insideKENT Magazine Issue 32 - November 2014 | Page 20

ARTS+ENTERTAINMENT bonfire night BY LISAMARIE LAMB Remember, remember, the 5th of November The Gunpowder Treason and plot; I see of no reason why Gunpowder Treason Should ever be forgot. It’s a tradition up and down the country that, on a chilly 5th November every year, the UK population enjoy standing in a field somewhere eating hot dogs, drinking hot chocolate or mulled cider, and watching fireworks fly into the sky. It's fun to wrap up warm in the winter months and chat to friends and neighbours in the community, or others who love the same old traditions as you do. However, although you probably know the ancient rhyme about the 5th November, do you know what it’ really all about? s Guy Fawkes was the one who started it all. It was 1605 and 13 young men hatched a plot to blow up the Houses of Parliament; Guy Fawkes (sometimes known as Guido Fawkes) was one of these men. He was certainly the most notorious. James I was king of England, and although it had been hoped that he would be tolerant towards the Catholics in the country when he ascended to the throne in 1603, that hope was dashed soon afterwards. Catholics were as persecuted under James I as they had been under the old Queen Elizabeth I, and gradually small groups began to rebel. One of these groups was led by a man named Robert Catesby It was . his idea to blow up the Houses of Parliament – he wanted to show the ruling government that the time had come to listen. This would certainly get their attention, especially as they planned to set the bomb for a time when the king was in parliament. One by one, 36 barrels of gunpowder were placed carefully beneath the Houses of Parliament. The plan should have worked perfectly, but for one problem; at least one member of the gang had second thoughts when he realised that innocent people would also most likely be killed in the explosion. He sent an anonymous letter to Lord Monteagle – whom he presumably liked – warning him to keep away from parliament on 5th November. Sensing a major disaster was about to unfold, Lord Monteagle showed the letter to the king. When the king’s guards stormed the cellar to catch the conspirators, only Guy Fawkes was present. It was to have been his job to light the fuse, but he was arrested and executed (brutally since he was a traitor; he was hung, drawn, and quartered) before getting the chance. 20 Since that day, the reigning monarch only ever enters the Houses of Parliament on one day a year (the St ate Opening of Parliament) to ensure maximum safety for him or her. Even our current Queen Elizabeth II observes this ancient tradition. To celebrate King James I’s escape from certain death, bonfires were lit around the country, and effigies of the traitor Guy Fawkes were burnt to show solidarity with the monarchy – a tradition which continues to this day, even if the meaning behind it has begun to be forgotten. The fireworks that we light each year are meant to represent the gunpowder stored beneath the Houses of Parliament, and just what might have happened if Fawkes had had his way and managed to light the fuse. It is doubtful that reality in 1605 would have been as pretty as our favourite rockets, Catherine wheels, and sparklers that are enjoyed so much today.