> THE HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1868, fearless expression of his altered sentimenta, had maac him (Continued from Arst page.) fected by means of such a limited expenddi- ture or cost as would well warrant the in- troduction of the system to an extent. a! feast, suflivicat to prove, inthe course of two or three years, whethey ik might be safely bromght into operation generally, throngh- oat the Island. 4 , “Ta regard to the expedieney of a law to permit the inhabitants of certain defined districts, or divisions of Conntice. to elect from among themselves, a Board, for the Management of Highways within sneh dis- _ ticts, onthe pr a mg embodied in the Tin- perial Statute of the 25th and 26th. Vie- toria, Cap. 6, towhich reference is made by the said Report, your Committee consider that a system of this hind would be attend- ed with many advantages— amongst others, that of relieving the Houre of Assembly from a great deal of the business which at present occupies it, in apprepriating the moneys gravted for the Highways, und dis: cursing local preferential wane in the dis- tribution of them; but, wnless a system of this kind were likely to be very wencrally adopted throughout the Island, its adyan- tages would be uncertain. “ Your Committce, in. conclusion, trust that the sulject ofan improved system in the making and repairing of the Highways, will be resumed at the earliest period of the next Session of the Legislature, when the Legislative Council will most readily coneur in the passing of any ,General Measure, having for its object, the permanent im- _provemcntof the Highways of the colony.” Hon. Mr. MacDonatp: T regret that I was voi present when the House was last in Committee upon this Report, for Thad not the advantage of hearing your honors’ remarks; but I must coveur in one observation just now made-by his honor from the City, that is, that iu or. der to carry out the suggestions contaiu- edin the Report, we would require a much larger revenue than we have at present. In this small Colony, and where our resources are proportioually emall, it is difficult to make roads equal to what they have in larger and older countries; particularly as our soil is of a very inferior description for road mak- ing. In some of she other Colonies they have abundance of hard stone just beside their roads, but our soil is so soft avd light that it is difficult to make substan- tial roads with it, An experiment has been tried in the neighborhood of George- town with Island stone, and a good piece of road has been made—cne which I be- dieve will remain good with very trifling repairs for many years—at an expendi- ture of £100, or less, per mile. ‘That is a very much less amount than it will cost to construct roads upon the plan suggest- ed or recommended by the Committee. I give the Committee full credii for havy- ing gone to a great deal of trouble in the preparation of that Report. They have Spared no pains to produce a very able and excellent Document, but I eannot say that I agree with all the conclusions they have cometo. Our roads are now kept up atan expenditure uf £6,000, or £7,000 a year ; though last year, includ- ing bridges aud wharves, I believe £14- 00 were expended. But for the road service alone, I do not think the annual expenditure, upon an average, excecds £5,000, or £6,000. Now, 1 do not | P think that is very desirable, for besides | duce ia taken to market, to be expended upon them, and it would economize our means to have competent poration, selves for the same object. force. eflicient. anything else. £15,000 or £20,000 a year are to be ex- j being = sage ronds, they are the pat pended upon the roads, one is no fairer upon Which the greatest quantity of pro-| way to raise that sum than by increasing : tt ve is, therefore, oe duty y would be better to let the Statute Labor desirable that they should be placed years, We might expect to see some im- neder'some other supervision than dhat provement ; but to talk of carrying ont of the present Road Commissioners fora) ijis scheme without money is simply large amount of public movey will have preposterous, Then, in a few Hon, Mr. HWavrrnorna: His houor supervisors appointed. ‘Phen the com- | from the city made some statements res- mittee suggest a system of loval manage pecting the great utility of good roads, ment, by which the people ia certain} which, 1 am sure, uone will be disposed districts, by applying w the Government, | to devy, for a country having no meaus could forms themselves into a sort of cor-| of communication may be said to be ina They could then apply to the | semi-savage — state. Legislature for and receive grauts, of | veighboring Colonies, though the popu- money in aid of the improvement of their | lation is thin, aud the soil poor, they yet roads, and they could also assess them-| contribute large sums for the construc: That system | tion of railways. as the railroad some of the In Nova Scotia, cost-| ner lot, aud would have cight or ten is, I believe none | times as much road as his nenghbor, who here would uudertuke to look atter its! would be found to say that the money | perhaps had more property? I think own roads, by takiug corporate powers | was thrown away, aud they would be of that kind, I believe they would soon | coutent to go back to the old system. 1 be in a more efficient state than they are | believe we are in a better position in likely to be uuder the system now in | some respects than Nova Scotia, and if With regard to statute labour, 1/ we once commenced a system of Mac- re, mere tracks, requiring a large amount have always been of opinion that a direet adumization, the cry would be for exten- pope ia at rep a) out od suanias poll tax would be preferable and raore | sion, | i is adopted in Canada, and if any district | ly The great complaint is, that a} ..), People frequently go upon the | good sound system of road making has | jonors spoke of having the Statute Labor roads under the preteuce of working, but | not been carried out, On the parts we! performed early in the Spring, and the often in reality more for a frolic than| have Macadamized, there has been «| Committee were fully aware of the advan- (Mr, Palmor—Hear)=) great waste of materials, aud the young They put iu their time, but if they went | Prince Edward Islander, who has never out to do a day's labor, they would re- seen good roads made, when he sees the aro heavy suowbanks, will isle ju. May? ceive more as wages, than would pay for) piece made past the Hov. Mr. Long- theretore, they did nut recommend the | spporting himself and his family, left no interval of rest. to all the statute lwbor they perform, and | worth’s, he, no doubt, Gomes « the con- adoption of that Change ; but they threw out | ’ would have a good deal of time to spare. | clusion that if that is the best system Up-| an observation, that if their suggestion were | still going on with scarce-abated warmth on either side, and | I believe, therefore, that it Would be | on which roads can be constwucted, bad is adopted, the Commissioners woald be re- | better for the roads as well as for the| the best, Sill, it is true that, though it| lieved of a considerable amountof duty, and people themselves. If they were to pay | is a rough piece of road, yet it is avail- a tax of 1s, 6d. or 2s, instead of work-| able for travelling upon all times of the ing a certain vumber of hours, there| year. The reason it is so rongh is, that made by the Legislature, would be judiciously expended, Wis honor from Bay Fortune (Mr, Dingwell) thought it be performed by each man in front of his own farm, and T must admit that there is something very: plausible in that idea, but I do uot think it would be found so practicable as might be supposed at firat sight, for some who have large properties have small fronts and vica versa, It would fall very light ou myself, as 1 have ouly six chains of frout, while my neighvor, who only oceupics sixty acres, has thirty, or six times as much as I have, who occupy 260 acres, If you ia- vestigate this proposal, you will find many such objections to it. How would you provide for a man who had a cor- his honor must have overlooked some of these matter’, With regard to Statute Labor in general, the Committee did did not speak in favor of it, but they saw that as long aa the roads remained as they having it abolished. Some of your tages of adopting that courec, but they were also aware that in some places the frost is not out, and in other’ places there {From the New York Tablet.) ’ THOMAS DARCY McGER—INIS AMERICAN CA- | REER, It wasin the autumn of the memorable year of 1848 that the subjeet of our sketch, with his wife andan infant daugh- ter, landed again on American soil, in the geometrical city of Brotherly Love, where the young exiles made warm, ap- preciative friends, Ju:t two weeka after, the New York Nation made its appearance, with ‘Thomas D'Arcy MeGee as editor, Theeareer of that paper wos brief and brilliant aa the meteor that flashes through the midnight sky ; of all the emanations of our lost friend's prolitic mind, what he wrote for the New York ution is the Icast pleasing to us; national it was, intensely so, but by an error common to the young enthusiasts of that and other times, it, to some extent, placed nationality above religion, Smarting under the keen sense of defeat and disappointment, our young editor was led to throw the blame of the reeent fulare in Treland on the clergy and hierarchy of that eountry, who had undoubt- edly discharged ther duty to their peéple by representing to them the absurdity and folly of any attempt to overthrow nitish power in Ireland under existing cireumstances. — The defence of the Irish clergy was taken up by the late eminent Archbishop Hughes, whose strictures on the rash and im- prudent articles in the Vidéon, although severe, were just, as Mr, McGee him-elf freely admitted in after years, None more than he regretted the course he then pursued, and whether in public, or in private, tothe last day of his life, he never shrank from acknowledging that grave error of his ardent youth. One trait of his generous and noble nature was ever a willingness to acmit himself wrong, if wrong he had been, The mistake, however, was fatal to the Now York Nation, and in June, 1860, it ceased to live, The Dublin Nution was by that time revived, and Mr. MeGce would have returned to assist his frend, Gavan Duffy, in its management, were it not that he could obtain no satis- factory answer from the Castle officials as to whether he was to be prosecuted or not, An answer came at length from the * Home Office ' to the cffect that no sufficient “ case had been made out against him,” By the time this answer enemies amongst certain classes of his own countrymen, and the foundations were being laid of that huge pile of calumny that has since been reared above his name and fume, ‘Truth to te!l, Mr. MeGee owed little to the great mass of his countrymen in these United States, and, when he was, at length, invited by the Irish citizens of Montrea) to take up his abode permanently amongst them, there wag no very heavy debt of gratitude to the le here to with. hold him from secking his own and his family’s fortuncy where an honorable earcer seemed opening before him, and every inducement was held out to his laudable ambition, A numerously-signed invitation was sent him from the lish. men of Canada, and of that, and his resolution to accept it, he said in the Valedictory already quoted : « None ot the motives to this step acted so powerfully as the spontaneous and cheering expression of good-will ‘ang confidence conveyed in the document we this day publish, ‘The signatures to that paper are promissory of @ greater de. gree of unity than I could hope to see among our fellow. emigrants in these States. Both our num and our causes of division are very much greater here than in Cang. da; nor have we in the multitude of our counsellors found the wisdom of working well together." ‘No! my good friends !"* he elsewhere says, * you will not find me less true to the principles we hold in common, on the banks of the St. Lawrence, than on the Liffey, or the Hudson. Prudence may dictate many modifications of expression, but thig heart will be cold, indeed, when it ceases to warm to the sacred name of Fatherland !"* And that his heart never dia cease to warm to that name, none knows better than the present writer; none now feels with a keener pang, with a more burning shame for the race to which both were alike devoted. “I go from amongst you,”’ said Mr, MeGee, ‘ beeause T cannot hope to effect much permanent good by remaining, . . .. From personal, and other causes, T have not had a fair ficldin the United States, I, therefore, never had it In my power to Cemonstrate fully, whether [ was entitled to the confidence you placed nme... . , The power to accomplish any great good for the lish in this Republic. I have not had, and, t fore, T can only point to my intentions, my projects, and my writings, for reached Mr, McGee he was conducting the American Celt could therefore devote more attention to the performance of statute Inbor. Some say the statute labor is slighted, bat i know that in some precincts the men turn out would be more work doue upon the roads | the Macadamizing system was departed and do their work in the best possible man- than there is at present. T am inelined | from, The stones should not be larger/ner The coumiites havu no reason to to think thatthe system propoved by the | than would go through a two-inch ring,| complain that their report has been too Committee, is too expensive for the pre-| but they are three or four times that size. | mach criticised, for none could expect that sent state of the finances of the Colony ;| The Committee, if I remember right, had | document of this kind would meet with | but at the same time, if our revenue was] the s.atement from the Commissiouer, universal approval, We know that men, upon these subjects, have — particular | sufficient to enable us to carry out that ‘ it one w Je I Ap von! that ¢ much larger quamity of stone was *erotehets,” bat if what Tmay call the system, I have no doubt but it wonld| used upon that road than was necessary, wnitorenl rele with renal 06 toad inaklag /coufer a very great benefit upon the! and that shows the necessity of having} that js, Macad.in's system, were adopted, |Colony. It would be the meansof savirg | meu to superiuteud the work who thor-|/there would he no room let for those /a vast deal of time to those who have to oughly understaud the system. Some-/|¢rotchets. And though the resolution of take their produce a considerale distance thing has been said with respect to the | his honor from the City docs not absolutely to market ; but the question is whether | use of Island stone. the cost, under the proposed system, | is pot so destitute of good materials for would not be greater than the benelits | road-making assome imagine, and though which would be derived from it, I know the Island | approve of the whole of the report without qualification, yet L think there is as much approval in it as could be expected from a gentleman occupying his position, Island: stoue is not so well suited for) ¢,, his honey may seen have to take the roads in general, as hard stone, yet, | jolu of our political alfairs, aud, of course, . . FELL: w - : apg : * “ ‘ ah plete indi — - ah have no doubt but it would be a benefit | it is wise tor him to keep himself free from on . P : ’ m many soft places, if it were carefully | being pledged to any particular course. she abeeches of your honore upon this] taid ow. Que of your hovors alluded to 4 oF ; piece of road in the Royalty, aud at the my remarks should be misunderstood. | gret it very much. for I am now uuder a present time, it is like a dyke, with the / neither do L think it was the desire of bis disadvantage. But as revards statute labor, I thiuk, and have thought for some years, that it should be abolished. I have thought for mavy years that, after over the top, was to drain the road properly, and ki 1 keeping | Vue" principles are thus set at defiance, the country making roads aud keeping you have no right to expect good results. water on one side, just ready to burst | honor who has just spoken to do so, but in | Macadam’s first principle | speaking of having the statate labor per- formed by each mau opposite his own farm, | [ bad no intention of requinng each man to perform the whole amount of labor re- quired in that way. Lonly suggested that them so long in repair for the benefit of : F tha hi te ie was hard that they Therefore, before any heavy expenditure | 4 man might be allowed to perform his own ’ is undertaken, we should see that we | atatate labor opposite hia own farms other- should still be called out to labor "P98 | have the means to lay the mouey out) wise it would be a great hardehip in waany | : ‘ properly, for it would be a pity if this| cases, hope some measure will be devieod to poor Colony should have its resources ex- them. (Mr. Haythorne—ilear.) 1 Ifon, Mr. Breen: Ae so much has been +4 > remedy that evil. For some years the pended in an injudicious manner, which | said upon this report, Ldo not wish to de- statute has not been much benefit, has been the case on the road I refer to, | ti your honors any longer, but allusion pod wer va pero te ve T have beeu iu the habit of travelling over ee eee Ney ADs | a piece of road laid with Istandstone, and think we have less than 5000 miles of| If it were allowed to be done opposite to has beou made to breaking stone in the winter, and T would just say that it has heen wy practice for some years to { find that it is dry earlier in the spring purchase as much limestone in the summer “ ge ‘ i , s, and if it were perfo . : roads in the Island, that is, including all hee eRe re eee te eee and remaius dry longer iv the fall than | as I require for the next summer, and iret roads upon which public money is ex- nded. Therefore, I think that when that extent of roads is considered, in con- nection with the amount expended for keeping them in repair, it must be admit- ted that, under the circumstances, they are very good. I am only just giving my own opinion, for 1 have not made any calculation as to the extent of our roads, but I do not think they are less than 5000 miles. It is trne that in the neighborhood of the towns, during the last few years, there has been a good deal of money expended, perhaps from £50 to £100 per mile, and yet, the roads are not such as we would wish; but [ am afraid that the revenue of the Colony is not such as to enable us to carry out the recommendations of the Committee, The proposal to import stone and a stone breaking Machine would entail a very heavy expenditure. According to the calculation made, it would cost £3000 to Macadamize six miles of road, and I think that is as much as we could expect to bave macadamized in any one year, for a machine breaking six tons of stone per hour, as stated io the report, and al- wing it to work six mouths in the year, would break nearly 10,000 tons. ‘That is about the quantity required, according to the calculation made by the Committee, to macadamizo six miles of road. Now, it must be seen that if we intend to car- ry out that system, so as to be a general benefit to the country, the taxation would have to be considerably increased, for all the other roads would have to be kept up at the same time, I believe the country would not have any serious objection to a slight increase of taxatiou for the im- provement of the highways, providing it were so expended that the publie would receive o general benefit; but I doubt whether er 4 would not find great fault with incurring the expense of importin stone to macadamize a few miles of roa in certain places, as the report recom- mends. In nother paragraph of the re- port, in which the defects of the present m are pointed out, it is suggested the highways should be placed under the control of a Board of Works, and I thiak that course is very desirable. The want of such a Board has been felt by every Government that has been in power for some time past. We have a great many important Sight works, such as bridges, wharves, t houses, &c., _ which require to be kept under the strict of an officer of the Govern- would be able to report to } as to. the state of those =f Feist ¢ziati f early in the spring, I think it would be a step in the right direction. There is That convinces me thatthe | it broken in’ the winter. other parts, use of Island stone might be attended | heen breaking stone nearly the whole of this | My wen have very. little :use-dac paving it dove ia tbe with good results, and I would not hesi-| Winter. It ean be broken very well daring summer when the ground is dry and hard, for the fall rains come on soon after aud they are then worse than before. If the men were allowed to perform the work tate to recommend it in many situations. Some of your honors thought the com- mittee should have gone more fully into travelling we requite ‘hard stone, the financial part of the subject, but we| tone would be juet’ as expensive ear eleven months of the twelve.” Ihave seen eeveral good picces of road made with Island stone, ‘but where there ia much Island i spring opposite their own : early iu the spring opp & cousidered that rather beyond our pro- | Charlottetown as imported stone, property, they would not think it so hard as to be called away to wherever the overseer chooses to take them, I approve of the suggestion in the report to have proper superintendants appointed, for we cannot expect a Commissioner, for the paltry salary of £10, to spend much time in looking after the roads, Some change is called for; and if the proprietors are determined to hold large tracts of land, they should be made to contribute something towards the re- pairs of the roads. Ido not think there is anything uoreasonable in that, for it is well known that the people have made all the roads and bridges io the Island, with very little assistunce from the pro- prietors, and it is the people’s labor which has made the propftictors’ estates valuable. nearly the whole settled. repair as they’are now. When eight or | two months or so, ten me goto yet say ye 9 —_ they | respecting the appointment of superin- generally doa g eal of work in a/tendants, and I am of opiuion that it is day. I agree, in the main, with the Re-| one of the surest means ve can adopt so ae mc gg aan = = agg a port, and I think the Committee deserve | as to have responsibility resting some-| tween the ages of ulead dea sixty rg The committee recommend the | about 30.000, and a tax of three shillings sich doenments; they recommend «| appointment of such superiutendants, | per head would amount to £4,500, That good system, but unfortunately, they did | and it is intended that they should kee not come to the point, that is raising the|a daily record of their proceedings, per: Aa —_— : nigga laying | nttach pm aye to that record, for it a farther tan 6 oo a land tax three shillings per | would show how their time was employ- hundred acres, or a poll tax of three | od, and if it were wasted they veut ie conven natn Therefnve ar think “ Thea his honor from | Committee acted wisely in not recommend- That would | Prince County, (Mr. Lord), appeared to| ing Statate Labor to be abolished. Give raise a considerable sum, and T wonld! me to have misapprehended one of our | man three shillings to work on the road. It was thought advisable and how mach will you get done for it? shillings, and one shilling and six pence | linble to censure. for every working horse. not object to a tax of that kind, for then | suggestions. ar might ge see reer suprovemit. that a certain number of townships should Of course I will vote for the resolutioa, | be at liberty to group themselves together, | +; there are good suggestions in the report,| and be allowed to appoint their own Mw nt ign new ani pie Ps i and I am sorry that the session is likely | superintendaot. to pass without any action being taken to carry them into effect, district think proper, the in the cou be done, let it be | vince, as we were appointed to report on the best means of mproviog the) mit thit we will never have good roads till Had we gone into the mode ol they are macadamized, and T agree with raising money, we would perhaps have | the report as far as it recominends that been laughed at, but we made such |system. But with regard to statute labor, suggestions as we considered practicable | Some of your honors thonght it would be and not much beyond the present means I believe there would not be any serious objection to the appro- priation of 8 moderate amount for the | cannot get work, Some say that statute importation of a machine for breaking | labor is of little use, and that it ia slighted ; | stone. We ace that mea who have a large | bnt where the roads really require repairs | quantity of hay to make, do not hesitaie to | I have seen mon work aa faithfully as npon lay out their capital in the purchase of mowing machines, for they know that it is good economy to do so, aad I do not see why those sensible men would objeci to require the whole of it to he done then; let the purchase of a stone breaker, for they | part of it he done early in spring and the know very well that good roads would) remainder in the summer, I economize horses and vehicles aa well as|why the stone crusher could not be em- Then his honor from George- | ployed in the wintor, and it would be easier his honor who has just spoken, with re-| town, (Mr. MacDonald), raised the ob- | move it from one place to another, acroas gard to the proprietors, but it every man | jection that only a small amount of had to keep the road in front of bis farm | improved road could be made iu one in repair, it would be a heavy tax, though | year—that a machine would only break I dare say, the roads would be kept in| stone enough for six miles—but we better repair than how, fur you may tra-| would uot waot the road eighteen feat vel from here to Cascumpee aud fiud| wide except near Charlottetown, and incido in eome’ respects with my col. I do not con-| perhaps two or three other places where league, (Mr. MacDonald), With reference sider Statute Labor of so Jitile value as/ there is a large amount of trailic. Then to the tmportation of a'atone-erdsher, it ap- his honor from Bay Fortune does, and if | he only allows the stoue break+r to work pears to me that it would be like putting a poll tax of five shillings were exacted | six months in the year, but I believe it| the engine of a Canard steamer into a it would mot keep the roads in as good| could work much longer, perhaps all but | ¥irch canoe. The report is excellent, but Somethiog was said | ' is adapted to a largereountry. We have roads, of the country, Hon. Mr. Lorp: I quite agree with | time. credit for it, but it is like many more | where. That system obtains in | valuo for your money, in @ great part of Eagland, where a given | some of your honors with respect to the The Commit- | number of parishes, perhaps ten ortweuty, | cost of imported stone, tor the trackage tee recommend that if the people in a| form themselves into a district, and ithas|*lene, exclusive of freight, would cost a “esta : may form — yy to work well. t ves into a sort of corporation, | spoke of the system in operation in Can- 4 ; aod assess the inhabitants for the repairs on. aod I » cS would cost very near £1,000 per mile, and of ihe roads, but I would like to koow|from Englan how that proposition would be received | wou!'d be better to place the manage-| advertise for so many tons of imported » TI would say, if thatisto| ment of those roads in the hands|stone, and so many tons of Island stone, a geveral mensure. Let| of the people themselves, for none aro| delivered at a certain the whole Island be divided into muni-| 80 much interested in them, and it would! 800 sce which is the cheapest. way as Canada. If be a guarantee that any grants of money it has been copied | f ain of the aame opinion still. thought it | vernment wish to test the matter, let them Ion. Mr. Axprrsoxn: We ninst all ad- better t pot on a poll tax, In some old settlements that might do very well, but in new settlements it is some times difficult for men to pay even a small amount, for they their own farms, Ido believe that if the statnte labor were performed at an earlier eres in the ogy say about the firat of May. it would be better; bat [ would not do not see a river for instance. The stone could also he drawn to where it was required in the winter, Tlon. Mr. Gorvon: T would like to ex- press my opinion upon the report, but I will not detain your honors long. I co- not the means to carry it out, With res. pect to Statute Labor, I am apprehensive would be a heavy tax; vearly equal to the amount realized from the Land As essment. Then, we have pores 20,000 horses, and 1s. 6d. upon them, would Tam sure it would not bear any compari- zon with what is done as Statute J.abor. I do not agree with Hi considerable amount. I said before, that is honor roals macadamized with imported stone If the Go- lace. and they will Ilon, Mr. Dixawen.: [do not wish that | in Boston! The busy, restless brain, and the necessity of | this life-long toiler, The native American controversy was | ;it was as the avowed champion of the © foreign-born citi- / gens" of the Union, especially the hish, that the paper was | started and received its name of the stiaerican Celt, ably tt maintained its distinctive character, how loyally de- ‘voted it was during the nine years of its cxistence to the best interests cf the Irish in America, none, we think, will, even now, deny. It was the high privelege of the present writer to be a contiibutor to that paper, and we shall ever | regard itas one of the brightest recollections of our literary | life which Uhen first flowed into the same channel with that of onr lamented friend, ; Afier spending some few years m Boston, Mr, MeGee | was induced by the late laxented Bishop ‘Timon to remove with his paper to Buffalo, and there he maintained for some time the same eheerless life of hard and iil-requited labor, of i ceascless struggle, of wasting, wearing, public speaking, i oftener for the benelit of others than himself. After a short ; and unsatisfactory residence in Buffalo, he once more took up his abodein New York, and there continucd the publi- leation of the Celt. During the course of his restdence in } Boston his mind had undergone a serious and notable change; jin the eotspany of such decp thinkers as the late highly in- jtellectual Hishop Fitzpatrick, Dr. Brownson and some | others, hiv rapidiy maturing mind had gradually discovered j the fallacy and the dunuce of the revolutionary principles which had hitherto controlled his actions, Ife had become ;an earnest and consistent Conservative. My own les- json," says he, in revolutionary polities was a very imper- j feet one, although I fancied at the time I knew all about jtham. It was only after (had been some time withdrawn out of the circle of mutual admration, that I began, as is my wont, to re-examine the ground, with the aid of a few lead- jing principles, for which I was indebted to Burke and Balmes, and (not least of the three inthis department of ; speculation) to the distinguished cditor of Bro.cason'’s Re- view; by the aid of these principles, T began to discern the lin quity of the French philosophy of insurrection, I learn- ;ed, to my horror, (at my own small share in one of those | imitative Insurrections,) that they whothatch revolutions’ |aforethought, sit on cockatrice eggs... . . I wish 1! j had thought so myself eight years ago: but I was too fresh j from the fray to taik calmly aboutit...... My plans of duty, my hopes of fame, were all seattored by that miser- able abortion of an Insurrection, of the mode or time of | whieh Lnerer approved, but from the meshes of which I }eould not.in honor withdraw myself. Naturally, ther fore, ) it was a sore eubject with me for some months after it hap- jpenal; and permitting myself to discuss itin New York latter my arrival, was, T now feel, a grave mistake, It was | worse, considering the character and office of the eminent | personrge to whom [was unwittingly opposed; it was a violation of that salutary discipline which is as necessary in the Church as in the Army. I feel. and have long felt, | that I was wholly wrong in that particular, and U desire, in this, the last paper T shall edit in New York, to put on |public record, for the last time, my profound regret that that diseus.ion ever took place."* Let no man henceforth reproach the memory of Thomas D'Arcy MeGce with what his enemies delight to eall his j quarrel with Archbishop Hughes.” God himself holds no jman guilty ofsin acknowledged and repented, |. Mr. MeGee's observations of the state of his countrymen jin these overerewded American cities had led him to the | conclusion that the best and wisest course for them, if they | would effect any permanent good for themselves and their j children, was to spread wbroad into the agricultural regions j of the continent and settle on the land, he cared not | Where—whether here or in DBiitish America. To promote | that end he recommended a general convention of delegates jfrom the States and the Provinces, and accordingly, 100 gentlemen, composed of priests and laymen, many of them | the first mon in their several districts, in intelligence as well as position, assembled in Buffalo, as being a central position j easy of access from both countries. ‘The part which Mr, McGee took in that Convention, the extraordinary capacity | for organization, the deliberative power and skill, the un- | Hiring industry, and withal, the singular modesty that made him threst others forward and keep in the background him- self; all this left a deep and lasting impression on the minds of the gentlemen associated with him in that great work. Many of these have passed away, but enough still remain, we would fain hope, to bear honorable testimony to the digmified, etatesmanlike, and wholly unselfish conduct of Mr, MeGce during the several sessions of the famous Bu*- falo Convention. “This is not the place to speak of that Con- vention, or the happy results that might have followed the more general adoption of its wise suggestions; suffice it to say that, for various reasona, it did not mect with that warm encouragement we and many others thought it de- served, and the good it effected, although positive and well ascertained, was not what had been expected. The years of Mr MeGee's life in New York were not Prosperous years, any more than those spent by him in Boston or in Buffalo. Politics, as conducted here, had no inducements for him; it was not in hiv nature to stoop to the petty subterfuges, the corrupt, uaderhand dealings, the dollar-and-cent operations of our elections; he could not, and would not. pander to popular passion or vulgar preju- dice; he could never atlow himself to be led by the people, knowing and feeling within him powers of governing as yet undeveloped. What with his paper, and tho sums he oc- casionally derived from his lectures, (many of them being then, as before and after, for charitable purposes,’ he con- tinued to eke out the means of subsistence for himself and his family—nothing more, Bat though poor, he keot him- self independent, and personal independence was one of the necessities of his being. It formed the subject of one of hia * Canadias Ballads,” published in 1859, of which we will here give two stanzas: Let fortune frown and foes increase, And Life's long battie know no peace; Give me to wear.upon my breast The object of my enrly quest-— Undimm'd, unbroken, and unchang’d, The talisman I sought and gain'd— The jewel, Tedipendonee ! It feeds with fire my flagging heart To act by all a fearless part; It irrigates like summer rain . The thirsty furrows of my brain; Through years and cares my sun and star, A present helpa hope afar— * The jewel, Independence ! And that manly, upright independence was one of the guid- ing stare of ha chegueed lif * a Of the lectures delivered hy Mr. MeGee while conducting the American Celt in New York, many, we fear, are lost, but enough remain to prove ihe matchless versatility, the exhaustless stores of knowledgo, the profundity ot thought, and the resistless eloquence that, more than most men, dis- tinguished our lost friend, Ifia lecturea on the « Catholic Ilistory of Ameria,” * The Reformation in Ireland,” and many other subjects, will never be forgotten, wo are sure, by any who had the rhre pleasure of hearing thom. But even then the Conservative turn his mind had taken, and the * From Mr. McGee's Closing Address to the Readera of the American Celt," when he was finally removing himself (To be continued.) a | ap nas “eer Mg and his fortunes to Montreal, what I would have done had not ways and means been de. nied me.” Rut still he had done much for the Trish, even in this Re- public. During the years he had been amongst them he had made, or helped to make, sifleen volumes of newspapers, and seven or eight books,—*' such as they are,"’ said he with characteristic modesty. He had delivered a great number How | of lectures and public addresses, and had been anactive co- operator in some of the principal movements for his country. men at home and abroad, ‘The strenuous efforts he made to engage the American Government to interfere on behalf of his former associates, Smith O'Brien, Meagher, and the others, when in exile, are not as well known as thoy ought to be. Wappily, some, at least, of the gentlemen who ac- companied him on one of those visits to the then President of the United States are still hving, and have not forgotten the effect of his thrilling eloquence that day while pleading for those who ill requited him in after ycars! So, in the year 1858, Thomas D' Arey McGee, removed, ashe said, ‘his household gods to the Valley of the St, Lawrence,” and in the city of Montreal established the New | Era, a paper which, for various reasons unnecessary now to }explain, had no very great success, and added little to the literary or other reputation of its editor, Journalism was jnot, after all, Mr. MeGee's forte, and that he knew and | often admitted to his friends, Tt wasin the Senate he was destined to shine, and amongst the rulers of the land. In _ the mighty problems of State policy, the clash of ponderous intellects, the mysteries of State-ernft, the inauguration of great ideas, he at length | found his level, Into this, his proper sphere of action, his countrymen soon elevated him, In the General Election of 1858, Mr. MeGee waa returned to the Legislative Assembly as member for Montreal West, the portion of the city which contains the largest number of lrish inhabitants, Very soon after, his admining countrymen.in Montreal presented him with a handsome dwelling suitably farnished, in St. Cather- ine street, and there our friend finatly and permanently es- tablished the “household gods" aforesaid. How many and how dear associations gather around that house, the tears that will well up from many hearts while reading these words will best attest. With the memory of his heart-warm hospitality, his uncqualled and wholly inimi- table conversational powers, his gentle, loving heart, his ex- haustless wit and quaint hamor gilding all within and around, the house shall ever he dear, and even though tho family should leave it, which we hope they may not do, many a pilgrim of friendship will visit it in years to come as the home of Thomas D*Arcy McGee; the scene of such bright hours as they may never, perchance, see again on earth. This apropos to the dwelling provided by his friends in Montreal for the honored guest they had Invited amongst them, Mr. MeGee’s parliamentary career in nowise disap- pointed his countrymen, at least the intelligent and racional amongst them,—who were able to appreciate him and his achievements. On every question affecting the interests of Catholics, the Divorce BIN, the Orange Processions’ Bill, the Separate School BI, the Bequests’ Bill, he was not only true as steel and firm as a rock. but the great advocate of Catholic claims, the clear and lucid expounder of Catholic principles. It was he, in fact, who made Catholics and theirclaims respected, and who, nevertheless, by his broad and truly liberal spirit of toleration, and practical cultivation of peace and charity amongst men of opposite parties and religions, made friends for the Catholic people as well as for him- self, No man ever did so much to smooth away party differences, and softer, down religious asperities, as did the man who fell in Ottawa in the dead of night beneath the dastardly blow of an assassin. Even to carry his own clection he would neither sanction nor permit re- course to violent measures or brute force. And who will sey that his countrymen, who first re- turned Ifimto Parliament, did not show their apprecia- tion of him, when they returned him no Jess than five successive times by acclamation? And who rejotced more than they when he was raised to office? Tt was their triumph no less than his. Even in the last election, when he was wantonly and vexatiously opposed by a certain Trish lawyer of Montreal whose name we do not care to mention, the foulest means were used to misre- present him and blacken his public character. After some four years’ Parliamentary experience, under the MeDonald- Sicotte administration, Mr. MeGee was made President of the Executive Council—hence his title of Honorable. Undera suceeeding administration formed by Sir Etienne ‘Tache, Mr. MeGee accepted a portfolio as Minister of Agriculture. He was subsequent- ly sent with one or two others to represent Canada at the great Paris Exhibttion, and at the same time went to Rome as one ofa deputation from the congregation of St. Patrick's Church, Montreal, on a matter affecting their interests. Even in that, his last visit to Europe, he wrote, for. this paper, “Irish Episodes of Foreign Travel.” Ever Ireland and the Trish oceupied his mind—little as some of the Trish understood, or appre- clated his devotion. Even amid the cares and tofla, and the endless bustle of a Parliamentary career, he Labor- ed with voce and pen to promote a sonnd and healthy Trish literature, such a one as might elevate the Irish as nrace to the level of their high and proud ancestry. ‘The disgust he had of their futile and abortive attempt? at rebellion, which nothing benefit them and place weap- ons In the hands of their enemies, his utter detestation of, and contempt for those wretched Secret Societics race, made him take, from the first, a bold stand against Fenlanism, whilst the unjustifiable invasion of that Cana- da which had raised him to its highest honors, and where Irishmen had ‘homes and hearths to cherish and defend, drew forth his most scathing denunclations—as why should it not? What had Canada—the home of Trishmen as well as others—done to the self-styled Trish patriots that they should invade her peaceful soil? Yet it was Mr. McGee's firm, out spoken, manly opposition to these Fentan schemes that evoked the wrath of the Fenians and thelr sympathisers, and, we fear, ultimate- ly causedhis brutal and cowardly prarder, Was it 4 far-off presentiment that once made our lamented friend dent Lincoln —“ Never yet did the asangsin'’s kntfe reach to the heart of a principle! Oh! the besotted igno- rance, the miserable short-sightedness of those who are disgracing the Irish race in this, our day, by using the assassin’s knife, or rather bullet! How little they know that they are doing more to degrade Ireland and her people than England at her worst could ever have done—that they are robbing the Trish cause of world's sympathy! The murder of Thomas D'Arcy Me- Gee was a cruel blow to the name and fame of Irishmen in this generation! But it is, after all, as a Canadian Statesman, as the chicf originator and promoter of the Confederation of the British Provinces, that Mr. McGee will live in the deepest affections of the people of the New Deminior- Watered by his blood, the new Confederation, which his genius cortributed largely to form, will on® day become A stately tive overshadowing all the North. Tt will be in the after thre his grandest monnment, grander even than the one already projected to perpetaate his me- mory. (Continued on seeond page.) say—anropos, we think, to the assassination of Presl: | which are the curse and bid fiir to be the ruin of our ¢