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seventeen years old, having been coined in 1880, and that it derives its origin from this very Captain Boycott who has just passed away. He was a captain in the English army. After a while he sold out his commission, and settled down as a farmer in Connemara, Ireland. He became the agent of an Irish landlord named Lord Erne, and it was his duty to manage the estate, see to the sowing and gathering of crops, keep the houses on the property in repair, and collect the rents from the tenants. The Irish had long been complaining that their rents were too heavy, and that their landlords did nothing for them in return for the money collected. There was a good deal of truth in these complaints; the landlords hardly ever went near their estates, and seemed to care only for the money they got from the tenants. The whole conduct of affairs was left in the hands of the agents, who were obliged to grind the money out of the tenants to supply the wants of their masters. It does not appear that Captain Boycott was more severe than other agents, but he does seem to have been less in sympathy with the peasants. There had been a long period of bad harvests followed by a famine, and the tenants could not pay their rents. They begged that their back rent might be forgiven them, and their future rents lowered. All over Ireland similar demands were being made. Irish agitators, as they were called, were holding meetings all over the country, advising the peasants to make these demands. Among the men who addressed the people were Charles Stewart Parnell, John Dillon, and Michael Davitt, all members of Parliament. Excitement had run so high that the peasants had murdered several agents who refused their demands. Mr. Parnell and his friends urged the people not to commit crimes, but to refuse to pay the rents demanded. These leaders bade the people stop buying from, selling to, or working for any landlord who refused to listen to their demands, and to prevent others from having any dealings with them. This is what is called "boycotting." Captain Boycott was its first victim. He not only refused to lower the rents, but, according to the story of the peasants, he reduced the wages of his laborers by a system of petty fines. Acting on Mr. Parnell's advice, the laborers refused to work for him, and the tenants refused to have any dealings with him. It was harvest-time, but the crops were left rotting in the fields, because
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