[Sidenote: Boston Jubilee.]
In the autumn of 1851, the inhabitants of Boston held a Three Days’ Jubilee, to celebrate the completion of various lines of communication, by railroad and steamship, destined to draw closer the bonds of union between Canada and the United States; and Lord Elgin gladly accepted an invitation to be present. Writing on September 26, 1851, he mentions having ’met there all the United States, President included;’ and describes a ’dinner on the Boston Common for 3,500 persons, at which many good speeches were made, Everett’s especially so.’ He adds:—
Nothing certainly could be
more cordial than the conduct of the
Bostonians throughout; and
there was a scrupulous avoidance of every
topic that could wound British
or Canadian susceptibilities.
To the general harmony and good feeling no one contributed more than Lord Elgin himself, by his general courtesy and affability, and especially by his speeches, full of the happiest mixture of playfulness and earnestness, of eloquence and sound sense, of ardent patriotism with broad international sympathies. ‘It was worth something,’ he wrote afterwards, ’to get the Queen of England as much cheered and lauded in New England as in any part of Old England;’ and the reflection faithfully represents the spirit of expansive loyalty which characterised all his dealings with his neighbours of the States.
These qualities, added to the reputation of a wise and liberal Governor, won for him an unusual amount of regard from the American people. At a dinner given to him in London, during his short visit to England in the spring of 1854—a dinner at which the Colonial Secretaries of five different Governments, Lord Monteagle, Lord John Russell, Lord Grey, Sir J. Pakington, and the Duke of Newcastle met to do him honour—no one spoke more warmly or more discriminatingly in his praise than the American Minister, Mr. Buchanan.
[Sidenote: Speech of Mr. Buchanan.]