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    Will the Empire Live?

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    What will hold such an Empire as the British together, this great, laxly
    scattered, sea-linked association of ancient states and new-formed
    countries, Oriental nations, and continental colonies? What will enable
    it to resist the endless internal strains, the inevitable external
    pressures and attacks to which it must be subjected This is the primary
    question for British Imperialism; everything else is secondary or
    subordinated to that.

    There is a multitude of answers. But I suppose most of them will prove
    under examination either to be, or to lead to, or to imply very
    distinctly this generalisation that if most of the intelligent and
    active people in the Empire want it to continue it will, and that if a
    large proportion of such active and intelligent people are discontented
    and estranged, nothing can save it from disintegration. I do not suppose
    that a navy ten times larger than ours, or conscription of the most
    irksome thoroughness, could oblige Canada to remain in the Empire if the
    general will and feeling of Canada were against it, or coerce India into
    a sustained submission if India presented a united and resistant front.
    Our Empire, for all its roll of battles, was not created by force;
    colonisation and diplomacy have played a far larger share in its growth
    than conquest; and there is no such strength in its sovereignty as the
    rule of pride and pressure demand. It is to the free consent and
    participation of its constituent peoples that we must look for its
    continuance.

    A large and influential body of politicians considers that in
    preferential trading between the parts of the Empire, and in the
    erection of a tariff wall against exterior peoples, lies the secret of
    that deepened emotional understanding we all desire. I have never
    belonged to that school. I am no impassioned Free Trader--the sacred
    principle of Free Trade has always impressed me as a piece of party
    claptrap; but I have never been able to understand how an attempt to
    draw together dominions so scattered and various as ours by a network of
    fiscal manipulation could end in anything but mutual inconvenience
    mutual irritation, and disruption.

    In an open drawer in my bureau there lies before me now a crumpled card
    on which are the notes I made of a former discussion of this very issue,

    a discussion between a number of prominent politicians in the days
    before Mr. Chamberlain's return from South Africa and the adoption of
    Tariff Reform by the Unionist Party; and I decipher again the same
    considerations, unanswered and unanswerable, that leave me sceptical
    to-day.

    Take a map of the world and consider the extreme differences in position
    and condition between our scattered states. Here is Canada, lying along
    the United
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