This book was digitized by Microsoft Corporation in cooperation with Yale University Library, 2008. You may not reproduce this digitized copy ofthe book for any purpose other than for scholarship, research, educational, or, in limited quantity, personal use. You may not distribute or provide access to this digitized copy (or modified or partial versions of it) for commercial purposes. THE PAST AND THE FUTURE oe NOYA SCOTIA: J^N ADDEESS SJlte 113fh %mvm\xi% af th jfottlp«tt of th nkl sf the fwuinw, DELIVERED EV E. G- HALIBURTON, JESy request of the Anniversary Committee. HALIFAX, N. S. PRINTED & PUBLISHED BY J. B. STRONG, 203 BjiKEiirGTOK St. 1862. HALIFAX, N. S. : PRINTED BV J. B. STRONG, 203 Bakkington St. *~4X. %J W! &£ 0 OBJECT AND NATURE OP THE ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION, Held at Halifax, June 21st, 1862. Colonists have for many years occupied, in some respects, an equivocal* and somewhat unenviable position. Though sincerely attached to the British Crown, and feehng, in common with the inhabitants of the Mother Country, a lauduble pride and interest in the greatness and hap piness of the nation, we are so far removed from the Parent State, that our familiarity with the incidents of its past existence, is derived, not from those public trophies and memorials which present and recall to the eye and to the mind of an Englishman those great' events whioh they commemorate, but from a study of the history of the world, which is as much the property of foreigners as of ourselves. In our daily life, we have but little to remind' us that we have a personal interest in the trials. and triumphs of that great country to which we belong, though we are conscious that as descendants of Britons we can justly claim an equal share of that heritage of glory which is the common property of the nation. But how striking is the contrast that presents itself to the colonist, when he' crosses the line that divides us from the neighboring Republic ! There all the inhabitants, young and old, combine to celebrate the an niversary of the establishment of the Union. Even the European emigrant, who has but a few months before sought that land as an adopted home, feels that he has a personal interest in the incidents that are recalled, but, above all, in those institutions which are annually ex tolled, and in the permanence of which his future happiness and destiny are so deeply involved. An impression has of late existed, that we might learn a useful lesson, in this respect, from our republican neighbors ; that an annual com memoration of the settlement of this province, might be of permanent benefit to ourselves, by promoting a feeling of loyalty to the Parent State, which by its arms and' its treasures protected and fostered- our early existence, by familiarizing us. with our past history, and by pro moting an interest in those natural resources, the value of which we have hitherto scarcely appreciated as they deserved. It has been considered, that an annual commemoration like this, if divested of that spirit of self-laudation so conspicuous in the national rejoicings on the Fourth of July, might be permanently established s