[Separate]
               
            
            
               
               [Note on microfilm:]
               
               
               
Union of Vancouver Island with B. Columbia.
               
               8 August 1866
                
            
            
               I trace from a letter of a very clear headed Colonist.
               
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
               Trusting implicitly to the discretion and good sense of the
               Home Government, we applied for Union.  I will say nothing of the
               vacillation, the political puerilities, the inconsistency which have
               throughout characterized our policy.  The broad fact is there:  we
               asked for Union, and the House of Assembly, whose action, as being
               professed by the Representatives of the people we are bound to
               support, agreed to ratify any arrangement that the Home Government in
               its supposed wisdom might authorize and propose.
               
            
            
               Misled by the statements laid before them the Government

 regard with
               aversion:  but as if of set purpose we have meanwhile been
               weakening, by all means in our power, the hands of our own
               Governor, who alone could have aided us in this Emergency, had he
               received in his Endeavours that support to which he was Entitled; and
               who, thus strengthened might effectually have counteracted in our
               favor in this Emergency.
               
               We may have been foolish in this matter, and if so must bear the
               Consequences of our folly.
               
            
            
               Let us not seek to Evade the penalty of our simplicity by proving
               ourselves rogues.  As we have made our bed so we must lie
               down—we cannot retract in this

 matter without a sacrifice of honor:
               and honor to a community is, or should be, no less precious than to
               an individual.
               
               Thus there does the case stand, and thus must we firmly view it.  For
               myself I derive a consolation from the reflection that the purposed
               terms of Union are so absurd that if Union be Consummated without a
               Modification of these the very absurdity will shortly correct the Evil.
               
            
            
               I believe, however, that the terms proposed will not be suffered to
               pass without material changes:  for there are in London at the
               present time many influential Gentlemen who, with an experience and a
               power of judgment

 certainly not inferior to that of 
Governor
                  Seymour, will strive for every prudential reason, to correct the
               misapprehensions under which the proposition has been framed at the
               Colonial Office.  As regards the removal of the Seat of Government to
               
New Westminister, this folly, like many others, may for a while be
               Countenanced.  But sooner or later 
Victoria must take the lead, and
               here Eventually the Seat of Government will surely be; surely, that
               is, unless we pre suppose an infactuation which cannot exist.
               
               In the intervene we must bow to circumstances which possibly we may
               not Control.
               
            
            
               As regards the feeling

 in 
British Columbia, I have reason to know
               that it is strongly in favor of Union with this Colony on fair and
               Equitable terms.  I do not speak of the petty clique at 
New
                  Westminster, who professedly represent the Colony, but to the great
               body of the inhabitants dispersed thro the interior, who Compose the
               People, and who are alive to the importance of 
Victoria to their
               interests, and can appreciate the importance of Union to both
               Colonies.
               
               [No signature]
               
               
            
            
            
            
            
               Minutes by CO staff
               
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
                  
                  Lord Carnarvon
                     I think you should see this.  
Govr Kennedy sent it to me.  The Bill
                     which the writer refers to and characterizes as absurd is 
Mr
                        Cardwell's Bill.  Y
r Bill had not, as I believe, reached 
V.C.I. at
                     the date on which the writer wrote.  But I don't imagine that your
                     Act will calm the troubled waters at 
V.C.I., though you have given
                     the Legislature what it asked for viz Union.  If the Act be
                     inappropriate and if influential persons were in London why did they
                     not by remonstrance, or in the form of a Deputation address 
Mr
                        Cardwell, whose bill was for some weeks on the table of the Ho: C. or
                     you when y
r bill was gone on with?  Why, also, if there were people
                     on the spot who knew anything ab
t B.C. and 
V.C.I. did they not get
                     up an opposition in Parl
t?  To the best of my knowledge not a word
                     was said ag
t the Bill in either House.  The condition of these
                     Colonies was for a long time under 
Mr Cardwell's cons
n.  With the
                     advice of the two Governors he framed his Bill.  You altered it &
                     went on with it.  As nobody, on the part of the public, criticized or
                     objected to it, it was carried.  And it remains to be seen whether it
                     will not ans
r its purpose.  If the Governor is discreet, & good Laws
                     are passed by the Leg
re I am under the impression that it will work
                     well.  At the same time I fully expect all sorts of indignation
                     meetings at 
V.C.I., got up by the Bankrupt, half Yankee population, &
                     that you may be burnt in effigy.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
                  
                  
                     I am glad I have seen this paper.  
V.C.I. may I am afraid give
                     trouble.  We shall know more before long.