An unsentimental portrait: from its realism, intensity and wrinkles emerges a Macdonald for our times.
English, John
Nation Maker: Sir John A. Macdonald: His Life, Our Times. Volume
Two: 1867-1891
Richard Gwyn
Random House
688 pages, hardcover
ISBN 9780307356444
UPON FINISHING RICHARD GWYN'S EXCELLENT biography Nation
Maker: Sir John A. Macdonald: His Life, Our Times, I know our first
prime minister much better. Surprisingly, I like him less.
Gwyn himself admires Macdonald and describes those qualities that
attracted Macdonald's contemporaries and Canadians more generally
to him: his generosity of spirit; his ability to move easily among kings
and paupers; his extraordinary skill in negotiation whether in
Charlottetown or in Washington; and, of course, his exceptional wit. Who
can resist Macdonald's famous political analysis: "they prefer
John A. drunk to George Brown sober"? Or his comment when his
colleague George Foster married an apparently inappropriate woman:
"beneath the belt, there is no wisdom"?
Macdonald was simultaneously charming and charismatic, a rare and
invaluable political combination. He possessed, as Gwyn remarks,
"the priceless political asset of being distinctive," with his
red cravat, checked trousers, flowing youthful locks and, in the words
of Liberal Charles Langelier, "a nose that made up his whole
glory." The nose reddened at times mad swelled as he aged, and his
hair thinned; but his strong personal presence endured to the end. In
1884, on the 40th anniversary of his entry into political life,
Macdonald lamented before a large Toronto rally that many of his
colleagues were gone or "like myself, feeble old man" A
supporter yelled out, unforgettably, "You'll never die, John
A." And it seemed he wouldn't. He was, very simply, great
company, too much alive to die.
He won two more elections, completed the Canadian Pacific Railway
and accomplished his aim of hardening the "gristle" of
Confederation into bone. To Gwyn, Macdonald is our nation maker, the
"man who made us" into a separate North American political
experiment extending from the Atlantic to the Pacific and almost to the
North Pole. Without Macdonald, Gwyn argues convincingly, our shape would
he much different, and--he suggests more controversially--the Americans
would have chewed us up and cast us into a few new minor states in their
great yet flawed democratic experiment.
Gwyn's second volume begins with Macdonald,
the Meiji Restoration in Japan and Bismarck's fashioning of
the new German Reich. It was the era of building new nations, and that
task was Macdonald's fundamental challenge. Gwyn later compares
Macdonald's turn away from free trade to the protectionism of his
National Policy with Bismarck's shift away from "blood and
iron" and toward internal economic development and support for
industrial workers. The means of nation making could change
dramatically, but the end--a new nationality--persisted.
Gwyn's assertion that Macdonald "built" the nation
of Canada is similarly persistent, engagingly and eloquently presented,
and finally convincing. It is not original; after all, Macdonald himself
believed it and made it the famous slogan--"The Old Flag, The Old
Policy, The Old Leader"--of his last campaign in 1891. Moreover,
Donald Creighton's celebrated biography of Macdonald, published in
the 1950s, similarly placed Macdonald among Washington, Bismarck and
Garibaldi as the fathers of their countries.
Although Gwyn generously acknowledges the historiographical
significance of Creighton's Macdonald and his own debt to
Creighton's classic work, his book is fresh with much new material
and a different presentation. Creighton's Macdonald became the
personification of the Laurentian thesis developed in the interwar
period. As brilliantly set out in Creighton's 1937 The Commercial
Empire of the St. Lawrence, the thesis disputes the continentalism
fashionable at the time by tracing Canada's development along the
path of the St. Lawrence River in the heartland through the trade of
staples. Linked through economics and empire with Europe, Canada became
a nation because of geography, not in spite of it. In Creighton's
biography, eloquent and elegant though it is, Macdonald bears the heavy
weight of the Laurentian thesis upon his shoulders.
Gwyn's Macdonald carries no such burden and, as Michael Bliss
observes in a publisher's blurb, readers meet a more lifelike and
credible person. Creighton paints like a Victorian portraitist where
imperial robes and decorations swathe the subject and enhance his
grandeur while most warts remain hidden behind shadows. Gwyn's
style is closer to Lucian Freud in its realism, intensity, wrinkles and
honesty: a Macdonald for our times.
To be fair, Gwyn employs brushes and colouring unknown to
Creighton. He generously and correctly gives credit to the many academic
historians who have written about the late 19th century and opened doors
that were largely closed, particularly in the areas of aboriginal,
western Canadian and feminist history. The rich texture of Nation Maker
also draws deeply upon the finest book ever written about Ottawa, Sandra
Gwyn's ;the Private Capital: Ambition and Love in the Age of
Macdonald and Laurier. These secondary works, which often revealed new
primary sources and took new approaches, permit Gwyn to drill down into
some of Macdonald's greatest challenges and to evaluate his
successes and failures more fully.
One constant remains: Macdonald's greatness as a nation maker.
Here there is no debate. He was the man who made us; and as we prepare
to celebrate Macdonald's bicentenary in 2015, we can safely predict
that nearly all Canadians will toast their nation's founder, no
doubt with appropriate spirits. The party has already begun with John A.
Macdonald Walking Tours in Kingston and a campus speaking tour by former
Liberal prime minister John Turner on Macdonald as "the greatest
Canadian." Although Pierre Trudeau tops the public opinion polls as
the greatest prime minister, his own principal secretary Torn Axworthy
disagreed in a 2008 Toronto Star column, in which he picked Macdonald as
our "greatest." This year's Maclean's poll of
historians, political scientists and journalists on the greatest prime
minister saw Macdonald edge close to the top spot, a fraction behind
Laurier. Out of step, I placed Macdonald in a first place tie with King.
(1)
Macdonald's greatness as the nation maker remains, but
troubles come in the accumulated details in Gwyn's biography. The
first and least serious problem is Macdonald's personal character;
the second, the westward expansion of Canada, especially tire Riel
Rebellion; and the third, the shape of the nation Macdonald bequeathed
to his successors.
What of his character? A wonderful subject for a biography,
Macdonald was splendid company to nearly all he encountered. Few
politicians, Gwyn writes, "have been so utterly at ease in their
skin." His colleagues were "mesmerized" by his charms and
his opponents kept their distance "for fear he would seduce them
into crossing the floor: Women apparently "worshipped him" and
he treated them more seriously than nearly all men of the time, even
considering granting limited female suffrage in the 1880s. While
experiencing personal tragedy--the death of his first wife and the birth
of a severely disabled daughter to his second wife, Agnes--he bore his
pain well privately while publicly remaining genial and committed to his
great political tasks. In describing these qualities, Gwyn does not
depart from Creighton or many other historians.
But he does elsewhere. While Creighton's Macdonald drank too
much, Gwyn's Macdonald is a drunk. In the 1860s and '70s,
Macdonald was frequently carried from the Commons completely besotted.
Parliamentary pages brought him water laced with gin, and alcoholic
outbursts marked his days and even more the nights. Agnes would sit in
the House gallery at night, apparently making notes but surely keeping
an eye on her flailing and failing alcoholic husband. Her diary
expresses relief when he is briefly on the wagon and then laments the
darkness that falls when drink sloshes through his bloodstream.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Did it matter? Did Macdonald's drunks impair his ability to
govern? The evidence strongly suggests it did. The 1870s were bad years
for Macdonald, with the Pacific Scandal, the mess he made of the birth
of Manitoba and the uneven leadership he gave in opposition. A
centralist, he fought Liberal Edward Blake's attempt to limit
appeals to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. Gwyn writes:
"Macdonald, at times sounding as though he had imbibed too
liberally, declared passionately that [the Blake proposal] threatened
the 'golden chain' linking Canada to Britain." Although
the British had already agreed to end all appeals, Macdonald's
arguments stirred opposition and the proposal died because of a fear of
"provoking a first-class transatlantic political row." As a
result, the arrogant and distant Judicial Committee of the Privy Council
tore apart the legal sinews of Macdonald's strong central Canada.
John A. drunk was not even as good as die sober Alexander
Mackenzie, and Canadians were fortunate that his government fell and
that he lost the election of 1874.
During this period, Macdonald became distant from his adoring
Agnes, quarrelled bitterly with his son Hugh John and became careless
about ties with others. In the 1880s he sobered up, but much time was
lost not only for Macdonald but also for his party and country. In
earlier biographies, Macdonald's personal faults lay gently; in
Nation Maker they are exposed and the reader often winces.
The second area where Gwyn raises doubts about Macdonald is the
treatment of the West. Like the devil in Paradise Lost, Louis Riel gets
the best lines in Nation Maker. Most supporting players are briefly
sketched, but Riel emerges from these pages as a towering challenge that
Macdonald cannot surmount. From the birth of Manitoba and Riel's
flight to the United States and Macdonald's secret bribes to keep
him there in the 1870s, Macdonald stumbles often. While Gwyn correctly
credits Macdonald with many successes ill the opening of the West,
notably the creation of the Mounted Police, he is too honest to avoid
hard truths. Here is Gwyn on the path to the Northwest Rebellion and
Riel's execution:
Macdonald remained as erratic as ever. in
1885, he tried to have it both ways, telling
MPs, "The Indian will always grumble, they
will never be satisfied ... if there is an error,
it is in exceedingly large supply being furnished
to the Indians." He was now in full Old
Tomorrow mode.
Macdonald, Gwyn reminds us, was his own minister for Indian
affair's where he heeded advice from the profoundly racist official
Hayter Reed. When "Tomorrow" could no longer be postponed,
Macdonald faced a rebellion both farcical and tragic and, to a
considerable extent, of his own creation. Gwyn again:
The problem wasn't that Macdonald had the
powers of a dictator but that he was an erratically
engaged dictator. When Opposition
critic David Mills complained that Macdonald
was letting his department "care of itself,"
the prime minister admitted he often had to
"rely on memory and the improvisation of the
moment" to deal with questions about western
affairs.
The rebellion erupted, failed and revenge came. Justice Minister
John Thompson's shrewd wife warned that "if you hang [Riel],
you make a patriot of him. If you send him to prison, he is only an
insane man." But Macdonald would not waver. Gwyn again:
A way out for Macdonald did exist. After
the trial, and after two appeals against the
verdict and sentence had failed, Macdonald
set up a hasty three-member medical commission
to examine Riel's mental health.
His motive was to provide political cover to
allow French-Canadian ministers to claim
that every possible step to save Riel had been
taken. Macdonald could have moved a further
half-step forwards. He could have deliberately
chosen experts likely to say that the accused
had become insane since the beginning of
the trial, thereby making him ineligible to be
executed, instead, he leaned towards alienists
likely to judge Riel sane and so qualified to
be hanged ... Macdonald made no attempt
whatever to avoid Riel's execution. In fact, he
seems to have regarded it as his duty to see it
through.
Later, eight rebellious Natives were hanged on the advice of Hayter
Reed, who urged that "the punishment be public as I am desirous of
having Indians witness it ... [as] would cause them to meditate for many
a day."
Gwyn meditates himself as he follows Riel to the gallows, struck by
his religiosity and dignity before death. He describes how Riel wrote
his wife, "Take courage. I bless you"; how the hangman placed
the hood on Riel's head; and how a sobbing Father Andre led Riel in
the Lord's Prayer, which ended abruptly with "thy will be
done" when the trap door sprung. Gwyn makes R clear it was not His
will: "Edgar Dewdney informed Macdonald by telegram that the deed
had been done. Macdonald replied it was 'satisfactory: It was the
worst mistake of his entire career."
When Macdonald learned that Donald Smith had driven the last spike
of the CPR, he commented "We have been made one people by the
road." Gwyn again: "Just one week later, Riel made his last
walk to the centre of the prison yard in Regina--and irrevocably divided
the nation. Macdonald was talking about a Canada that no longer
existed."
Gwyn regards the current celebrations of Riel In opera, fiction,
non-fiction and House of Commons resolutions as silly and profoundly
ahistorical. And he's right. Riel was deeply flawed as a leader and
would not stand scrutiny as a rebel or martyr worthy of glory in the
21st century. Moreover, Macdonald was a 19th-century leader, far from
the cruellest and not at all racist by contemporary standards. In
defence of Macdonald's policies, Gwyn often compares the bloody
exterminations in the United States with the absence of massive removals
and genocidal attacks in Canada. And yet Gwyn himself has written a
strong indictment of the Macdonald government's treatment of the
West and readily finds in those policies the roots of 20th- and
21st-century western and aboriginal discontents. And he's right
again.
After describing Macdonald's "worst mistake" Gwyn
celebrates the completion of the CPR and the election victories of 1887
and 1891. In the latter, Canadians remain true to "the old
man" and the protectionist national policy, which, Macdonald
argued, had assured our independence from the United States, a
separation profoundly threatened by the Liberal policy of unrestricted
reciprocity. These were bad times in Canada with die economy depressed,
the people often desperate and hundreds of thousands crossing the border
to work in die more dynamic and prosperous society in the south.
In 1891, proclaiming that "a British subject I was born, a
British subject I will die," while pointing to evidence of close
ties of some Liberals to American annexationists, Macdonald
"saved" the country and the system he had made. One could
quibble with Gwyn's suggestion, following Macdonald, that flee
trade would lead ineluctably to annexation. It was not, after all,
Macdonald's own earlier belief nor Gwyn's late 20th-century
opinion. It is also unfortunate that Christopher Pennington's
excellent study of the 1891 election came out too late for Gwyn to use
because It does flesh out in much detail the ties between Canadian
politicians and American annexationists and provides some striking new
evidence based on discoveries in American archives. (2)
But conniving and "veiled treason" aside, what precisely
did Macdonald save? What had he made? Certainly a better country than
Bismarck whose blood and iron became Storm und Drang and, for the
Germans, a horrendous first half of the 20th century. Gwyn, superb
journalist that he is, cannot resist the temptation to find traces of
Macdonald in the peaceful and prosperous 21st-century Canada.
And yet it is this third problem, the "shape" of the
Canada that Macdonald made, that emerges as the most troubling one in
Gwyn's book. Macdonald, Gwyn clearly recognizes, was no democrat:
the American experiment chilled his blood and he was traditionally Tory
in his belief that an elite should ride, generously but sometimes
harshly. Not a philosopher, although more learned than he appeared,
Macdonald applied these opinions--they were never an ideology--to
Canadian political circumstances.
Just before the 1891 campaign, George Stephen of the CPR wrote to
Macdonald complaining that he was being ignored even though he had
"alone spent over one million dollars" for the Conservatives
and that the CPR had given a million more. Stephen had earlier written
to Macdonald that the CPR was "in reality in partnership with the
government." This "partnership," in truth a profoundly
corrupt arrangement, troubles Gwyn greatly. He comments decisively that
"Macdonald embraced the wrong side of history." Even after the
Pacific Scandal that nearly destroyed him, Macdonald "continued to
chase election fluids in the wrong places as avidly as he ever
did," and he left file Canadian political system in those wrong
places after he died. In Right Honourable Men Michael Bliss claimed that
none of Macdonald's biographers have "come to grips" with
Stephen's remarkable letter. Gwyn does, and in the process supports
the doubts Bliss expressed in Right Honourable Men, and in his recent
autobiography about the political system Macdonald created, one in which
democracy was limited, cash was king, and party favour and paternalism
prevailed. (3) A Gwyn anecdote is telling: as Macdonald's health
collapsed after the 1891 election and he lay in bed, he still found time
to comment on whether the baggage master at Hampton merited $1.50 per
day. The devil is indeed in the details.
The political shape Macdonald gave Canada survived him, but it
caused endless problems for his successors, not least the underestimated
Robert Borden who finally and eagerly, in the compelling moment of
wartime sacrifice, ended the system of political corruption in the
Canadian public service and stood up to the CPR at considerable cost to
his successor.
In this honest, thoughtful mid masterful biography, Gwyn has come
to grips with this astonishing Canadian, and the portrait, like those of
Freud, is often disturbing. It has many sores, the skin is rough, the
mind less quick, but you see Macdonald clearly in his greatness and his
flaws. He'll never die.
NOTES
(1) In the June 10, 2011, issue of Maclean's Macdonald came
second in the poll of 117 experts, the same position as in a 1997
Maclean's poll, which ranked Mackenzie King first.
(2) Christopher Pennington, The Destiny of Canada: Macdonald,
Laurier and the Election of 1891 (Penguin, 2011).
(3) Michael Bliss, Right Honourable Men: The Descent of Canadian
Politics from Macdonald to Mulroney (HarperCollins, 1994). Bliss writes:
"The Conservative Part), must have been so flush with CPR and
manufacturers' money in the 1880s that general elections were dose
to meaningless."
John English is General Editor of the Dictionary of Canadian
Biography at the University of Toronto. He has written biographies of
Pierre Trudeau, Lester Pearson and Robert Borden.