In sitting down to write the accompanying letters, I had intended to
address myself to the Geographical Society of which I am a member,
& to confine myself merely to the matter of town sites. I have
however been led "currente colonio"
to dwell on so many other topics that I seem entirely to have
transgressed the limits of a simply geographical paper. I therefore
venture to take the liberty of addressing my letter to you Sir as
Colonial Minister, in case that any of the remarks contained in it,
sd be useful to you, and through you to the colony in question.
I am aware of the difficulty of altering the direction of commerce or
even of passenger traffic when once it has taken a run to
any
particular locality. Still it seems a pity that the money of the
public as well as of private individuals s
d all be expended on such
a place as
Victoria, when so many sites unquestionably superior
remain comparatively unoccupied. I s
d fancy that the neighbourhood
of
Victoria might with some propriety be bestowed on the Hudson's Bay
Comp
y—thus at once satisfying their claims, and doing so in a
manner least expensive to the public. I am tolerably
well acquainted with the Island having purchased land fr
m the H.B.C.
and gone out there as a colonist in '49 taking with me some of my own
people from the North of Scotland, & I have subsequently travelled
over & sailed round the greater portions of the district. I trust
therefore that [the]
interest which I consequently feel [in] the
prosperity of our new Colony, [does] in some measure plead my
case, for having ventured to trouble you with the accompanying
remarks. There is little danger to be apprehended from Scylla
(Russia), but I fear that accident alone can prevent
Vancouvers
Island eventually from being swallowed up by Charybdis (America in
Puget Sound).
I beg of you to accept my apologies for troubling you, & to receive
with them the assurance of the sincere respect with which I have the
honor to remain