Our Living Tradition

£20.99

Our Living Tradition

First Series

Biography: historical, political and military Autobiography: historical, political and military General and world history History of the Americas Social and cultural history Oral history Industrialisation and industrial history History of ideas

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Collection: Heritage

Language: English

Published by: University of Toronto Press

Published on: 15th December 1957

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 160 pages

ISBN: 9781442633704


In this book, seven distinguished scholars and writers discuss seven leading figures in the history of Canadian letters and public affairs.

Frank H. Underhill, historian, describes the tragic career of Edward Blake, one of the ablest men who ever entered Canadian politics. D.G. Creighton, author of the definitive biography of Sir John A. Macdonald, writes of this politician whose solid achievements mock the facile depreciations of his character current during his lifetime and after. Mason Wade, author of The French-Canadians, describes the career of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, who pledged as a law student, "I will give the whole of my life to the cause of conciliation, harmony, and concord among the different elements of his country of ours."

Robertson Davies, playwright, author, and critic, writes with penetration and sympathy of Stephen Leacock, the humorist; Munro Beattie, professor of English, of Archibald Lampman's poetry, particularly as related to Ottawa, the city in which he lived and wrote; Wilfrid Eggleston, journalist and poet, of Frederick Philip Grove, "the first serious exponent of realism in our fiction." Malcolm Ross, professor of English, editor, and critic tells of Goldwin Smith, that complex and contradictory figure—the architect of "Canada First," who yet "had no sense whatever of the national feeling of born Canadians."

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