|
Has anyone else noticed ?
I'm enjoying it as a history lesson that was never even mentioned in school when I was growing up in Liverpool. Strange, because half the population was Irish (as was my own Grandmother).
Strange too, because it's only now that I'm learning that the English aristocracy treated the peasants in much the same way as they treated the natives in their colonies.
We in Liverpool were too busy trying to eke out a life to be concerned with what was going on in the rest of the dominion. But as I get older and see what mentality drove that same aristocracy, then I have no boundaries for my distaste for them.
First of all they take all of the land, then they take all of the resources the land has to offer, then they sequester the crops, then they charge rents for the properties they've stolen.
You want more?
They call you up to fight their battles for them.
Even that's not enough, they lay ownership to all of the wildlife, birds, beasts, fish and fowl, and pass laws that allow for beatings and execution for any transgressions.
Then they turn their attention to the winsome young lasses who grow up in the villages and decide that they should have the right to be the first one to screw them if they so desire.
All of this without a peep of protest to be countenanced............ no wonder the peasants got mad and rebelled.
It's not stellar stuff but it's interesting enough to keep you watching.
I can't get over how I've suddenly realised that there is something that can be called an "Irish" face.
score 7/10
cordenw 12 November 2019
Reprint: https://www.imdb.com/review/rw5251972/ |
|