can be enjoyed under conditions of healthy living,
liberal laws, free institutions, in exchange for the
over-crowded cities and the almost hopeless struggle
for existence which, alas, too often is the lot of
many in the old country. But one condition, and
one only, is made by our colonial brethren, and that
is, “Send us suitable emigrants.”
I would go further, and appeal to my fellow countrymen
at home to prove the strength of the attachment of
the motherland to her children by sending to them only
of her best. By this means we may still further
strengthen, or at all events pass on unimpaired, that
pride of race, that unity of sentiment and purpose,
that feeling of common loyalty and obligation which
knit together and alone can maintain the integrity
of our Empire.
FOOTNOTE:
[11] A speech delivered by His Majesty King George when Prince of Wales, at the Guildhall, London, December 5, 1901, on his return from his tour of the Empire. With the permission of the proprietors of The Times the report which appeared in that paper has been followed.
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----------------------------------------------------- | By Grenville Kleiser | ----------------------------------------------------- |Inspiration and Ideals | | | |How to Build Mental Power | | | |How to Develop Self-Confidence in Speech and Manner| | | |How to Read and Declaim | | | |How to Speak in Public | | | |How to Develop Power and Personality in Speaking | | | |Great Speeches and How to Make Them | | | |How to Argue and Win | | | |Humorous Hits and How to Hold an Audience | | | |Complete Guide to Public Speaking | | | |Talks on Talking | | | |Fifteen Thousand Useful Phrases | | | |The World’s Great Sermons | | | |Mail Course in Public Speaking | | | |Mail Course in Practical English | | | |How to Speak Without Notes |