64 SETTLEMENT ON THE LAND 



agents who have told the villagers of the wealth and 

 the pleasures reserved for them in the Dominions. 

 Englishmen do not grudge the Dominions those who 

 go. But the rearing of a healthy rural stock here is as 

 much for the ultimate advantage of the Dominions as 

 for ours. Let it be known that if a man will work in 

 England as he works across the seas, he will be able to 

 live happily on the land. The restless and the ad- 

 venturous may always want to go, but it should be 

 understood that necessity forces exile on no man. 



