COMMERCIAL INTERCOURSE AND TRANSPORTATION. 247 



gestion of Lord Bury that the Treaty of Washington 

 is unjust to Canada. He shows, on the contrary, that 

 the Treaty is beneficial and acceptable to the Domin 

 ion, specifying particulars, and citing the approbatory 

 votes of the legislative assemblies of the Canadian 

 and maritime Provinces. 



But the United States will never make another 

 treaty of reciprocal free importation, without includ 

 ing manufactures and various other objects of the 

 production of the United States not comprehended in 

 the schedule of the Elgin -Marcy Treaty. In fine, 

 Canada must expect nothing of this nature short of a 

 true zottverein involving serious modifications of the 



v_&amp;gt; 



commercial relations of Canada to Great Britain. 



RELATION OF THE BRITISH PROVINCES TO THE UNITED 



STATES. 



The Dominion of Canada is one of those &quot; Posses 

 sions,&quot; as they are entitled, of Great Britain in Amer 

 ica, which, like Jamaica and other West India Islands, 

 have ceased to be of any economic value to her save 

 as markets, which in that respect would be of al 

 most as much value to her in a state of independence, 

 which she has invited and encouraged to assume 

 the forms of semi-independent parliamentary govern 

 ment, which, on the whole, are at all times a charge 

 to her rather than a profit, even in time of peace, 

 which would be a burden and a source of embarrass 

 ment rather than a force in time of war, and which, 

 therefore, she has come to regard, not with complete 

 carelessness perhaps, but with sentiments of kindli- 



