
audiobook
by Robina Lizars, Kathleen Macfarlane Lizars
Transcriber’s Note:
HUMOURS OF ’37 GRAVE, GAY AND GRIM REBELLION TIMES IN THE CANADAS. BY ROBINA AND KATHLEEN MACFARLANE LIZARS, Authors of “In the Days of the Canada Company: the Story of the Settlement of the Huron Tract.” “The humours are commonly the most important and most variable parts of the animal body.” TORONTO: WILLIAM BRIGGS, Wesley Buildings.
PREFACE.
NEW WORDS TO AN OLD SONG; OR, JOHN GILPIN TRAVESTIED.
HUMOURS OF ’37.
Baneful Domination.
More Baneful Domination.
The Canadas at Westminster.
A Call to Umbrellas. “We must have bloody noses, and cracked crowns, and pass them current, too.”
Le Grand Brule.
This volume paints a vivid picture of the turbulent year 1837 in the Canadian colonies, when political discontent erupted into open rebellion. Using veteran recollections, official reports, and newspaper accounts, the authors blend everyday details with the broader forces of ideology and grievance. Their narrative balances scholarly care with occasional wry humor, revealing how ordinary people experienced both the gravity and the absurdity of the moment.
The book draws on a wide array of sources—parliamentary debates, pamphlets, and local testimonies—from towns stretching from Sarnia to Quebec, giving a textured sense of the era’s social climate. It examines the roots of the conflict, the split between Loyalist and Reformist factions, and the early skirmishes that marked the opening act of the uprising. By presenting both the grave and the gay aspects of the period, it lets listeners hear the voices of a time when myth and memory intertwine, without revealing the later outcomes.
Language
en
Duration
~11 hours (644K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Larry B. Harrison, Wayne Hammond and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Books project.)
Release date
2017-08-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
d. 1918
A Canadian writer with a strong feel for local history, she is best known for lively books written with her sister Kathleen about early Ontario and the rebellions of 1837. Beyond writing, she was also an accomplished musician and music teacher.
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d. 1931
A Canadian writer and historian, she helped bring early Ontario history to life through vivid accounts of settlement, rebellion, and everyday experience. Her books, often written with her sister Robina, turn local history into lively storytelling.
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