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^^-^^'^^^^^^ ^^2<>Z!idd^ 
 
 An Appeal to 
 
 the British-Born. 
 
 TO PROMOTE THE SENSE OF 
 CANADIAN NATIONALITY. AS 
 AN INCREASING POWER WITH- 
 IN THE BRITISH EMPIRE. AND 
 TO PRESERVE UNIMPAIRED 
 THE CANADIAN AND BRITISH 
 CHANNELS OF COMMERCE ON 
 WHICH THE PROSPERITY OF 
 THE DOMINION HAS BEEN 
 .* J» J* POUNDED. Ji Ji j» 
 
 
 R^rinttdfrom "Th» British Nmvs of Canada. 
 Issutd by thg Canadian National League. 
 314 McKinmn BuiltSne. 
 TORONTO. 
 
4690/ 
 
 THE APPEAL, AND WHY. 
 
 CmnJ^"^ to the BriUtb-Bom " wm pabli.h.d in " Th. Britbh New. of 
 «P«bliri.ed b«:.u.e U i. thought th.t it .,p«„., with «,m. cogency L h 
 
 E.iiSr^K^T'"*: ' "'""' f^"*^ •" C*n*««!«..Briti.h hi.torr. 
 h.. ST!^!.. ^ l-PPWod »ince the App«tl n^. written in Febmiuy 
 Sr;^. r^ v.ew.exp.«.«I in it Pn-ident T.ft hiu cl«trly indi^ 
 
 iL!^.v T ^^ "«•»»«» »«"•«» •• to the extent to which commereS 
 ^d??^r"*T' "' •* i«terch«ge.ble tern... There i, notW^^T^ 
 co«*t,ooof C««U to war^nt the digh.e.t «:q«ie«:ence in that d-il^ 
 
 S^ty r*!*" •"~"'*»* ' «'•''•>«»?»«•» of the policy ofTn.^ 
 J^^J^ • rJ^rr' *■""• ^'"•"* *'' ^""*' L.urieruin.we«bly 
 
 S^^i .^"0"?. "" ''•'*'~ "» "•• "•««»• Tntn«:o«Un.nUl and G«nJ 
 Tniok Pacific Railway Legi.laUon in 1901. 
 
 than^!!!!^*' ^""' "^^ »"»~' »«•<»* PoMtical «o»eo«,t. that are grater 
 th^profoundeet party «achi«.tio«. are alw.y. to be found fkr beCTthe 
 
 omiuari*.. To me Uie Agreement prore. that the time ha. come for Canada 
 
 «:hi.j.ngfi„tr«,own in the con.tell.Uon of kindred Britiri, «,tTcI., ^ 
 jrjmutmg to the .e«er gioHe. of th. Republic. That i. a ^ZgX 
 Canadian citiMn.hip which meriu an unmiMalieabte anawer. ^^^*' '" 
 
 TO.OKTO. J««. 191,. '^*™"« "AWKES. 
 
 911275 
 
AN APPEAL TO THE BRITISH-BORN. 
 
 Jam goln^ to •?!>«»> to the patriotism of every man. woman, 
 and family of British birth in Canada— to demonstrate 
 the depth and strength, tiie inteUigence and endurance of 
 °"d b h"l *''** countries to which we belong by parentage 
 
 No gre^ company of people on the globe to-day are stttiatcd 
 as we Mc. By the hundred thousand we have crossed the ocean, 
 changed our habit of hfe. enlarged our experience, widened our out- 
 look, increased our possessions, and seen our children's feet set 
 in wider places than our own ever knew— and we have done it 
 without bating one jot or tittle of our tie with th*. Old Land : 
 without sacrificing a single worthy sentiment which prevaded our 
 youth. We have broken nothing in order to build anew. 
 
 EASY WAS THE CHANGE. 
 
 We have come from the islands of the sea to this continent 
 and have flourished m Provinces as widely spread as the babel- 
 tongued countries of Europe. We have done it witii as little 
 violence to our inmost traditions as would have distinguished a 
 move from the North to the Soutii of England— not as far as from 
 Montreal to Toronto, or from Winnipeg to Regina. 
 
 We have followed the citizenship ofthe Kfngdom Ith the 
 citizenship of the Dominion more easily than you can transfer a 
 vote from Glasgow to Greenock. We have seen Ttistke. tlie haU- 
 mark of a free and enlightened people, wearing the same avect 
 here as it wears m the Old Home. We have found many thhigs 
 better than they were in the days of our childhood. 
 
 Some of us have once turned back, thinking the Old was 
 
 better, but wc have returned to the Younger Fold of the Flock 
 
 ?Ti.* M*"* "^^ ca/ne. glad and thankful to be again partakera 
 
 A f**?^*"" o* Life which doth here much more abound. 
 
 And with It all there is no diminution of your affection or 
 mine for the Land We Left. It takes on a different, a clearer, 
 [uahty— It must do so when we have enlarged our own quality, 
 t is like a mature, reflective family man's love for his parents, 
 which makes him glad to visit his Old Folks, and more glad to 
 get back home among his Voung Folks. 
 
 And yet again, how ft .e moat of us know about the Land 
 We Left Of the Land We Lire In I When I started for Canada 
 over twenty-five years ago I had never been north of London. 
 1 he look of Sheffield, the aspect of the rugged country of Long- 
 dendale, with its immense reservoirs ; th- cotton milb of the 
 
 ?, 
 
il! . ^ ' ***• P*'* '"°~ between Manchester and Liverpool- 
 were as strange to me as Saskatchewan is to the Prince EdSSd 
 Islander. I wu dropped off a train in the heit of AsSnSS. 
 i"i"£'V»?"^'S'y^*" ' ••'^ "°*hing butp«irie I ulid ; 
 
 Th.* 7^ ^^"^ "^ LIVE IN. 
 
 of creafin? a H^llh J^ "^J^i """.V °^ "'; ^"* *»>• limitation, 
 «*J^:^ livelihood and foandtoff a family In an ctttlrclr 
 new cottntry only intensify one's love Tor the countrywheie^ 
 many great things are being done by just avSraw JJe^d.?^ 
 
 fift. .rT^ partners Of its genius, of its present honor, and its 
 
 iTll iKlr^u""' J^ J? °"y •o^" Can Jda so much. knSwinK 
 h^crjo httle. how should we fove her if we knew heTfroriS 
 
 BecaS?o^^uPLiir^gr,J?Cp^'^^^^^^ 
 S5*""^? the middle of ?cbfiu2ry? Not 5 dl; S>t ft all 
 
 £iS'"wi^'*^'°l!'?P/"'.^°^" *" ^« bush, or onThe blld 
 prairie, with enough food to last you to the next meal b^ nn» 
 
 le^iiS. r„T 'Jf'^'l^"* ';:*° «<»"g «bout the^ounSTL ;iuTe 
 left with only Wue sky to keep you warm. ^ 
 
 nn tiSJlifL^***!' t^'*.S*^* "•«'« Canada. And-think well 
 ? fc?* *■ **®P** '^ like Toti and me who hare done it Out 
 of somude-a community. Out of wealthiest toil-?r^*perity 
 Out of vacancy-a nation. Out of a lone frontier-the bSSark 
 of an Empire, the Envy of a RepubUc. '^"""" "' Bulwark 
 And how was it done by just such people as we are ? Thi.« 
 S." lS'",?"^Jl!"- ?*°"* ^*«"' didnVcoSifort thern^ V JwftS 
 Britl3fr,S°\*i!5 they were laying a foundation To? a^irile 
 British nationhood, they were doing it just the same. ' 
 
 A CX>UNSEL OF DESPAIR. 
 
 But, even to those who did walk bv faith who*- ft»> «,i. 
 
 prepared for the rtory of a nation's birth was saved S as bv fi^ 
 
 1 
 
j 
 
 forBWtoto. They knew, deep down in their souls, that CeaadA 
 POMMM Brttafai in « far more magnificent sense than Britain 
 SSw^^^'^TV'f f »»»««»' of their tribulation rich ftSte 
 would spring. That is even more splendidly true to^ay 
 
 n.i V .NATION WAS BORN. 
 
 nm«,.„ .Sr~*^'* was coming to birth a nation within a 
 nation, such u no epoch had yet produced. Like many other 
 births, It wasn't a very pleasant experience. Some of the mid- 
 wives of Downing Street were mWe bother than use. But it 
 came out aU right. The RepubUc that had counted on thrdis 
 2';*?h/'ff w"SL?^^"^** ^""^ America faUlSjinto ite hand, 
 S« ^^j^'T-"^^c ^'»K™«nt» unite into a confSierated Dom- 
 1^ 4 ^'-.i" 'a*^^* Jf"*"* *•>* Republic noticed the Dominioa 
 
 !il"i?JJ!? •^^P*""* "> the history of Empires which nobody had 
 CmhS^tatl "^^ ' *'•*' '''**" of affection for the distant 
 More unpredicted tilings happened. Again a few years 
 and .t was possible to take Ttrain afongside AtbnS 
 tidalwater and stay in it until tiie heaving bosoi of the Pacific 
 lay beneatii the car window-a tiling which tiie Republ^haJ 
 not accomplished to tiiis day. Canada had «* arrived^ 
 ♦K! J?..tf»^erse fertile plains was comparatively simple: but 
 this British oeopfe, tiiis handful who could not be put^ot^tsWe 
 theEmpireW tiie snperdUous indifference of DowSinR sSeet 
 or by the calculated coolness of Washington, bridgJd a wSZT- 
 ne« of a thousand miles, such as had never been frosted !Sh 
 rails. It was an insurance against the political stranmiUtion of 
 CWa, a guarantee by Canada thatBritish dSSi and 
 
 ssjiiii^td aSt """" "^ """"•''" ^«" E"-p« "«» 
 
 CANADA WAS TRANSFORMED. 
 
 .u /^^'^^'"t ?■* ^"'^'H °^'^*'' children. Canada this day is not 
 the Canada I first saw in 1886, eitiier in mind, body or eJ?ate 
 lijH ?*^ '"•" ^o^iering whether it really was acJS?^' 
 TI'V^ ?**'•» permissible to think of it as a poor relation^ th^ 
 Un^ States Ther. it was little observeHy the 1^,2^^ 
 whiAh was the mort noteworthy portent. 
 
 Whatwasthematterwiti.it? Lack of people-tiiat's all- 
 plus a lack of faith that People would come W cTiSJl would 
 come ; and Fertility would come into its own. 
 
 But all tilings come— fiutii comes if it is eivinc the least 
 chance. Did it ever strike you how amazingl?^ t is St 
 whatsover a people soweth, tiuit shall it also riap. and tiiat the 
 
 faHh^litiT^drTs" '^'*' "^ "'" °^ ^'^'^ "^ »>^ »^ 
 Remember thoK who heralded a United Canada that wotdd 
 SSri?T •■^** *** "^^ remember those who risked ewy- 
 tirfng of their own and of as many others an they couWUv 
 hands on, because they were impelled by a f atth that ovacaiw 
 
 8 
 
•mihua^w.., boMdV^SSS So^SEtT^jja: 'ss 
 
 Und.«nd thowaoas of whom lived in oSSriS.n?di2Z 
 
 SS«*i^"«^''*"'^"'"**«^^''»»^*»»*- SlrJohTffiidJ^ddwrJS 
 ti^ moat famous sentence in Canadian iwlitics." A Srf^2! 
 
 « cune Mritriily M to « leoood Md « bettw home. 
 
 tJ^^'^u y^LL THAT WORKED. 
 
 l—n £f '*" Of "» "f" of Cutad. on the United StMei hei 
 
 gwat opportunities for tr»ie andLSta;^ "^ '** ^'^^ 
 
 thouMnds. TheyfoundtheCaiiadlaa-Bfwi^fl^IS!« JSLilii!" 
 than in the States they had left, and tens of thousaods SfSSS 
 
BritWi method wuSi^iT^^*'*''*^ "hwiheCanadSS: 
 
 crwJ'Tn tiSX«d?^^ In. 
 
 nunitiet in ur« and heiUth. Mv^l^^J^^.}"*^ «>w 
 
 to .ee u. marvelled StwiJth^m ^^"'**' S**** '^'^ cwne 
 
 A«t thtfe wu • aor Power In thcN^fc ^S^o""' understood 
 «JVli«d before dWdned "vKTy/fS^ JS*??*^**'''*?' ''*»•» 
 ««nioiii of npltal lus gene IroJtt uSZ tf f ?^ '«*•* 
 fcwtofki, •n7hundred5^thS5«nrf/5r ^**". *»*• CwudlMi 
 Canadian farm.. AglS^^SS^'Slljn"! ^F^ h-^eioSto 
 up there. We murtiStSe^/.t'^wlneby leapt and Bound. 
 
 DEMAND FROM THE STATES 
 
 A-Pre.ident hadlSt gro^"d?J th?£ii'b,f ' «{ "»« ""• "SS. 
 rebellion Inhwown hSuehold hS52^^JJJ!"»**:L" ^ by 
 -the Canada of 1910 ; the CM^lZMShi^iH^ °" Canadi 
 fl«>«W»ln». the bcit.K»Si ?I2L!1 if .t ** become theaoH 
 try the coSmerclaTfiSSS^.t'^^'^ *^ »*«*" ^mptn^ 
 but which offer noth^^^JJ Z?ht ^^^^J^^^' 
 
 A few Canadians thought of <»LI!rVui« P^?*" 
 * long time ago. The MaSri.1 kf!? *^?*i ""'*>"» but it wa. 
 
 decide wheCtSro'SS.:^ ShSTS^* Canadlani.rto 
 scarcely disgulwd wSation^ «,/^ iL***>'> ^"^ of the 
 Md nJouT.hSl ftS^^LSLrTead? **" *'**' '^ ^ 
 
 Ura GETTING TErIriTORV 
 For our neighbor have oroinSv«i *^* 
 •ccept a wmpact which reJenEX^lJ^l "^ 'T' *»k«* ^ 
 m; which w^ de«nwAr.r!SL S.""** «>nduct toward. 
 Wert live a commoHSSn? life^.^^^Kyt '"^'^ Ea.t and 
 pendent of Redpix«fer"Me to hLJl ' ^^ **•*? K"**"* '"de- 
 end the thing w?SS?iuSown •"■««>ured of the word 
 
 yhemejhe Secretar/of A^SSSJ^ w^ ^1!^^" S '^ 
 tlon. lead me to the co«cI«.L thrt th^'^ptilS^f SSlfcr 
 
/<■ 
 
 pracity Tffwtv wovld. from the natioml itmdpoint. I* m ■■■■i 
 
 Can^and Britain .xprMjed typically in one of the m«t 
 ***?S!t**^Jl!5* Republic, thi- idnneapoli. Jownal" 
 
 unfa-ISl'r.ifJ'^^w SfJ'^*" to prwtieairif iot poHtfcal 
 Mntonwith Canada. Tlie otiier path leads to a eloier Velation 
 bjtween Can«da "id Great Br^t Jn . It means the carrying Tt 
 ij^h^^'^S^^l!^ Imperial Federation, bound totetlSr no 
 f.K^^JrtlftJIL **»"•"*'?!«?*• "^^^ Canada taking the place 
 of the United States as chief jpunreyor of food prSducts and 
 maaufactared articles to Great Britain. f^wuct. una 
 
 KEEP DISTINCT INDIVIDUAUTY. 
 
 .ki J2ir**^*^"*''"*y" °*" *?'* customer, and Canada is our 
 third best curtomer. But our foreign trade wanes, and that ol 
 Canada grows. If we push Canada into Englai^d's armTthe 
 te^hntTSST" **" *''' ^""^ wUI tenS more and mS5 
 
 "Htw long win our trade with these two customers last if 
 I!S**tS5fi?' ?"'' , On' Canadian trade must fall off. as the East 
 and Wert channels of her commerce ar^ scoured by use. And 
 Lanada will more and more supply English needs in our stead." 
 
 They must Increase, we must decrease. That b the direc- 
 tion of their ambition. I know the United States. whowiSopk 
 
 Ijovemment they have no keener sympathizer. Their war h 
 
 Sf{hTuI5lrqlSJ^*'*'^^*^S?¥**^- WeareneiSe! 
 fljrAAv^ ^^*?' "? f *»«*'y o' Britain. We have a disdnct 
 Individuality which we brieve Is better than either. We ale frSe 
 from the woes that spring from the United SUtes sowing Its wild 
 ull' r: Vu"°' encunbered by those handicaps wlilch the 
 long centuries have placed upon the land of our natMty. 
 
 CAESAR IS CXJRSELVES. 
 
 ^•i"^5.°™I^'«?* command of ourselves. Unknely we 
 
 possess the Old Land as well as the New. Its tradition., to 
 S^'5? •chievemente in wMdy-sundered parts of the worM- 
 these things are ours richly to enjoy without the faintest sense 
 of alienation. According to the speed of history, the last dSaS 
 hu produced an amazing readjustment in t£ InteHmSrial 
 Influences which, more than the mere mechanics of Parliamwits^ 
 w2l W^",^!l**5°"i?'u"' resrreating the Empire in which we 
 were born and of which we are a motive part. We are fast 
 coming into the front rank of the inter-depr.iSent States. I <S 
 conceive of no calling more noble, more full of the dignity of 
 
 we help to re-fashlon a yenerable and glorious Empire. 
 
 Once the ^fffi^g appeal was to Caesar. ThTappeal is to 
 Cacsarnow. And Caesar k odrsdvea. — -iipwi » lo 
 
 ARTHUR HAWKES.