The Story of Louis Riel: the Rebel Chief eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about The Story of Louis Riel.

The Story of Louis Riel: the Rebel Chief eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about The Story of Louis Riel.

“We are despised by these white people.  We want no social or political alliance with them.  We shall live apart, rather than in ignominy and union with them.”  Louis Riel was not ready the next morning to rise and lead the people to revolt, for this occurred some years before his bloody star reached the zenith; but the same hatred was there years later, when he turned the governor sent to the colony by the Dominion out of the territories, and set up an authority of his own.  Well might the French historian, cognisant of the fate of the luckless suitor, and the consequences of the rejection, cry out with the poet: 

   “Amour tu perdis Troie.
   [Footnote:  Love thou hast conquered even Troy.]

As for poor Jennie, heroic Jennie, who would follow her lover to death itself, she submitted, after a few sleepless nights, and days that for her were without a breakfast, to the mandate of the guardian, and to the philosophy of her sister.  A little later, a tall, ungainly young Highlander came, offered himself, and took to his home the poetic and tragic daughter of the Company’s officer.

Despite the blizards that sometimes come sweeping across the prairie, smothering belated travellers, and un-roofing dwellings, notwithstanding the frequent incursions from regions in the far west of myriad-hosts of locusts and grasshoppers, Red River settlement throve in wealth and population, till, when the period with which I shall now deal arrived, it numbered no fewer than 15,000 souls.  Upon the completion of the great Act of the Confederation of the British North American Provinces in 1867, the attention of Canadian statesmen was turned to this distant colony, and negotiations were opened for the transfer of the Territory to the Dominion.  The back of great monopolies had now been broken.  In 1858, England had resumed its great Indian empire and extinguished John Company; and this act had paved the way for a similar resumption of the vast prairie domain granted by King Charles to “the Governor and Company of Adventurers of England trading into Hudson Bay.”  The transfer was to be effected, as one writer puts it, by a triangular sort of arrangement.  All territorial rights claimed by the Hudson Bay Company —­and Red River lay within the Company’s dominions—­were to be annulled on payment of 300,000 pounds by Canada, and the country would then be handed over by Royal proclamation to the Dominion Government, the Company being allowed to retain only certain parcels of land in the vicinity of its trading posts.  I may as well go upon the authority of the same writer. [Footnote:  Captain G. L. Huyshe.] The transfer was dated for the 1st of December, 1869; but the Dominion Cabinet, eager to secure the rich prize, appointed its Minister of Public Works, the Honourable William McDougall, C.B., to be Lieutenant-Governor of the North-West Territories, and sent him off in the month of September, with instructions to proceed to Fort Garry “with all convenient speed” there to assist in the formal transfer of the Territories, and to “be ready to assume the Government” as soon as the transfer was completed.  So far so well, but let us pause just here.

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The Story of Louis Riel: the Rebel Chief from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.