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Clive Rosefield

History of nowab Sirajuddaula

When Nawab Sirajuddaula was arrested and dragged away, countless people laughed and enjoyed the scene like silent spectators. Not only that, when the Nawab was insulted with a cut throne and torn shoes before being stabbed in the back, hundreds of people were greatly amused by the joke! Take a look at mass psychology, this is how this nation welcomed two hundred years of slavery. An interesting fact. Lord Clive wrote in his personal diary that "If the bystanders had thrown a single stone to insult the Nawab as he was being captured, Clive would have suffered a crushing defeat." The more surprising information is that Nawab Sirajuddaula came to Palashi Maidan with a large well-armed army of about 10,000 cavalry, 30,000 infantry and numerous cannons and ammunition. But in contrast, Robert Clive's army was only 3,000, of which 900 were amateur official members of the British army, most of whom were not well trained to hold a sword and had never fought. Knowing this much, Robert Clive went into battle knowing he would win. For, as Robert Clive knew very well, it does not take much organization to defeat a low self-interested, greedy, indecisive nation; Blood-war is like a cannon to kill mosquitoes for them. Why would he risk the lives of thousands of soldiers for those who can be defeated with just a few chess moves? Also, when Mirzafar was baited by the Nawab, Robert Clive knew that after defeating Siraj, the rest of these scoundrels would get their asses kicked, and they did. Mirzafar, Umichand, Raivallav, Ghasheti Begum and all died tragically. No Vailog, Robert Clive did not come to war relying on Mirzafar's dishonesty. He came to war. Bengali's mentality and fortune-telling are far-fetched. He knew that Mirzafar would swallow the bait and kick him when the job was done. He knew that at the end of the war, even if he kicked the Nawab's ass in public, this nation would gnash its teeth in amusement, or at least look away. Certificates can be issued without hesitation. "Kada of the Bengali nation
DaoistHTtw8a · 1.4K Views

In the bottom of the Darkness

Throughout my life, I was always captivated by all the television shows that consisted of short stories. I always found it pretty clever how they put in fantastic stories, in thirty minutes or an hour. My initial references were "Twilight Zone", "Amazing Stories", "Night Gallery", among others. Of course, over time that continued with current shows like "Black Mirror" and "Room 104". On the literature side, this started with the short stories by Stephen King and Charles Bukowski. That later continued to evolve with other authors such as Lovecraft, Jorge Luis Borges, Clive Barker, among others. Thanks to these influences, I decided to take the step of starting to write my own short stories. These stories were written throughout my life. While I was developing them, little by little, I polished, expanded, or shortened them, depending on the situation warranted, and this is how this compendium of stories was born. "In the bottom of the Darkness" is simply a name that occurred to me, since many stories have a dark foundation, concept, and approach. I wanted to find a rhyming title and that's what I came up with. Initially, I wanted to write basic horror stories, but the problem is that I could not come up with original ideas. When I came up with one, I realized that it was quite similar to those of Stephen King or another author. So I started to work in another way, to discover how to make a more authentic story. After some time racking my brain I was able to get it and here is the result. The stories are varied, mainly there is a bit of dark realism, magical realism, horror, fantasy, eroticism (do not worry, it is moderate, it does not become pornographic), among others. Each story touches a different theme, using a different genre, which makes this compendium very varied and dynamic. I hope you enjoy it...
Aizpurua_82 · 11.7K Views
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