No. 62
               
            
            
            
            
               I have had before me your despatch of the 
12th October marked
               "Separate," accompanied by a Memorial from 
Mr. Cormack and 
Mr. Holbrook
               relative to the Essay of the 
Revd. R.C. Brown upon 
British Columbia.
               It appears that in conjunction with the Archdeacon of 
British Columbia
               these two gentlemen formed
the
 the Judges who awarded to 
Mr. Brown the prize
               offered by the local Government for the best Essay on the capabilities
               and advantages of 
British Columbia.  Their complaint is that whilst the
               Essay to which they allotted the Prize contained a passage strongly
               condemning the manner in which the affairs of 
British Columbia are
               administered, the Essay as afterwards printed
at
 at the Royal Engineer
               Press contained no such passage, but on the contrary spoke of the
               satisfaction given by the Government to the colonists, with the
               exception only of a part of them which was described in disparaging
               terms.  The Archdeacon does not remember seeing the alleged passage
               censuring the Government, but disapproves of the introduction
of
 of one offensive to a
               distinct portion of the community.
               
 
            
            
               The facts of the case, as established by the documents which you
               have sent home, are as follows.  A prize of £50 was offered for the best
               Essay on the resources of the Colony, but all the Essays were afterwards
               to remain the property of the Government.  When 
Mr. Brown had obtained
the
               the prize, you thought that it would be fore the good of the Colony to
               publish it, but that it's usefulness would be increased by its being
               much condensed.  
Mr. Brown had himself asked to have an opportunity for
               revision in case the pamphlet were published.  From that time forth it
               appears that he dealt with the pamphlet entirely at his own discretion,
               and
communicated
 communicated directly with the printers, and completed it exactly in
               the shape which he himself thought proper.
               
 
            
            
               These facts conclusively exonerate the Colonial Government from any
               charge of tampering for it's own purposes with the work which was
               printed at the Royal Engineer Press.  I have no doubt that you judged
               very rightly in thinking
it
 it expedient that the pamphlet should be
               condensed, as certainly you took the most judicious and proper course in
               leaving the accomplishment of that object entirely to the Author.
               
 
            
            
               On the other hand I am bound to say that I think it is to be
               regretted that the 
Revd. Mr. Brown, whilst the bulk of his pamphlet is
               laudably confined to the statistical
and
 and descriptive matter which forms
               it's proper subject, should anywhere have introduced a disparaging
               allusion to any of the Colonists. The Essay was not of a kind to form a
               suitable vehicle for any political sentiment.  On the same ground it
               seems to me that if it had contained a sweeping charge of
               mal-administration, this would have been especially
misplaced
 misplaced in a Tract
               for which the Government had offered a Prize as for an account of the
               material resources of the Colony; indeed so much misplaced as to render
               it a matter of some surprise that the Judges should have selected that
               Essay for the object of their award.
               
 
            
            
               The work, I observe, has been produced with the title not of "a
               Prize Essay," but of "An Essay"
by
 by the 
Revd. Mr. Brown.  It contains
               however on the fly leaf the advertisement under which the original Essay
               was tendered and obtained the prize.  The complaints which have been
               made would have been obviated if the fly leaf had contained instead a
               notice that this Essay, although founded on one which had obtained the
               prize offered by the
Government
 Government, had been curtailed in some parts and
               expanded in others, and largely altered, and that the Author alone was
               responsible for it's contents.  This would have met the anxiety which I
               think it natural that the Judges should have felt not to seem answerable
               on such an occasion for the approval
of
 of any passages which were
               calculated to displease any portion of their fellow colonists.
               
 
            
            
               But whilst I have entered into these details in order to satisfy
               the gentlemen who have appealed to me that I have examined fully into
               their complaint, I wish to state in conclusion that the 
Revd. Mr. Brown
               appears to me to have
discharged
 discharged his task in a manner which does great
               credit to his industry and ability, and that although a casual sentence
               which escaped him may excite attention on the spot where party
               differences prevail, I believe that it will be wholly passed over by
               distant readers, and that the only effect of the work will be to render
               service to the Colony by diffusing a
knowledge
 knowledge of it's resources, and by
               offering a favorable though discriminating, account of the advantages
               which it holds out to properly qualified settlers.
               
 
            
            
               I have the honor to be
               Sir
               Your Obedient Servant
               
Newcastle