[The Romantic Settlement of Lord Selkirk’s Colonists by George Bryce]@TWC D-Link bookThe Romantic Settlement of Lord Selkirk’s Colonists CHAPTER XIII 4/10
It seemed like an offering to the god of peace in order that the vast region with its scattered and thunderstruck inhabitants from Lake Superior to the Pacific Ocean might be saved from the horrors of a cruel war of brother against brother, and a war which might involve even the cautious but hot-blooded Indian tribes. Though the two parties were made up of daring and head-strong men, yet adversity is a hard but effective teacher. The Hudson's Bay Company was represented by Andrew Colville, a warm friend of the house of Selkirk, the opponents by Edward Ellice, a Nor'-Wester.
It seemed, indeed, the very irony of fate that Ellice should be a negotiator for peace.
He and his sons the writer heard spoken of by the late Earl of Selkirk--the son of the founder--as the bear and cubs.
On the other hand the burly directors of the Hudson's Bay Company possessed with all the confidence of the British Lion, and with their motto of "Skin for skin" were only brought to a state of peace by the loss of dividends.
Much correspondence passed between the offices of Leadenhall Street and Suffolk Lane in London, which the two companies occupied, but articles of agreement were not sufficient to make a union. All such coalitions to be successful must circle around a single man. This man was a young Scottish clerk, who had spent a year only in the far Athabasca district.
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