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Not Big Enough for modern teenagers |
I escaped to Rome and met a daughter backpacking with two friends. Two out of three expressed surprise at the size of
the Colosseum. They had expected it to be bigger. Too many digitally enhanced
super-cities have beamed from their millennial screens.
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Corbyn at 2016 Tolpuddle Festival |
Rome jaunt means, sadly, that I'm missing the
Sunday climax of the Tolpuddle Martyrs Festival in Dorset, where Jeremy Corbyn
is due to speak this afternoon. It celebrates the early days of British
Trade Unionism when in 1834 farm workers in west Dorset faced punitive wage cuts and lawfully
formed a trade union.
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The "Draco of Dorset" |
Their deadly enemy
was rich local landowner and magistrate James Frampton, who masterminded the
ruling-class plot to smash the union. He framed them with a charge of taking an
illegal oath of secrecy. This law was meant to apply to mutinies in the navy, not
workers’ unions. But Frampton was a clever lawyer and on a mission.
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The Edict Framing Union Members |
Six Tolpuddle men were sentenced to
seven years’ transportation to Tasmania. One of them, George Loveless, later wrote a
pamphlet in dazzling prose which remains one of the most important sources on
the dire experience of deported felons in the colonies.
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Loveless' Pamphlet |
The national outcry from other workers eventually
meant that the Tolpuddle martyrs were pardoned. They returned to play a key
role in the Chartist Movement. But I'm interested in the hatred between Loveless and Frampton. Loveless’ pamphlet says, ‘I shall
not soon forget’ Frampton’s name.
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George Loveless is depicted bottom |
Frampton was popularly known as the ‘Draco
of Dorset’, after the Athenian legislator of the 7th century BCE who
had established laws punishing even minor offences with death. The working men
knew Draco, whose laws were said to have been inscribed in human blood, through their reading of English translations of Plutarch’s Life of Solon. Solon repealed Draco’s
laws and passed laws favourable to the poor.
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DRACO of ATHENS |
The dastardly Draco of Dorset will have understood
his nickname. As a wealthy young gentleman, Frampton studied Classics at
Winchester and St John’s College, Cambridge, before going on the Grand Tour. Come
to think of it, he will certainly have visited the Colosseum.
A shame that his classical education led him to
side forever with the Dracos and Domitians of antiquity rather than with
Prometheus and Spartacus.
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