580 PARLIAMENTARY COLBERTISM
i a 237. Such were the changes at work within the realm,
The one but the encouragement given to particular interests at home
Too. affected other parts of the British System. The systematic
ment the offorts of the legislature to increase the shipping and foster
fone the industries of Great Britain had a marked, and, to some
extent, an injurious effect upon the development of the
American and West Indian plantations. These colonists
were scarcely touched by legislation in regard to the English
landed interest, except in so far as the protective tariffs,
imposed by the Restoration Parliament, prevented them from
establishing a trade in cereals. The case of Ireland was
entirely different: the sister island had suffered severely
from the Navigation Acts, and from the repression of her
industries; but the chief grievances of which she had cause
to complain arose from the agricultural, rather than from the
industrial, or commercial, policy of the British Parliament.
In climate and position Ireland is so far similar to Great
Britain that her products entered into direct competition
with those of the English soil. Probably nothing did greater
harm to Ireland than the system of bounties by which
English corn-growing was encouraged. The English farmer
found it profitable to grow corn, and with the help of the
bounty he was able to export it to Dublin, at rates which
Jefied competition in a country where wheat-growing had
nade but little progress. The very same measure which
sncouraged the application of capital to the English soil,
rendered it utterly unprofitable to invest money in im-
proving the cultivation of Ireland’. The graziers had
suffered under Charles IL; wool-growing was less profitable
than it would have been, if the drapery trade had had a
fair chance; while tillage was depressed by the English
bounties. The backward condition of agriculture, despite
the excellence of the soil, made a very deep impression
on Arthur Young, and the causes are fully described by
Mr Newenham. “The different disadvantages which the
agriculture of Ireland laboured under * * * had, almost
necessarily, the effect of preventing an accumulation of
1 For an exceptional case of cultivation for export, see Pococke, Tour in
Ireland in 1752, p. 64.