In this scene, Her Ladyship didn't treat daisy as a scullery maid, she was being her wise and loving grandmother, and that shows how noble the Dowager Countess truly was.
I like how she would fight for "the little people" like when she wrote to the war office so that Mosley and William aren't called up for war or the time she went to bat for William to get treatment in their village hospital after he had been injured in the war.
I mean… it would be improper, but it’s possible, underneath „Noble birth” there can be characters like Lady Sybil, I would be more speculative about Daisy character here, I think a girl in her place would never opened up like this to member of the „family”
@@julianowakowska5140 but in general the British aristocracy and landed gentry were not high and mighty with their staff, one of the reasons they survived.
I think people’s accents were different depending on where they lived in the UK, and they were taught to speak a certain way if they belonged to an upper-class family. That’s why Daisy and some of the other staff have a different accent.
Aristocrats typically speak in the RP accent or Received Pronunciation: the standard accent for upper class educated people in the London area. This was primarily due to education and peer interaction. I can’t tell if Daisy is speaking in a Yorkshire accent which is the area where Downton Abbey is set in. We know Mrs Hughes is Scottish while Branson is Irish so Daisy could have come from somewhere else in the country.
@@babsgrayson8432 We are joking as though I don't know _Abby_ exists and that this is a scene from a _Harry Potter_ film. We continue by claiming the scene is from a prequel, then I joke about the age reduction CGI used in _Captain Marvel_ and various _Star Wars_ movies.