The Peasants Revolt
by
Sean Corrigan
You
may have missed it, over the weekend, but the UK had an earthquake.
No,
not the 4.8 Richter earth tremor in Dudley, but the broad-shouldered
masses of the good yeomanry of the nation, Celts and Saxons together,
who marched on the bastions of the Jacobins in their Westminster
haunts.
407,791
four hundred and seven thousand! good sons
of the soil turned up on the Liberty and Livelihood March through
London on what turned out to be the biggest civil liberty protest
in British history.
The
backbone of the nation labourers, agricultural tenants, country
dwellers, gentleman farmers and landed gentry and a goodly smattering
of sympathetic Townies, to boot! all combined to protest the actions
of the UK Committee of Public Safety under Tony RobespiBlaire in
its attempts to social engineer this Sceptred Isle, the land of
Magna Carta and Habeas Corpus, into some morally relativistic, multicultural,
Islington dinner party in between supplying auxiliaries for the
Legions of the Empire, of course.
Jefferson
would have been proud of the Brits, for once!
The
Times noted,
"Among
the placards, distrust of the Government was one common thread:
‘Blair run the country, don’t ruin the countryside’, ‘For
fox sake, fox off Blair’, ‘Towney Blair’s got rid of more farmers
than Mugabe’, ‘We do not like being DEFRA-cated on’" the
last referring to the post-Foot and Mouth, spin doctor-rebranded
replacement for the despised Ministry of Agriculture a typical
Blairite ploy to airbrush history.
The
Sun quoted landowner Andrew Duff Gordon who declared: 'There
is a huge strength of feeling because everyone in the countryside
is being ignored. The reason I’m here can be summed up in one word
— freedom.'
Stephen
Robinson perhaps best captured the mood as he
exulted in the Telegraph:
'The
placards, swaying in the sunshine, conveyed an attitude of defiance.
"We will not be culturally cleansed", read one; "Future Criminal"
read another carried by an eight-year-old; "Revolting Peasant" another,
carried by an adult, dressed in the Sloane Ranger's weekend uniform
of plum-coloured corduroys.
Then,
at precisely 10am, with whistles, horns and bagpipes blaring, the
Liberty march began to roll from the eastern corner of Hyde Park,
and into Piccadilly.
Kate
Hoey, the Labour MP and darling for many of the marchers for her
brave and lonely stance within her party, stood at the front, alongside
Richard Burge, the alliance's chief executive. One placard read:
"Hoey for Prime Minister."
The
crowd eased forward at about half normal walking pace, into Piccadilly
and past the Ritz where Londoners lined the pavement, shouting their
support.
The
marchers cheered one placard at the Ritz: "Kiwis Support Country
Poms", carried by John Falloon, a New Zealand farmer visiting friends
in England. Hunting is popular in New Zealand, and Mr Falloon said
he worried that a ban in Britain might have a knock-on effect in
his country.
As
the giant procession snaked rightwards into St James's, the gentleman's
clubs had all opened up. At Boodle's, the staff stood on the first
floor balcony in their waiter's uniforms, quitely applauding the
marchers.
The
marchers loved that touch. Most of the the upmarket St James's traders
were closed, but they had left banners of encouragement in their
windows.
On
surged the crowd, down Pall Mall, and into Trafalgar Square, where
Mayor Ken Livingstone, no friend of the countryside or hunting,
had left his mark. The road narrowed into an uncomfortable funnel
because of the continuing roadworks, forcing the marchers to furl
their giant Liberty & Livelihood banner, as they eased around
the construction equipment of the mayor's half-finished pedestrianisation
scheme.
The
Liberty march turned into Whitehall where with immaculate timing it merged with the Livelihood march which had been making its
way over from its eastern starting point.
There
were whistles and cheers and shouts of recognition as these two
tributaries met in the middle of Whitehall to form a giant river
of humanity heading towards the Cenotaph, where the marchers fell
silent as a mark of respect.
This
meant the marchers could not shout their true feelings towards Downing
Street, which was just as well as the mood was specifically hostile
to the Prime Minister. One man, dressed as the grim reaper with
a Tony Blair mask, was wildly cheered.
If
the well-heeled of St James's were sending their best wishes, the
tone of the march was not at all grand. Early yesterday, a presenter
on Radio Five Live put on a jokey posh accent as he spoke to a reporter
in Hyde Park, perhaps to convey the BBC's general disdain for the
event.
The
presenter should have spoken to Mike Idle and Ewan Gaskell, keen
members of the Ullswater fell pack, whose Cumbrian accents were
so thick they warned "you might need an interpreter to interview
us".
Both
had been to London only twice before, to attend the previous countryside
marches, and they were in no hurry to come back.
They
said they were incensed that the media always suggested hunting
was for rich people on horseback. "There are no toffs in our hunt,"
said Mr Gaskell, a van driver, rather giving the impression that
they would not be welcome there.
"And
I'll tell you now, we're not going to stop because of what Blair
says. How are they going to stop it? They don't police the towns
in Cumbria, so how will they police the hunts?" There was a definite
edge of defiance on the streets.
From
a different perspective, Richard Fry, who owns a business in London
and a farm in Dorset, had brought his family, along with another
1,000 or so supporters of the Cattistock Hunt.
"Make
no mistake," he said, "this one is the last peaceful march I'm coming
on. If they press on with a ban now, the gloves will really come
off."
There
were no speeches, no rally, no concert to raise the spirits before
the long journey home. Once they had passed the counting station,
the marchers were asked simply to disperse to allow those behind
to complete the route.
The
very spareness of the march somehow added to its power. Some 400,000
people came to London from all over the country to tramp along the
streets, and simply be counted.
The
walk took a good two hours, and the wait could be double that. No
gift packs were offered to the children, no jugglers or clowns along
the way, no computer games to take home just long journeys by
coach or train, and a long, tiring, march, and aching bones.
"It
was brilliant, brilliant," said Daisy Walker, 12. She was there
with her parents, Sean and Karen, north Londoners who carry no candle
for hunting Daisy strongly disapproves of it as well yet adamant
that they should support the countryside.
"It's
a matter of individual choice," said Mr Walker.
To
be on the streets yesterday was to feel you were part of something
much larger even than the important issues that had drawn the masses
to the capital.
As
hard as a BBC presenter might try, you could not generalise about
these people. No cosy British social snobbery or inverted snobbery
helps you out, for the crowds were so socially and geograpically
diverse.
One
of the last banners read: "Mr Blair, see what a minority looks like."
This was a pretty good joke when 200,000 were expected, but became
better still when more than double that figure turned up.'"
But
what was the response of our latter day Richard II to this horde
of modern Wat Tylers?
Very
much that of Shakespeare’s arbitrary monarch, for Blair was off
at his weekend grace and favour retreat in Chequers, playing geopolitics,
and no doubt telling his fawning coterie of court favourites:
"We
will ourself in person to this war:
And, for our coffers, with too great a court
And liberal largess, are grown somewhat light,
We are inforced to farm our royal realm;
The revenue whereof shall furnish us
For our affairs in hand: if that come short,
Our substitutes at home shall have blank charters;
Whereto, when they shall know what men are rich,
They
shall subscribe them for large sums of gold
And send
them after to supply our wants."
Richard,
you may recall, gratifyingly, did not end well, and, when Bolingbroke
finally cast him down from the throne, few mourned his passing:
"With
much more contempt, men's eyes
Did scowl on gentle Richard; no man cried 'God save him!'
No joyful tongue gave him his welcome home:
But dust was thrown upon his sacred head."
One
can only hope!
http://www.countryside-alliance.org/
September
25, 2002
Sean
Corrigan [send him mail]
writes from London on the financial markets, and edits the daily
Capital Letter
and the Website Capital
Insight.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
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Corrigan Archives
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