in the
+proper working of our own constitution from a misconception of its
+literal wording or of its largeness of spirit. We must never challenge
+the truth that "spirit giveth life."
+
+More than ever the supreme difficulties of governing numerous racial
+groups, issued from ancient stocks so long divided by endless
+feuds,--the result of the many sudden changes of territorial limits to
+be wrought by the restoration of peace--will be very hard to settle
+satisfactorily. The task will require the constant effort of
+statesmanship of a high order.
+
+Many of those who will hereafter be trained to self-government will look
+to us for their guidance. We must give them the inspiring example of
+fair play, of justice for all, of unity of purpose and aspirations in
+the diversity of ethnical offsprings.
+
+Need I say that the most urgent duty of all fair minded Canadians is,
+and will ever be, to heartily join together, to bless our dear country
+with concord, good feeling, harmony and kindly dispositions to grant an
+overflowing measure of justice to all our countrymen of all origins and
+creeds.
+
+Writing this book with the express purpose of explaining and strongly
+disapproving the deplorable efforts of a few to deter my French Canadian
+compatriots from doing their bounden duty through the dire crisis we are
+all undergoing, I will close these pages by calling anew upon my English
+speaking countrymen not to judge them by the sayings and deeds of
+persons who can at times somewhat stir up dangerous prejudices, but who
+are utterly incompetent to lead them as they should and deserve to be.
+Silenced at last by a patriotic measure to censure any disloyal
+expression of sentiments, matters have easily resumed their regular and
+honourable course. All loyal citizens, throughout the length and breadth
+of the land, have, I am sure, much rejoiced at the loyalty with which
+the French Canadians, of all classes, religious, social, commercial,
+industrial, financial, agricultural, have united to obey a statute of
+military service to which many of them did not agree, as long as they
+had the constitutional right to differ from the opinion of the large
+majority of our people, but to the successful operation of which they
+rallied the moment it was the law of the land. The worthy leaders of our
+Church strongly recommended obedience to the decision of the constituted
+authority, firmly condemned any guilty attempt at disturbing public
+order, and ordered all the members of their flocks to fervously pray the
+Almighty for PEACE WITH VICTORY FOR THE ALLIES.
+
+Our "pacifists at all hazards" once more silenced, this time by the very
+religious leaders under whose aegis they had shamefully tried to shield
+themselves, the patriotic impulse was moved to most commendable action.
+Without waiting for the call of the law, hundreds of young men from the
+better classes, from the universities and other educational
+institutions, well educated, voluntarily enlisted and rallied to the
+Colours. At least as much as in the other provinces, the class of our
+young manhood called by law heartily responded, all the real leaders of
+public opinion uniting to give the only advice loyal men could express.
+
+For one, I was most happy to ascertain how favourably western public
+feeling was impressed by the new turn of thoughts and events in the
+Province of Quebec. The reaction of sentiments operating both ways,--in
+Ontario, the western Provinces and Quebec--augurs well for the final
+abatement of the excitement which for a time menaced our fair Dominion
+with regrettable racial strifes so much to be deprecated.
+
+It can be positively affirmed that the whole people of Canada, east to
+west, north to south, are now more than ever a unit in their patriotic
+determination to fight the war to its final victorious issue. To this
+end the two millions of French British subjects in Canada, in perfect
+communion of thoughts and aspirations with the two millions of the
+neighbouring Republic's subjects of French Canadian origin, are loyally
+doing, and will continue to do, their share. Their representatives at
+the front are gloriously fighting the common enemy. Their valour and
+their achievements during the Allies' offensive so masterly planned and
+carried out by the Commander-in-Chief, Foch, have been worthy of their
+victories at Ypres, Vimy, Courcelette, Passchandaele. Many have, during
+the last three months, given their lives for the cause they defend. Many
+more have been wounded and are anxiously waiting their cure, when
+possible, to return to the field of honour. Daily reports from the
+front tell of their enthusiasm, of their bravery, of their heroism!
+
+The French Canadians--I have no hesitation whatever in vouching for
+it--will continue to bear stoically with the sacrifices of so many kinds
+the conflict imposes upon them. Though smarting, as all others, under
+the burden, yet they cheerfully pay the heavy taxes required from the
+country to meet our national obligations the outcome of the war.
+
+So all is for the best under the strenuous present conditions of our
+national existence.
+
+In closing, I pray leave to reiterate, from the Introduction to this
+work, the following lines expressing my most sincere and profound
+conviction:--
+
+I hope,--and most ardently wish--that all my readers will agree with me
+that next to the necessity of winning the war--and may I say, even as of
+almost equal importance for the future grandeur of our beloved
+country--range that of promoting by all lawful means harmony and good
+will amongst all our countrymen, whatever may be their racial origin,
+their religious faith, their particular aspirations not conflicting with
+their devotion to Canada as a whole, nor with their loyalty to the
+British Empire, whose grandeur and prestige they want to firmly help to
+uphold with the inspiring confidence that more and more they will be the
+unconquerable bulwark of Freedom, Justice, Civilization and Right.
+
+May I be allowed to conclude by saying that my most earnest desire is to
+do all in my power, in the rank and file of the great army of free men,
+to reach the goal which ought to be the most persevering and patriotic
+ambition of loyal Canadians of all origins and creeds.
+
+And I repeat, wishing my words to be re-echoed throughout the length and
+breadth of the land I so heartily cherish:--I have always been, I am and
+will ever be, to my last breath, true to my oath of allegiance to my
+Sovereign and to my country.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX--A.
+
+PRESIDENT WILSON'S SPEECH
+
+TO THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS--11TH DAY OF FEBRUARY, 1918.
+
+
+On the above mentioned date, Mr. Wilson, the President of the great
+American Republic, delivered the following speech to the Congress, in
+Washington. This noble and statesmanlike utterance met with the
+unanimous and enthusiastic approval of the members of both Houses, and
+was highly applauded, not only in the United States, but over all the
+truly civilized world. It reads thus:--
+
+ "On the eighth of January, I had the honor of addressing you on
+ the objects of the war as our people conceive them. The Prime
+ Minister of Great Britain had spoken in similar terms on the
+ fifth of January. To these addresses the German Chancellor
+ replied on the 24th and Count Czernin for Austria on the same
+ day. It is gratifying to have our desire so promptly realized
+ that all exchanges of view on this great matter should be made
+ in the hearing of all the world.
+
+ "Count Czernin's reply, which is directed chiefly to my own
+ address, on the eighth of January, is uttered in a very friendly
+ tone.
+
+ "He finds in my statement a sufficiently encouraging approach to
+ the views of his own government to justify him in believing that
+ it furnishes a basis for a more detailed discussion of purposes
+ by the two governments. He is represented to have intimated that
+ the views he was expressing had been communicated to me
+ beforehand and that I was aware of them at the time he was
+ uttering them; but in this I am sure he was misunderstood. I had
+ received no intimation of what he intended to say. There was, of
+ course, no reason why he should communicate privately with me. I
+ am quite content to be one of his public audiences.
+
+ "Count von Hertling's reply is, I may say, very vague and very
+ confusing. It is full of equivocal phrases and leads, it is not
+ clear where. But it is certainly in a very different tone from
+ that of Count Czernin and apparently of an opposite purpose. It
+ confirms, I am sorry to say, rather than removes, the
+ unfortunate impression made by what we had learned of the
+ conferences at Brest-Litovsk. His discussion and acceptance of
+ our general principles leads him to no practical conclusions. He
+ refuses to apply them to the substantiate items which must
+ constitute the body of any final settlement. He is jealous of
+ international action and of international council. He accepts,
+ he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to
+ insist that it be confined at any rate in this case, to
+ generalities and that the several particular questions of
+ territory and sovereignty, the several questions upon whose
+ settlement must depend the acceptance of peace by the
+ twenty-three states now engaged in the war, must be discussed
+ and settled, not in general council but severally by the nations
+ most immediately concerned by interest of neighbourhood. He
+ agrees that the seas should be free, but looks askance at any
+ limitation to that freedom by international action in the
+ interest of the common order. He would, without reserve, be glad
+ to see economic barriers removed between nation and nation, for
+ that could in no way impede the ambitions of the military party
+ with whom he seems constrained to keep on terms. Neither does he
+ raise objection to a limitation of armaments. That matter will
+ be settled of itself, he thinks, by the economic conditions
+ which must follow the war. But the German colonies, he demands,
+ must be returned without debate. He will discuss with no one but
+ the representatives of Russia what disposition shall be made of
+ the peoples and the lands of the Baltic provinces; with no one
+ but the Government of France the "conditions" under which French
+ territory shall be evacuated and only with Austria what shall be
+ done with Poland. In the determination of all questions
+ affecting the Balkan states he defers, as I understand him, to
+ Austria and Turkey and with regard to the agreements to be
+ entered into concerning the non-Turkish peoples of the present
+ Ottoman Empire, to the Turkish authorities themselves. After a
+ settlement all around effected in this fashion, by individual
+ barter and concession, he would have no objection, if I
+ correctly interpret his statement, to a league of nations which
+ would undertake to hold the balance of power steady against
+ external disturbance.
+
+ "It must be evident to everyone who understands what this war
+ has wrought in the opinion and temper of the world that no
+ general peace, no peace worth the infinite sacrifices of these
+ years of tragical suffering, can possibly be arrived at in any
+ such fashion. The method the German Chancellor proposes is the
+ method of the Congress of Vienna. We cannot and will not return
+ to that. What is at stake now is the peace of the world. What we
+ are striving for is a new international order based upon broad
+ and universal principles of right and justice--no mere peace of
+ shreds and patches. Is it possible that Count von Hertling does
+ not see that, does not grasp it, is in fact living in his
+ thought in a world dead and gone? Has he utterly forgotten the
+ Reichstag resolutions of the 19th of July, or does he
+ deliberately ignore them? They spoke of the conditions of a
+ general peace, not of national aggrandizement or of arrangements
+ between state and state. The peace of the world depends upon
+ just settlement of each of the several problems to which I
+ adverted in my recent address to Congress. I, of course, do not
+ mean that the peace of the world depends upon the acceptance of
+ any particular set of suggestions as to the way in which those
+ problems are to be dealt with. I mean only that those problems,
+ each and all, affect the whole world; that unless they are dealt
+ with in a spirit of unselfish and unbiassed justice, with a view
+ to the wishes, the natural connections, the racial aspirations,
+ the security and peace of mind of the peoples involved, no
+ permanent peace will have been attained. They cannot be
+ discussed separately or in corners. None of them constitutes a
+ private or separate interest from which the opinion of the world
+ may be shut out. Whatever affects the peace affects mankind,
+ and nothing settled by military force, if settled wrong, is
+ settled at all. It will presently have to be re-opened.
+
+ "Is Count von Hertling not aware that he is speaking in the
+ court of mankind, that all the awakened nations of the world now
+ sit in judgment on what every public man, of whatever nation,
+ may say on the issues of a conflict which has spread to every
+ region of the world? The Reichstag resolutions of July 19
+ themselves frankly accepted the decisions of that court. There
+ shall be no annexations, no contributions, no punitive damages.
+ Peoples are not to be handed about from one sovereignty to
+ another by an international conference or an understanding
+ between rivals and antagonists. National aspirations must be
+ respected; peoples may now be dominated and governed only by
+ their own consent. "Self-determination," is not a mere phrase.
+ It is an imperative principle of action, which statesmen will
+ henceforth ignore at their peril. We cannot have general peace
+ for the asking, or by the mere arrangements of a peace
+ conference. It cannot be pieced together out of individual
+ understandings between powerful states. All the parties to this
+ war must join in the settlement of every issue anywhere involved
+ in it because what we are seeking is a peace that we can all
+ unite to guarantee and maintain whether it be right and fair, an
+ act of justice, rather than a bargain between sovereigns.
+
+ "The United States has no desire to interfere in European
+ affairs or to act as arbiter in European territorial disputes.
+ We would disdain to take advantage of any internal weakness or
+ disorder to impose her own will upon another people. She is
+ quite ready to be shown that the settlements she has suggested
+ are not the best or the most enduring. They are only her own
+ provisional sketch of principles, and of the way in which they
+ should be applied. But she entered this war because she was made
+ a partner, whether she would or not, in the sufferings and
+ indignities inflicted by the military masters of Germany,
+ against the peace and security of mankind; and the conditions of
+ peace will touch her as nearly as they will touch any other
+ nation to which is entrusted a leading part in the maintenance
+ of civilization. She cannot see her way to peace until the
+ causes of this war are removed, its renewal rendered, as nearly
+ as may be, impossible.
+
+ "This war had its roots in the disregard of the rights of small
+ nations and of nationalities which lacked the union and the
+ force to make good their claim to determine their own
+ allegiances and their own forms of political life. Covenants
+ must now be entered into which will render such things
+ impossible for the future; and those covenants must be backed by
+ the united force of all the nations that love justice and are
+ willing to maintain it at any cost. If territorial settlements
+ and the political relations of great populations which have not
+ the organized power to resist are to be determined by the
+ contracts of the powerful governments which consider themselves
+ most directly affected, as Count von Hertling proposes, why may
+ not economic questions also? It has come about in the altered
+ world in which we now find ourselves that justice and the rights
+ of peoples affect the whole field of international dealing as
+ much as access to raw materials and fair and equal conditions of
+ trade. Count von Hertling wants the essential basis of
+ commercial and industrial life to be safeguarded by common
+ agreement and guarantee, but he cannot expect that to be
+ conceded him if the other matters to be determined by the
+ articles of peace are not handled in the same way as it was in
+ the final accounting. He cannot ask the benefit of common
+ agreement in the one field without according it in the other. I
+ take it for granted that he sees that separate and selfish
+ compacts with regard to trade and the essential materials of
+ manufacture would afford no foundation for peace. Neither, he
+ may rest assured, will separate and selfish compacts with regard
+ to the provinces and peoples.
+
+ "Count Czernin seems to see the fundamental elements of peace
+ with clear eyes and does not seek to obscure them. He sees that
+ an independent Poland, made up of all the indisputably Polish
+ peoples who lie contiguous to one another, is a matter of
+ European concern and must of course be conceded; that Belgium
+ must be evacuated and restored, no matter what sacrifices and
+ concessions that may involve; and that national aspirations must
+ be satisfied, even within his own empire, in the common interest
+ of Europe and mankind. If he is silent about questions which
+ touch the interest and purpose of his Allies more nearly than
+ they touch those of Austria only, it must, of course, be because
+ he feels constrained, I suppose, to defer to Germany and Turkey
+ in the circumstances. Seeing and conceding, as he does, the
+ essential principles involved and the necessity of candidly
+ applying them, he naturally feels that Austria can respond to
+ the purpose of peace as expressed by the United States with less
+ embarrassment than could Germany. He would probably have gone
+ much farther had it not been for the embarrassments of Austria's
+ alliance and of her dependence upon Germany.
+
+ "After all the test of whether it is possible for either
+ Government to go any further in this comparison of views is
+ simple and obvious. The principles to be applied are:
+
+ "First, that each part of the final settlement must be based on
+ the essential justice of the particular case, and upon such
+ adjustments as are most likely to bring a peace that will be
+ permanent.
+
+ "Second, that peoples and provinces are not to be bartered about
+ from sovereignty to sovereignty as if they were mere chattels
+ and pawns in a game, even the great game, now for ever
+ discredited, of the balance of power; but that,
+
+ "Every territorial settlement involved in this war must be made
+ in the interest and for the benefit of the populations concerned
+ and not as a part of any mere adjustment of compromise of claims
+ amongst rival states; and,
+
+ "Fourth, that all well defined national aspirations shall be
+ accorded the utmost satisfaction that can be accorded them
+ without introducing new or perpetuating old elements of discord,
+ and antagonism that would be likely in time to break the peace
+ of Europe and consequently of the world.
+
+ "A general peace entered upon such foundations can be discussed.
+ Until such a peace can be secured we have no choice but to go
+ on. So far as we can judge, these principles that we regard as
+ fundamental are already everywhere accepted as imperative
+ except among the spokesmen of the military and annexationist
+ party in Germany. If they have anywhere else been rejected, the
+ objectors have not been sufficiently numerous or influential to
+ make their voices audible. The tragic circumstance is that this
+ one party in Germany is apparently willing and able to send
+ millions of men to their death to prevent what all the world now
+ sees to be just.
+
+ "I would not be a true spokesman of the people of the United
+ States if I did not say once more that we entered this war upon
+ no small occasion, and that we can never turn back from a course
+ chosen upon principle. Our resources are in part mobilized now,
+ and we shall not pause until they are mobilized in their
+ entirety. Our armies are rapidly going to the fighting front,
+ and will go more rapidly. Our whole strength will be put into
+ this state of emancipation--emancipation from the threat and
+ attempted mastery of selfish groups of autocratic
+ rulers--whatever the difficulties and present partial delays. We
+ are indomitable in our power of independent action, and can in
+ no circumstances consent to live in a world governed by intrigue
+ and force. We believe that our own desire for a new
+ international order under which reason and justice and the
+ common interests of mankind shall prevail, is the desire of
+ enlightened men everywhere. Without that new order the world
+ will be without peace, and human life will lack tolerable
+ conditions of existence and development. Having set our hand to
+ the task of achieving it, we shall not turn back.
+
+ "I hope that it is not necessary for me to add that no word of
+ what I have said is intended as a threat. That is not the
+ temper of our people. I have spoken thus only that the whole
+ world may know the true spirit of America--that men everywhere
+ may know that our passion for justice and for self-government is
+ no mere passion of words, but a passion which, once set in act,
+ must be satisfied. The power of the United States is a menace to
+ no nation or people. It will be never used in aggression or for
+ the aggrandizement of any selfish interest of our own. It
+ springs out of freedom and is for the service of freedom."
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX--B.
+
+TEXT OF UNITED STATES REPLY TO AUSTRIA.
+
+
+On the 18th of September, 1918, the Secretary of State made public the
+official text of the letter he sent, to Mr. W. A. F. Ekengren, the
+Swedish Minister, in charge of Austro-Hungarian affairs, conveying
+President Wilson's rejection of the Austrian peace proposals. It reads
+as follows:--
+
+ "Sir,--I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your note,
+ dated September 16, communicating to me a note from the Imperial
+ Government of Austria-Hungary, containing a proposal to the
+ Government of all the belligerent States to send delegates to a
+ confidential and unbinding discussion on the basic principles
+ for the conclusion of peace. Furthermore, it is proposed that
+ the delegates would be charged to make known to one another the
+ conception of their Governments regarding these principles, and
+ to receive analogous communications, as well as to request and
+ give frank and candid explanations on all those points which
+ need to be precisely defined.
+
+ "In reply, I beg to say that the substance of your communication
+ has been submitted to the President, who now directs me to
+ inform you that the Government of the United States feels that
+ there is only one reply which it can make to the suggestion of
+ the Imperial Austro-Hungarian Government. It has repeatedly, and
+ with entire candor, stated the terms upon which the United
+ States would consider peace, and can and will entertain no
+ proposal for a conference upon the matter concerning which it
+ has made its position and purpose so plain.
+
+ "Accept, sir, the renewed assurances of my highest
+ consideration.
+
+ "(Signed), ROBERT LANSING,
+ "Secretary of State."
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes
+
+Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
+
+Numerous obvious spelling errors have been corrected.
+
+Archaic or unusual words and spellings have not been changed:
+beneficient, coronated, consolated, conspiration, devotedness, divers,
+elogius, enflame, enounced, equilibrist, eulogium, fervously,
+injustifiable, irresistable, instil, Magna Charta, planturous,
+plebiscit, plebiscitary, preconized, profonated, Roumanian, Servia,
+subtilties, tragical, treasonably, troublous, tutorage, unbiassed,
+uncontrovertible, unsufficiently, woful.
+
+Both "bolshevik" and "bolchevik" appear and have not been changed.
+
+Both "standpoint(s)" and "stand-point(s)" appear and have not been
+changed.
+
+The following inconsistent usages appear and have not been changed:
+"Mother Country", "mother country", "mother-country", "Mother Land",
+"Mother land", "mother land", "Motherland".
+
+Italic font is indicated by _xxx_ and bold font by =xxx=.
+
+Page 34: Duplicate word "His" deleted (His Excellency had just).
+
+Page 96 (and elsewhere): "per cent" changed to "per cent." for
+consistency.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of England, Canada and the Great War, by
+Louis-Georges Desjardins
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