The Great Round World and What Is Going On In It, Vol. 1, No. 35, July 8, 1897 - A Weekly Magazine for Boys and Girls by Various
page 13 of 38 (34%)
page 13 of 38 (34%)
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and the tenants refused to have any dealings with him.
It was harvest-time, but the crops were left rotting in the fields, because no one would lend a hand to gather them. The farm servants left the farm, and there was no one to feed the cattle or milk the cows. The country people round would sell neither food, clothes, nor medicines to any of the family. The peasants cut Captain Boycott off from the rest of the world, and kept him thus isolated until the Government had to interfere. A gang of laborers was sent down, under the escort of a troop of soldiers, and gathered in the crops, and when the work was done, under the protection of the soldiers, the Captain and his family were taken from their home and safely guarded until they reached Dublin. In describing this most extraordinary affair there was no word which properly applied to it, and so the word "boycotting" was coined, after the man who first suffered from the system, and in the new editions of the dictionaries "boycott" and "boycotting" appear as regular words of the English language. * * * * * We may have an Arbitration Treaty with England after all. President McKinley is in favor of an understanding between England and the United States, and it is said that a new treaty has been prepared. Sir Julian Pauncefote has refused to take any steps in the matter until |
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