6o RELIGION, COLONISING AND TRADE
tinued to lead plantations ; and those colonies which
were plantations in the true sense, human plantations,
if not considered, as they were by not a few English-
men, to be a net loss to the Mother Country, were
valued in terms of trade. The British Empire overseas
inspired Chatham to appeal to British patriotism and
to the nobler instincts of his countrymen, but its
economic value expressed itself to him no less than to
Walpole in terms of trade. The eighteenth century
was -for England a century of exceptionally strong
contrasts, of immense gains and losses, a century of
force, of conquest 2nd defeat, on the face of it a most
materialist century. Amidst its many wars there
was one long interlude of comparative peace, when
Robert Walpole was in power, and Walpole was pre-
eminently an embodiment of materialism and a high
ptiest of trade. Yet it was an age which produced
William Law, Oglethorpe and John Wesley. The
eatly years of the century, which saw the victories of
Matlbotrough, saw also two very notable and most
salutary coalitions. The first was the Union of
England and Scotland, dating from May 1, 1707.
It is true that Scottish sentiment resented the Union,
and sore feeling at the loss of legislative independence
lasted long in Scotland. But the Union put an end
once for all to ruinous national competition between the
two peoples, and it obviously promoted the interests
of the Lowlands and the trading classes, bringing
immense expansion to Glasgow as an Atlantic port.1
1 ¢ The opening a free trade, not only with England, but with the
plantations, and the protection of the fleet of England, drew in those
who understood these matters and saw there was no other way in
view to make the nation rich and considerable. Those who had