![]() ![]() There’s something deeply comforting about it all – it’s as cosy and familiar as a candlelit supper at the Nampara kitchen table. We’d waited all episode for it, and she delivered right at the end. And there cannot be a single Poldark fan who didn’t smile when panto servant Prudie uttered her catchphrase “’T’int fair, ‘t’int right!”. Poldark is about to take on – again – a lost cause that will pit him against the establishment, but which he will predictably win. ![]() Here are the sweeping shots of Cornwall, and some peasants about to start rioting. So here’s Ross Poldark looking pensive and tousled here’s George Warleggan being vile (“Why should we pay more for labour when we can get it for less?”). “What do it hold for us?” And here’s to the new series of Poldark and what it holds for us, it seems, is more of the same. 'H ere’s to the new century,” says Sam Carne, raising a glass during dinner at Trenwith.
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