This second episode presents the sickness underlying movements to make the British acquiesce to the wishes of the German invaders during World War II. Free speech is certainly precious, but when the underlying reason for it is anti-semitism and rolling over for a despot, one can easily see why someone like Foyle had a significant job to do.. The people who are holding meetings and welcoming such horrors are the lowest of the low. There is a wonderful sophistication to this show. Foyle is a man of great empathy who is able to look with great compassion at people who would be disenfranchised otherwise. The show avoids the simplistic. One of the major characters is a man who has lost his legs in Norway. There is a subplot where his wife seems to blame him for his infirmities. She is an ugly, spoiled woman, treating him like he is a little child, demeaning his work with Foyle. Another focus is a man who owns a fishing boat who, along with his son (a tragic figure), cross the sea to rescue British soldiers who have been maimed or abandoned in battle.