SUMMARY 79
country, though not inside the British Empire, much
mote developed, mote accessible than or at least
equally accessible with any of the countries within
the Empire, offering mote opportunities except for
those who had the instincts of pioneers and almost
equal opportunities for them also, and presenting a
special attraction not only to the growing number of
emigrants who came through from the continent of
Europe to the Atlantic ports of Great Britain, but also
very especially to citizens of the British Isles who, like
the Irish, had no love for the British Government.
The result was that for about the last half of the nine-
teenth century the volume of emigration from the
British Isles to the United States, either direct or
through Canada, very greatly exceeded the total
number of those who went to all the home-giving
countries of the Empire put together.
It has been abundantly seen? that in the beginnings
of the Empire the planting of colonies was recom-
mended as a means of providing employment and
relieving distress. ‘The same motives, more solidly
grounded, operated eatly in the nineteenth century,
and have been operating more or less ever since, not
least at the present day. The substitution of machinery
in factories for cottage industries, which brought
starvation to the handloom weavers of northern
England and southern Scotland in the years between
Watetloo and the Reform Bill, gave a great impetus to
crossing the sea. ‘There must have been in these years
mote widespread and acute distress than at any time
in the sixteenth, seventeenth or eighteenth centuries.
1 See above, pp. 5, 6, 14, etc.