TUESDAY it is!

Today is Guy Fawkes Night. It commemorates the arrest of Guy Fawkes and the failure of the so-called ‘Gunpowder plot’ to blow up the English Houses of Parliament in 1605.

On the night of November 4th 1605, following a tip-off through an anonymous letter, Guy Fawkes was caught guarding thirty-six barrels of gunpowder in a cellar beneath the Houses of Parliament in London.

The conspirators of the Gunpowder Plot were Roman Catholics who opposed the lack of religious tolerance under King James I. They planned to assassinate James and his government by blowing up the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament on November 5th 1605. This was to be the start of a series of actions across England that would lead to the installation of James’ daughter Elizabeth as a new Catholic head of state.

Fawkes and seven others were tried and convicted of treason and executed in January 1606. His head was among those displayed on pikes at London Bridge. Within months Parliament established November 5th as a national day of thanksgiving and it was made illegal not to join in the celebrations. The act remained in force until 1859.

A tradition was that children would make a dummy of Guy Fawkes and ask people for money (A‘Penny for the Guy’) which they spend on fireworks. This custom of going from door to door asking for money was already a custom for the poor on All Souls Day (November 2nd) and a similar tradition existed in Ireland during Halloween (October 31st).

As the tradition of making a dummy grew in popularity, ‘Guy’ became a word to mean any oddly dressed person, then in the 20th century it became the commonly used slang word of today as a way of referring to any male person.

Fireworks, Lighting bonfires (on which the ‘Guys’ were placed) and ringing church bells on November 5th also became common traditions. It seems odd to light a fire and set off explosives to mark an event which stopped exactly that happening, but the bonfire tradition at this time of year is a much older custom echoing pagan customs of lighting fires to mark the end of harvest. Bonfires were part of the Irish Halloween tradition that didn’t make it across the Atlantic into the American customs.


BADA BING!!!!!

Interesting reading…Making Marriage Work by Henry VIII

I’ve been on a diet for two weeks and have lost 14 days of happiness.

You know you’re getting old when the clothes you used to wear are now Halloween costumes.

I am often mistaken for an adult because of my age.

My house isn’t messy. It’s just creatively expressing that I live a very busy and interesting life.

According to my height to weight ratio, I should be 9 feet 4 inches. So my weight is okay, it’s my height that’s the problem.

Once all the illegals have been removed, you can finally realize your dream of replacing roofs in the scorching 102-degree summer heat.

Dear Puerto Ricans, trash day is November 5th, 2024. Don’t forget.

He climbed into the wrong end of the garbage truck.

As you get older, “PAID OFF” sounds so much better than “BRAND NEW”.

The inventor of yodeling died recently. Sadly, so did his little old lady too.

My fear of tsunamis comes over me in waves.


Today is the birthday, in 1957, of David Moyse, guitarist for the Australian soft rock band Air Supply who scored the 1980 UK No.11 single ‘All Out Of Love’ and the 1981 US No.1 single ‘The One That You Love’. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nY31ZH6hAFI

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