Both Susanna Moodie and Copway admire nature and the environment by demonstrating good aspects of nature. In addition, they describe nature and the environment as difficult and challenging elements of life. Susanna Moody talks about a phenomenon in which the wilderness is pure and does not disturb human activities. Meanwhile, Copleway encountered a sight of natural depiction in the trip recorded in the biography. However, both explain the environment and the wilderness in their own way, which affects the way Canada represents the essence of Canada.
Example 1: Catherine Parr Traill and Susanna Moodie visited Canada in the early nineteenth century and wrote down their experiences. Their work involves journals and letters to record their trips, and their struggle to survive in harsh environments. Both Parr Traill and Moodie were born in the UK and the living in Canada was adjusted. Case 2: How Catherine Partrail and Suzannah Moody Describe Their Voyages in Upper Canada, Reflecting Popular Media among Pioneering Women Represented through Travel Stories You can conquer people and understand women's suffering and pleasure in their efforts to adapt to the change of Canadian society. Traill and Moodie's works reveal the social differences facing these unprepared women while conveying the image of the early landscape of rural and urban life in Canada.
English-speaking Canadian writers, especially Katherine Partrail and her sister Suzannah Moody, middle-class British settlers who published their memoirs as a request for their harsh life became very popular. Traill announced Canada's Backwoods (1836) and Canada's Crusoes (1852), Moodie announced "rough" for Bush (1852) and Qingming Life (1853). Their memoirs explain the severity of living settlers' lives, but they are still very popular. Like the educational and nursing charity organizations advocated by British upper class women, upper class women support charity. The ruins of a Victorian nurse still exist and were founded in 1897 as a gift to Queen Victoria to commemorate her diamond day. The empire medal of Empire was founded in 1900 and supports educational scholarship and book awards to support the knowledge of the British Empire while promoting Canadian patriotism.