Tag: Thomas Hamilton

  • Theology and Black Sails

    Theology and Black Sails

    Little known fact about me: I went to seminary! I love thinking about the theological messages that are implicit and explicit in the media I love, and Black Sails has some VERY interesting things to say about religion in general and Christianity in particular. In the following four discussions, we’ll dig into what the characters of Pastor Lambrick and Thomas Hamilton reveal about the Black Sails theological framework.

    Season 1, Episode 3: Miranda Barlow and Pastor Lambrick

    Pastor Lambrick:  I’m afraid I’ve become a burden.
    Miranda:  Far from it.  I look forward to our conversations. This week’s sermon?
    PL:  Your thoughts are always enlightening.

    From their first lines together, we see that Pastor Lambrick frequently visits Miranda and asks her opinion on his sermon notes.  Taken charitably, this shows his willingness to accept a woman’s spiritual leading.  This is something that is fought about today and perhaps shows the spiritual freedom of 1715 Nassau away from “civilization’s” influence.  Cynically, this is Pastor Lambrick’s excuse for spending time with a beautiful woman or a desire for external validation.  Since one of Black Sails‘ theological themes is the concurrent sinfulness and saintliness of every man and woman, I like to think that his motivations include all three.

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    Miranda:  Easter.  Is it Easter already?  ‘It is Christ’s love of sinners that gave him the strength to endure agony.  This, the truest form of love, love through suffering.’  Do you believe this?
    Pastor Lambrick:  It’s not to be believed or disbelieved.  It’s God’s gospel truth, is it not?
    M:  ‘Thy navel is like a round goblet which wanteth not liquor.  Thy belly is like a heap of wheat set about with lilies.  Thy breasts are like two fawns, twins of a gazelle.  Thy stature is like that of a palm tree and thy breasts like clusters of grapes.  I will go up the palm tree and take hold of its fruits.’  God wrote that, too.  True love shouldn’t require suffering.  And you don’t have to take my word for it.

    Over and over again, we will see that Lambrick’s faith is simplistic.  When Miranda asks him if he believes what he has written about Christ’s love and suffering, his reaction is one of confusion.  It is truth, and not to be questioned.  Interestingly, Miranda’s argument is not so much about the statement’s truth, but about its totality.

    In quoting the erotic love poetry of Song of Solomon, she reminds Lambrick that love, as explained by God, has many forms.  Christ’s suffering is one form, but it is not the only way that love exists, and we should not exalt it as such.  In effect, she calls Lambrick out on picking and choosing Scripture to suit his message.  She is here, I believe, a wonderful example of a systematic theologian.

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    Pastor Lambrick:  I must confess there is an ulterior motive for my visit today beyond the content of my sermon.
    Miranda:  Is that so?
    PL:  There are whispers among my flock that a ship of the Royal Navy docked in Harbour Island recently.  The Scarborough.  They say the king means to reassert colonial rule here.  Perhaps soon.  Judgment in this world, not the next.  For those who are a part of my flock when that judgment arrives, their righteousness will almost certainly go beyond doubt.
    M:  It’s not quite that simple for me.
    PL:  Is he keeping you here?
    M:  Good day, Pastor.

    In the final part of their exchange, Lambrick further reveals the motivations for his visit. Before I discuss the negative implications of what he says, I do want to give credit for his asking if Captain Flint is keeping Miranda in the house against her will.  More faith leaders would do well to look for and address potential instances of domestic violence among their parishioners.  But let’s delve into his assertion that his church will be spared when the British arrive to reassert their dominance.

    To begin, his words have an air of paternalistic protection that Miranda clearly has no interest in.  It’s telling that she just demonstrated a greater understanding of Scripture than he has, so his sudden switch to “I’ll protect you” contains hints of reasserting power over her.

    Far more damning is the way his words bely an exclusionary view of Nassau, one in which his “righteous” flock will be spared.  The implication, of course, is that the heathen pirates will not.  Although we do not yet know Miranda’s full story, or her opinion of the pirates of Nassau, her disinterest in his proposition is our first hint that she might not see the world so divided.

    Ultimately, Lambrick is pretending to be a leader, though one whose leadership is granted through capitulation to England and “civilization.”  This is a theme that has yet to be fully fleshed out in the show, but it is important to note going forward.

    In our first scene that explicitly discusses theology, we are treated to two drastically different theologians.  One is primarily concerned with upholding the status quo, both spiritually and culturally.  The other questions what is “obvious,” thinks deeply, and refuses to benefit from the advantages of living under the status quo.  It remains to be seen which of these theologians we are meant to admire and imitate.


    Season 1, Episode 7: Pastor Lambrick Preaches to an Empty Field

    The seventh episode begins with Pastor Lambrick practicing his Easter sermon to an empty field before he is interrupted by a messenger on horseback tearing through his oration.

    “Easter is upon us, an opportunity for renewal and rebirth both in spirit and the flesh.  And yet we may also ask ourselves, ‘When the spirit is renewed and the body resurrected, what becomes of the sin?’  Will not a trace of it linger to mock and torment us, to remind us of the roiling pit of despair that awaits the unrepentant beyond this life?  And yet does it not often feel as if life itself is the pit?”

    It’s a short bit of preaching, but it’s fitting in an episode focused on Captain Flint’s plan for Nassau and the partners who fail to support his vision.

    For what is Flint’s plan if not one of renewal and rebirth, one in which a wealthy Nassau can allow pirates to become soldiers and farmers?  But Lambrick’s sermon asks us to consider this rebirth – can pirates-turned-farmers truly leave behind their old ways?  Is a renewed Nassau possible, or will it forever be marred with the sins of corruption, greed, and violence?

    Flint believes that, in the words of Lambrick, Nassau can be reborn without sin.  But he is very much caught in the “roiling pit of despair” that Lambrick worries is a hellish current existence.  Flint tells Miranda that he has made enormous sacrifices for his cause, some of which he is experiencing in this episode as Gates and Miranda abandon his vision. We later learn that James McGraw created the persona of Flint to accomplish Thomas’s plan, and that he hated this persona (aka himself) a little more every day.  For ten years.  In pursuit of the dream of a renewed Nassau, he lost Thomas and then Miranda.  He murdered Gates, his closest friend.  He endured mutinies and sent his crew to their deaths on innumerable occasions.  He partnered with men he despised and attacked innocent men.  His life truly is a hell on earth, but astonishingly, he continues to hope for a hell-free future.


    Season 3, Episode 9: Pastor Lambrick and Charles Vane

    When Lambrick visits Vane before his execution, his attempt to offer peace and repentance is rejected.

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    Lambrick enters and offers Vane bread, which coming from a clergyman seems pretty obviously to symbolize Communion.  But bread is only one half of the grace of Communion, just as the peace Lambrick is about to offer is not complete.  He wants Vane to feel fear for what is coming so that the mighty pirate will need a pastor’s solace.

    Lambrick:  Men who’ve never experienced fear are said to know it for the first time.  But in this moment, there is quiet.  An opportunity to find some measure of peace.
    Vane:  Get many takers, do you?  For the kind of peace you’re offering?
    Lambrick:  It is a different experience to what you may imagine it being.  Surely a man like you has faced death before, but never so nakedly.

    Lambrick’s pretense is revealed when Vane shows zero interest in accepting what he offers.

    “I can help you do that.  To repent.”
    “I have nothing to repent for with you.”

    Tellingly, Vane does not say he has nothing to repent for.  He just doesn’t want to repent to Lambrick, later insisting that “whatever I have to say to God, I’ll tell him myself or not at all.”  We know that Vane has begun to see the wider ramifications of his kill-or-be-killed worldview.  When fighting the Spaniard in 305, Vane realized that everyone isn’t fighting for the glory of fighting.  Some fight simply so that their dead bodies will be evidence enough to provide their families with food.

    But whatever sins Vane believes he has committed, he has no interest in sharing them with someone like Lambrick, who will use them as evidence to distance himself, a “good” man, from “monsters” like Vane.

    “Don’t you?  I understand you believe your violence is justified in the name of a defiance of tyranny, but there are mothers who buried their sons because of you.  Wives widowed because of you.  Children awoken in their sleep to be told their father was never coming home because of you.  What kind of man can experience no remorse from this?”

    “What kind of man” reveals that Lambrick shares civilization’s instinct to make pirates inhuman.  Vane clearly sees Lambrick as representative of the people he hates, those who would willingly enslave themselves to England, and an English worldview, for a bit of comfort and security.

    Lambrick:  I am a shepherd sent to help you find a path to God’s forgiveness.
    Vane:  A shepherd?  You are the sheep.

    Sheep are consumed by fear, and a shepherd leads them into a new world of freedom and hope.  Vane sees Lambrick’s hypocrisy and therefore wants nothing from this man of God who is blind to his own failings.

    Ironically, although Lambrick did not get what he wanted, Vane does leave their conversation with peace.  He has seen himself as a shepherd capable of leading people into freedom, and as such he delivers one hell of a last speech.  It probably wasn’t quite what Lambrick intended.


    Pastor Lambrick and Thomas Hamilton

    There are two main characters in Black Sails whose actions are explicitly motivated by Christianity:  Pastor Lambrick and Thomas Hamilton.  Together they represent the best and worst of their religion, with one embodying its privilege and the other its sacrifice.  This duality is perfectly expressed in the metaphor of a shepherd and the sheep.  A shepherd leads people and challenges the status quo for the betterment of their flock, even at personal risk.  The sheep follow people and fearfully accept the status quo out of a desire to maintain their privilege.

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    Pastor Lambrick believes he is a shepherd, but his conversations with Miranda and Vane reveal his inner sheep.  As I mentioned earlier, Lambrick has an exclusionary view of Nassau that separates his “righteous” flock from the heathen pirates.  This becomes even more obvious in his conversation with Vane, which ends with him implying that Vane is inhuman.  He sees his connection with civilization as something that elevates him above others.  We have never seen him try to create a better life for the men and women of Nassau in the present, and when forced to interact with a pirate, the only hope he offers is a fear-based call to repentance in hope of a better life to come.  One imagines Vane might have been more open to repenting to Lambrick if he had seen the man fight against slavery and injustice rather than enjoy a comfortable life in the island’s interior.  Lambrick’s power is entirely based upon capitulation to England.  He believes he is a shepherd when in reality, he is a sheep.

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    Miranda:  In some ways he [Thomas] was like you, a shepherd to his flock.

    -Episode 106

    Unofficially, Thomas Hamilton established himself as a shepherd to men and women in England by hosting salon conversations with the goal of seeing “the yoke of shame lifted from your shoulders,” a habit that seems to be grace incarnate.  Both in word and in deed, Thomas believes that his social and political privilege is something to be sacrificed, not clung to.  In episode 201, he gives money to the poor, which seems to be a regular occurrence.  His plan to offer pardons to the pirates of Nassau is done out of a desire to inspire England to live up to its Christian ideals (204) despite the possibility, and eventual reality, of it costing him everything.  Thomas passionately lives out his ideals, leading others into freedom as their shepherd.

    Lambrick, the sheep, sees monsters where there are men, and he wants people to change in order to better serve England.  Thomas, the shepherd, sees men where others see monsters, and he wants England to change in order to better serve people.  There is no question as to who is more fully living out Christ’s belief in inherent human dignity and His willingness to sacrifice privilege for others’ gain.  The fact that Black Sails chose to show Christ embodied in a rich white queer polyamorous man opens spiritual doors that some churches currently keep closed, and I personally find that incredibly beautiful.


  • Black Sails Season 2 Episode 5 Review – XIII

    Black Sails Season 2 Episode 5 Review – XIII

    Miranda embarks on a journey to save the island.  Eleanor opens old wounds.  Rackham sniffs around a big secret.  Vane must take matters into his own hands.

    (Summary provided by starz.com)


    BEST FLINT MOMENT

    How can I choose?  Is it his shocked face when Thomas moves to kiss him?  The montage of his private interactions with Thomas in which he is oh so soft and vulnerable?  Or is it the palpable grief with which he touches the inscription “My truest love, know no shame” in the present day?

    Trick question, it’s EVERYTHING.

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    TODAY’S RUNNER UP

    Miranda!  She is phenomenal in this episode.  We’ve been seeing her take more and more of an active role in the events of Nassau as the show goes on, and I am here for it!  In the flashbacks we see her desperately trying to tell Thomas and James that their plan will end in ruin.  She is ignored but proven right.  Then in the present day she decides to try again.  She sees that Flint has gone beyond their original dream, so she leaves the house to go into Nassau (so great to see her there!) and confront Flint.  This time he listens to her, and we will see what happens as a result.

    LOL MOMENT

    Jack, Anne, and Max’s threesome is interrupted by the fort being attacked, and Jack’s response is, “It would appear we lost track of time.”  LOL.

    WELL-FORMED THOUGHTS

    Are you kidding?  How can I have well-formed thoughts about this episode when my emotions haven’t stopped shrieking?

    Instead of finding something intelligent to say, I’d rather share this GORGEOUSLY PAINFUL short James/Thomas fanvid.  Prepare for your heart to be shattered all over again.

    FRAGMENTED THOUGHTS

    • The placement of Miranda’s thumb is beautifully subtle, and my God, how it drastically changes Thomas’s inscription!  Watching this episode a second time, it is so sad to see Miranda sitting by a rain-spattered window looking at the book that her husband has dedicated to James, his “truest love.”  I know that the three of them have a no-shame policy and an open relationship, but it has to hurt to know that Thomas’s and James’s connection was deeper than hers.
    • Silver is using all of his Storytelling Powers, but Billy is unmoved.  Did Silver really think that he could convince Billy to pity Flint re: Gates’ murder?  Luckily, Silver always has a backup plan, and Billy realizes he is in chains.
    • When James returns from Nassau, he is so eager to enter the house and see Thomas again.  And Thomas’s heart eyes from across the room!  Oh man, the CHEMISTRY between the two of them as they stand beside each other and share the same dream.

    “Three months…feels like twice as long.”

    • James’s role has changed.  Instead of countering Thomas’s position and revealing weaknesses, he is totally on board with pardoning the pirates and will do his part to get the British Navy’s support.  Miranda tries to separate them and talk sense into James, unable to understand why he would risk so much for some pirates.  What she doesn’t realize is that James has a personal stake in the matter now.  He’s seen the freedom in Nassau and realized that the three of them could live there without fear of discovery and punishment for their relationship.  Oh, JAMES.  Oh, MIRANDA.  Oh, THOMAS.  This is all agonizing.

    “We all have the same swords out there, we all have the same guns.  But great art has felled empires – therein lies the difference.”

    • Jack knows the importance of art, even if his pickiness is driving Charlotte the Artist crazy.  He’s also very pragmatic.  While his island is being blown apart, he sees an opportunity to get some planning done.

    Jack re: Vane

    “Given the choice between capitulation and survival, I don’t imagine that to be a choice for him at all.”

    UM.

    • I love Vane for ensuring that Abigail remains safe and untouched when he leaves the fort.
    • Daddy Guthrie is making a play to come back to power.  I really feel for Eleanor, because like her, I sense that he’s skeezy but I can’t quite pinpoint why.
    • Flashback to everything falling to shit.  I kind of hate Hennessey for letting James go on about his plan when he knew the whole time that Lord Hamilton was waiting for them.  I definitely hate him for how he talks about James’s relationship with Thomas, saying things like “flaws, weaknesses,” “but not this, it is too profane,” “this is your end,” and “be grateful it’s not on the gallows.”  UGH, this from the man James considers his father-figure!

    “He told me what you did after he invited you into his home, trusted you to assist his son and daughter, and you flagrantly violated his trust.”

    • James’s face and voice as he realizes he has been discharged from service and exiled from London, knowing that everything has been taken from him.  Including Thomas, who has already been taken to Bethlam before James can return to the house.  They never got to say goodbye!!

    James:  I’m not leaving.  I’m going to get him out of there.
    Miranda:  You can’t.
    James:  Watch me.

    • James’s Flint voice makes its first appearance.  Hello darkness, my old friend. *weeping*
    • Now I remember why it took me a while to like the adorable Featherstone – his introduction occurs when he forces Jack to decide between Anne and Max!  I’m firmly empathizing with Anne here – despite the logic of Jack’s long term plan, it absolutely feels like a betrayal.

    Billy:  You thought Flint killed me, then Gates, and you queued up to be next to fill the post?
    Silver:  I’m certain I won’t make the mistake you both made.  I don’t believe in him.  To me, he is the means to securing a very valuable prize, no more, no less.

    • BILLY WAS THE ONE TO PUT THIS THOUGHT IN SILVER’S MIND??  WOW.  Wait, why am I surprised by this?  Billy is always the one placing thoughts in Silver’s mind.
    • Much like the appearance of Flint in McGraw, here we get the first appearance of (Long) John Silver when he casually threatens Billy’s life.  But Randall is there with a quick reminder, “We like him too.”
    • I’m really not a fan of men who ignore other people’s pain (like, their children’s pain) because theirs is just “Too Much”.  Poor Eleanor.
    • Love that Eleanor kicks everyone out of the tavern when Miranda says she and Flint need privacy.

    Flint:  I think that I’ve made my intentions very clear.
    Miranda:  No.  You’ve been anything but clear!  You say you fight for the sake of Nassau, for the sake of your men, for the sake of Thomas and his memory.  But the truth of the matter is, it isn’t for any of those things.
    Flint:  What the fuck do you think I am fighting for?
    Miranda:  I think you are fighting for the sake of fighting.  Because it’s the only state in which you can function.  The only way to keep that voice in your head from driving you mad.
    Flint:  What are you talking about?  What voice?
    Miranda:  The one telling you to be ashamed of yourself for having loved him.  You were told that it was shameful, and part of you believed it.  Thomas was my husband.  I loved him and he loved me, but what he shared with you…it was entirely something else.  It’s time you allowed yourself to accept that.
    Flint:  The only thing I am ashamed of is that I didn’t do something to save him when we had the chance.  That instead I listened to you.

    • Oh, my HEART.  There it all is.  There’s the reason behind their bad sex and Flint’s passive-aggressive leaving all the time.  He resents Miranda for convincing him not to attempt to rescue Thomas (and as much as I would have loved to see that, I do think she’s correct that it would not have worked and would only have made things worse).  But more importantly, James hates himself.  His whole Flint persona is a mixture of attempting to bring about Thomas’s dream (I do think that is partly his motivation) and masochism toward himself, forcing himself to do horrible things because he believes he is a horrible person.
    • But Thomas reminds him, “Know no shame.”
    • Excuse me, I’m weeping again.
    • THAT MONTAGE.  Tears tears tears.  Where is the good fanfiction of this time between James and Thomas?  Recommendations very much appreciated!
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    They’re so peaceful and happy!!  Boyfriends reading books to each other in bed!!  AUGH.

    Not done reliving the episode?  Listen to Daphne and Liz’s podcast at Fathoms Deep!

  • Black Sails Season 2 Episode 4 Review – XII

    Black Sails Season 2 Episode 4 Review – XII

    Flint threatens Vane.  Eleanor chooses a side.  Rackham learns what Max is capable of.  Silver reunites with an old friend.

    (Summary provided by starz.com)


    BEST FLINT MOMENT

    “People can say what they want about you, but you’re a good man.  More people should say that, and someone should be willing to defend it.”

    I’M FOREVER SCREAMING INTO THE SUN, byyyyye.

    TODAY’S RUNNER UP

    Thomas!  He is, I believe, the best example of a “good person” we’ve had on this show.  He is so driven by his beliefs in the inherent goodness of humanity that he refuses to take an easier path to success despite knowing his ideals could potentially cause himself and his loved ones great harm.  For the previous three episodes, he was mostly an affable man, inspiring but kind of soft.  When he confronts his father, however, he is STEEL.

    Reader, I love him.

    LOL MOMENT

    Everything about Max’s description about the difference between fucking and seduction is comedy gold, from her earnest delivery to Idelle’s confused assurance to Jack’s certainty in the world crumbling around him.

    WELL-FORMED THOUGHTS

    In this episode, we get two people caught in the middle of a messy situation.  Eleanor must decide whether to side with her partner (Flint) or the safest/smartest option (Vane), and in flashback, James must decide whether to side with his partner (Thomas) or the safest/smartest option (Lord Hamilton).

    Eleanor does her best to reconcile the two warring pirate captains, to no avail.  It is really wrenching to see her real fear at the possibility of a destabilized fort opening Nassau to another Spanish attack.  She knows that Flint knows it is a dangerous move, but she can’t convince him to change, so she sides with Vane.

    James spends the entire episode counseling Thomas to abandon his plan to pardon the pirates, both for communal and personal reasons.  He’s genuinely frightened of what may happen to Thomas if he were branded a coward for suggesting forgiveness for traitors.  But when it comes down to it, and he SEES someone attacking Thomas in just the way he feared, James stands (literally, oh my heart) and sides with his partner despite knowing it is not the safe or smart option.

    It is parallel storylines like these that make me really adore Black Sails.  We get to see two people making opposite decisions, but we feel for both of them.  There is clearly no easy answer for either of them, and though we might wish they chose differently, we cannot blame them for their decision.

    FRAGMENTED THOUGHTS

    • Abigail!  Vane is shit for leaving her only maggoty bread, but she is awesome for eating it after only a moment’s hesitation.  Vane continues to show that he does not know the meaning of “good host” when he says, “My name is Charles Vane, and you are now my guest.  As such, no harm will come to you so long as you do exactly as I say.”  Um, OKAY, Charles.  Although it is rather lovely when they bond the tiniest bit over their shared satisfaction that Ned Lowe’s head is on a pike.
    • Anne, Jack, and Max wake in a pile, but Anne is snuggled up close to Jack.  She makes her alliance to Jack very clear throughout the episode, and I love her self-awareness that she needs him with her in the bedroom because her mind isn’t clear there. She’s exploring a new part of her sexuality, and it scares her. She wants her partner there with her, and god bless Jack for supporting her.

    Anne:  I’ve put a lot of bodies in the ground for you, haven’t I?
    Jack:  Excuse me?
    Anne:  Watched your back.  Cleaned up your messes.  Carried out your plans.  I didn’t always understand, didn’t always agree, but I did it.  Some fucked-up, awful shit ’cause I knew you needed it done.  I don’t think the night you had last night comes even close to something to bitch about.
    Jack:  I know you know this is significantly more complicated than the quantity of tits I have access to at any given moment.
    Anne:  I know she’s dangerous, especially to me.  I ain’t in my right head about her.  She knows it.  And it ain’t hard to imagine her intent is to play us off one against the other.  But I’m asking you to do this for me. I’m asking you to watch my back on the other side of that door.  ‘Cause I know as long as you are, there ain’t shit she can do to get between us.

    • Is this the first time we see Eleanor on a ship?  I love Flint’s ingrained manners when he stands as she enters, and even more I love that he insists on talking alone with her.  I am in love with watching a young woman and an older man going head to head with equal respect and frustration.
    • This scene between Flint and Silver is FORMATIVE.  It’s the first time Flint is the tiniest bit vulnerable with Silver, and it’s therefore the first time Silver sees beneath Flint’s aggressively brilliant exterior.

    Silver:  It’s possible this has nothing to do with the fort, nor with Vane.  Perhaps it’s just them expressing their opinion about you.
    Flint:  So you think that they see me as the villain in this particular story?
    Silver:  I think that would explain their decision, yes.
    Flint:  And you?  What do you think?  You see me as the villain here?
    Silver:  I see you as the agent most likely of securing my share of the gold on that beach.  As long as that remains true, I am not bothered in the least by whatever labels anyone decides to affix to you.  Why?  What do you think about it?
    Flint:  I’m sorry?
    Silver:  It bothers you, doesn’t it?  What they think.  With the things you’ve done–My God, it must be awful being you.

    • This scene is even more heartbreaking after Flint’s explosive defense of Thomas:  “People can say what they want about you, but you’re a good man.  More people should say that, and someone should be willing to defend it.”  Silver has been Flint’s defender, so it makes sense that Flint wants Silver to also see the good motives beneath his actions.  But that is not what drives Silver to support Flint – it’s his honest using of Flint to get the Urca gold.  It is so painful to watch Flint realize Silver is not that person for him.
    • It’s hard for me to completely understand just how dangerous Thomas’s idea was for its time and place.  I need to learn more about British empire culture/politics.
    • Billy is back in our story, and looking real rough!  It’s all kinds of heartbreaking that his first words are “Get Gates.”
    • Miranda blowing up at Eleanor is very illuminating.  Miranda has definitely lost her passion for Nassau, because all she sees is the place that cost her everything, and keeps costing her (in encouraging Flint’s violence and leading him further from the man she knew).  Which is why it’s so great to see her mind formulating plans when she learns from Pastor Lambrick that Abigail Ashe is in town.  Perhaps there’s a way for her to put an end to all of this AND honor Thomas and Flint’s plans.
    • Max is so fascinating.  She’s definitely out of sorts now that Anne has brought Jack into their bed.  I still don’t think Max loves Anne, and this is more fear of losing her power and influence.  She tries to intimidate Jack (who is entirely confident in his relationship with Anne – awww), and when that doesn’t work, she bribes him with Featherstone and a crew.  She’s a very smart woman, and I respect her, but I don’t really LIKE her for it just yet.
    • And then that pivotal flashback scene!!  It is perfection.  Thomas’s father is immediately dislikable, Thomas is glowing with passion and certainty, Miranda and James are trying to stay out of it UNTIL.

    James:  I support it.  I found his argument persuasive.  I find his intent to be good and true, and I find yours wanting, sir.  I will be relaying my findings to Admiral Hennessey in short order.  And now I think it’s time you left, sir.
    Thomas:  Did you just ask my father to leave his own house?  Right now he will be dispatching messages to the Sea Lords, the Southern Secretary, his friends in the Privy Council.  He will stop at nothing to ensure that this plan never sees the light of day, and now you’re in the line of fire.
    James:  People can say what they like about you, but you’re a good man.  More people should say that.  And someone should be willing to defend it.

    • Mr. Scott tries to convince Flint not to attack the fort.  Flint gives Mr. Scott the due he deserves by acknowledging the Mr. Scott’s invaluable role behind the Guthries.  Mr. Scott gives excellent advice, but to no avail.
    • Once again, Flint makes a decision that I disapprove of, but he’s so conflicted about it that all of my emotions are only for him.
    Worst dinner party ever.

    Not done reliving the episode?  Listen to Daphne and Liz’s podcast at Fathoms Deep!