# Bayeux Rhythms, by T. Emery Lolsworth. Medieval folk sure were existent!

WHAT IT IS

 

This was only brought to my attention recently during my Shakespeare course for Uni. THE Civil War, as in Cromwell and that, was different from the previous two (the Anarchy and the Wars of the Roses) in that normal people were involved. There was no such thing as the middle class in the middle ages, although they were being constructed at the time as trade became more important - boats needed to be built, so trees needed to be cut down, and then ports needed to be made for those boats, which meant stones needed to be gathered and on and on, until you get your actual interdependent market structure, and with it the rise of the businessman - one who employs serfs rather than owning them. Obviously there was a tension there between these new entrepenhoweveryouspellthat guys and the Lords, a division which manifested as the old fashioned Royals and Aristocrats and newfangled Parlimentary types. THE Civil War of the 17th Century was the final release of all this tension, the first and only Civil War in British History not to be about two sets of Kings squabbling over mud. Sorry if you were expecting jokes in this alt text, but I reserve the right to educate you about socio-political English history instead. Shut up, it's not as if you paid.

JOURNEY TO THE BEGINNING OF TIMEJOURNEY TO A COUPLE OF DAYS EARLIER IN TIMEJOURNEY TO A COUPLE OF DAYS FORWARD IN TIME

October 2nd, 2008

As previously mentioned, there's a reason why I chose the village of Worksop particularly. Not a revelatory or even particularly interesting one, but a reason nonetheless.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This is a Bob the Fish comic. Hooray!