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certain points。 But I tried to draw a picture of our agriculture and rural conditions in the twenty…seven counties that; with the Channel Islands; I visited; which should be true and faithful to the circumstances of the time。
Some; of course; were angry with me because I did not advocate Protection as a remedy。 Others of a different school were angry because I pointed out that Free Trade had wrought enormous damage to British agriculture; and that this same Protection; if it could be established; would go far to repair that damage。 As a matter of fact; I began my travels a believer in Protection。 By the time I had finished them; rightly or wrongly I came to the conclusion that it was not feasible in England — a view which; during the last ten years or so that have elapsed since the publication of “Rural England;” little has happened to controvert。 Indeed; I still hold that Protection; or Tariff Reform; which is so widely advocated by the followers of Mr。 Chamberlain; is a heavy stone tied round the neck of the Unionist dog; and one which it will find makes swimming difficult in our political waters。
I elaborated these views in a speech I made some months after I published “Rural England” at the Framlingham Farmers’ Club; which speech has often been quoted since that time; when; it will be remembered; Mr。 Chamberlain’s proposals were very much before the country。
Well; Mr。 Chamberlain’s trumpet; which has been echoing through the land for the last ten years; has not yet shaken down the Free Trade walls; though it is possible that by the time these lines are read it may have done so。 I cannot tell; nobody can tell except the Great Disposer of events。 I can only put things as I see them。 At any rate the point that I believe I was the first to place bef