page_0001

OverviewTranscribeVersionsHelp

Facsimile

Transcription

Status: Complete

Quebec. 31st July, 1936.

Mr. President, as the personal representative of His Majesty
the King, I offer my most cordial greeting to the First
Citizen of the United States. Canada welcomes you, Sir, not only for you
own sake as an old acquaintance - for I think you know well our Eastern
coasts - but also as one of the major forces today in the statesmanship
of the world. She welcomes you not less as the head of a
country to whose people she is bound by ties of kinship and tradition;
a country whose problems she shares, and whose future deeply
concerns her own. As a North American nation we have much in common
with your; yet we have each our own idioms and characteristics.
Our differences, understood and respected, are, not less than our
similarities, a basis for cooperation and friendship.

Canada is a free and a sovereign nation and for generations
she has dwelt side by side with yours in perfect amity - an example
to all the world of how civilised neighbours should live together.
She is also a principal constituent part of the British Empire, and
as such she is a link between your great Republic and that Commonwealth
of Nations which covers so large a part of the habitable globe.
Mr. President, it is my earnest hope - and I know that it is also
yours - that our friendship and goodwill may grow, to a still closer
understanding and become that strongest of human creations, a thing
about which men do not argue but which they can take for granted. It
is my prayer that, not by any political or other alliance, but through thinking the same
thoughts and pursuing the same purpose, the Republic of the United

Notes and Questions

Nobody has written a note for this page yet

Please sign in to write a note for this page