In the House of Commons, members applauded Sergeant-at-Arms Kevin Vickers, who yesterday put aside his ceremonial duties to draw a gun and fire the shot that halted one attacker.
Vickers' composed bravery has become an inspiration to Canadians struggling to comprehend how two of their countrymen could turn against their homeland with such reckless brutality.
"The objective of these attacks was to instill fear and panic in our country and to interrupt the business of government," Prime Minister Stephen Harper told the chamber as business resumed.
"We will be prudent but we will not panic and as for the business of government, well, here we are, in our seats, in our chamber in the very heart of our democracy and our work."
Harper then crossed the floor to shake Vickers' hand, and to hug opposition leaders.
Earlier, the prime minister had lain a bouquet of flowers at the Ottawa war memorial where an unarmed Canadian soldier mounting a ceremonial guard was shot dead yesterday.
A large crowd had gathered at the site, still cordoned off with yellow police ribbon, to pay their respects and show their defiance in the face of the unexpected threat from within Canadian society.
There, officers opened fire, including Vickers, a veteran of the Royal Canadian Mountain Police appointed to lead the parliamentary security team and wield the ceremonial mace.
The attack followed a similar one on Monday, when 25-year-old Martin Couture-Rouleau ran over two soldiers in a Quebec parking lot, killing one of them, before being shot dead by police.
Both assailants were already on a Canadian government watch list of so-called "high-risk travellers" banned from leaving the country for fear they might join Islamist extremists waging war abroad.
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