. The Irish green book. xious to blacken hisParnellite opponents, says : ^Vhat is boycotting? Itis combined intimidation made use of for the purpose ofdestroying the private liberties of choice by fear of ruinand starvation.—HorsE of Commons, 24th May the same date the G. 0. M. refuted himself in ad-vance by saying ; Exclusive deaxino is a totallydifferent thing. Now. The Grand Old Parliamentary Hand, anxious towhitewash his Parnellite allies, describes boycotting(4th July 1887) as Exclusive De-^ling, and subse-quently as natural, lawful, and necessary com-binations, and, further, as t


. The Irish green book. xious to blacken hisParnellite opponents, says : ^Vhat is boycotting? Itis combined intimidation made use of for the purpose ofdestroying the private liberties of choice by fear of ruinand starvation.—HorsE of Commons, 24th May the same date the G. 0. M. refuted himself in ad-vance by saying ; Exclusive deaxino is a totallydifferent thing. Now. The Grand Old Parliamentary Hand, anxious towhitewash his Parnellite allies, describes boycotting(4th July 1887) as Exclusive De-^ling, and subse-quently as natural, lawful, and necessary com-binations, and, further, as the instrument bywhich, in their unfortunate circumstances, they (theNationalists) could defend their rights.—At Derby,20th Oct. 1887. XJOyCOttmg and. MUrder. That which stands in the rear of boycotting, and by which alone boycotting canbe made thoroughly effective, is the murder which is not to be denounced.—W. E. G., 24lh May 1882. [DuringAugust 1887 over 5000 persona were undergoing boycotting in Ireland.]. THE PARNELLITE ATH. I will let them (the Tories) for a few months stew in their own Parnellite juice, andwhen they stink in the nostrils of the countiy, then the country will fling them, discreditedand disgraced, to the Constituencies.—Sir W. V. Harcourt, Ith Dec. 1885. The Separatist Gouernment] 22 [Parnell on Gladstone. ^be Separatist (Bovernment. UetOre ttie Election. The Grand OW Separatist says—Let me suppose that the Liberal Party might be returnedin a minority, which might become a majority by aid of the Irixh vote. Now, gentlemen, 1 tell you, seriously andSOLEMNLY, that it would not be aafe for it to enter into the consideration of a measure in respect of which it woukl bein the power of the party coming from Ireland to say—unless you do this and unless you do that, WE will turn youOUT TO-MORROW.—W. E. G., 9//; November 1885. [? What the Leader of the Liberal Party, seriously and solemnly declared to be unsafe, the Prime Minister hasnow delibera


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectgladsto, bookyear1888