Sir F. Rogers
                     I send you this despatch at once, thinking that 
Mr Begbie's
                     recital of his peregrinations up the Country will be useful to
                     you in the consideration of the means by which the 
Duke of Newcastle's
                     "outline" for a Constitution for 
B. Columbia can be worked out.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     B. Columbia—or rather a knot of persons at 
New Westminster—has
                     been calling out loudly for the establishment of a separate
                     
Govt.  In order to
accomplish
 accomplish this design it is proposed to give the Colony a Governor to itself, and
                     a partly nominated, and partly
                     elective Leg: Council. But this Council must, of necessity,
                     be in the first instance, and probably for some few years to come
                     limited in its numbers, and drawn from a circumscribed radius.  For
                     the Magistrates have enough to do in keeping order among the miners
                     without having to repair once or twice a year to 
New Westminster to
                     attend the deliberations of the Council—omitting all mention of
                     the difficulty, and expense of such journies—and as for the
                     miners they are only fit for digging and washing for gold.  It will
                     be impossible to make Leg. Councillors out of the mining class.
                     The result is that the members of the Council must be drawn, as
                     before observed, from such materials as can be found in and near
                     
New Westminster, 
Douglas, 
Hope, 
Lytton, and such other places as
                     contain persons of respectability.  I should suggest that this office
                     content itself with an announcement of the change contemplated
                     with respect to this 
Govt, with the selection of a suitable
                     Governor who should be instructed to report to the 
Duke of Newcastle,
                     as soon as he could

 after his arrival, how large this L.C. ought
                     to be, and who are the persons, and whence they can be drawn, who
                     
shd compose it.