EUROPEAN EXPANSION AND WORLD POLITICS
9g
is a man, whose project is under consideration. Every one
of these has passed hours in that dull but anxious attend-
ance. . . . After a short conference you will generally see
him return with disappointment stamped on his brow, and,
quitting the Office, wend his lonely way home to despair, or
perhaps to return to his Colony and rebel.”
These are the words of a partisan, but they convey a
reasonably accurate picture of the actual condition of affairs
at the time.
It was from such leading-strings that the colonies were
gradually emancipated. Beginning with Canada in 1840,
where colonial home rule and union originated through the
activities of Lord Durham in 1839 and 1840, responsible
government was introduced into New South Wales in 1843,
South Australia in 1856, Victoria in 1851, Tasmania in
1853, New Zealand in 1852, Cape Colony in 1854, and into
Queensland in 1859. By 1870 the new system was thor-
oughly developed and in good working order in all these
typical British colonies.
While this was going on, the old wasteful system of free
land grants was abolished, and the Government undertook
to regulate the sale of the crown lands on an equitable and
scientific basis. The discussions of party politics in Great
Britain were greatly relieved by the removal of numerous
petty questions of colonial life and policy from the field of
Parliament’s activities. The imperial forces were gradu-
ally withdrawn from the self-supporting colonies, until the
Colonial Secretary reported, in 1873, that the military
expenses for the colonies were confined almost entirely to
the necessities of imperial defense.
During this period territorial expansion was not popular
with the Colonial Office. Lord Derby, Lord Granville, and
Lord Blachford — all pupils of the Manchester School of
Bright and Cobden —had no faith ina Greater Britain” or