 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     Until our conversation took place just before I left
                     
Victoria I had no idea that you attached much importance to
                     the letter you wrote me in 
New Westminster on the subject
                     of the suggested union of the two colonies. I should
                     certainly have answered it, had you desired it,

 although I
                     do not see that my answer would possibly have been satisfactory.
                     
                     The situation of things at the time you wrote was this;
                     
Vancouver Island, through its House of Assembly, had declared
                     in favour of union upon any terms. 
B. Columbia, through its
                     Legislative Council, had pronounced against the proposed union.
                     You, however, commence with the rather startling assertion
                     that the only obstacles

 to union rest with 
Vancouver Island.
                     This was not a promising foundation for our correspondence.
                     
                     I gathered however from you in conversation that your
                     meaning was that as I had the power to command a majority of
                     votes in the Council I could force down any measure in favour
                     of which the Secretary of State had shewn a leaning. You are
                     aware of the attention which

 was paid in Downing Street to the
                     oratory of the people of 
British Columbia, even before they
                     possessed their present very moderate share of representation.
                     I cannot believe that I should be consulting the wishes of H.M's
                     Government were I [to] make union a Government question in my
                     Council and carry it by force. Far from that, I am convinced
                     that I should be blamed for exercising

 a tyrannical power
                     which would revive all the old complaints. I think the
                     proceeding would be so unwise that, as I said in your office,
                     I should not take it without instructions so imperative as
                     to leave me no discretion.
                     
                     You informed me of your intention of dissolving your
                     Assembly on the union question. I expressed verbally my
                     satisfaction at the intention.
                     
                  
                  
                     Agreeing with you, in the abstract, that

                     union is desirable,
                     I waited to see whether any party in favour of it would rise
                     up in this Colony. Failing that, it was very difficult for
                     me to enter into any negotiation on the subject, and I even
                     refrained from writing about it to the Secretary of State.
                     The despatch to which he alludes, in his note which has not
                     reached me, enclosed my proroguing speech on my assumption
                     of office. I therein

 said, referring very shortly to my
                     speech that I considered a return to the old order of things
                     impossible and that 
Cariboo could never be satisfactorily
                     governed from 
Victoria; or something to that effect.
                     
                     The state of uncertainty which the agitation in your
                     Colony has kept up in both is most detrimental and I shall
                     be glad to see an end put to it, but this it is not in
                     
our
 power to bring about. You seem to see this as you have
                     never made a suggestion to me on the subject upon which we
                     could have founded a discussion. It was prima facie for you,
                     as the representative of the proposing colony to have made
                     the advances, for me, whose people wish to keep clear of the
                     connexion, to be reserved.
                     
                     I should long ago have answered you had

 I thought you cared
                     about it. I fear that this answer will not appear very satisfactory.