I hope you all had enjoyable and restful weekends full of friends, family, and perhaps even a little treating yo self.
Though none of you owned up to it, some of you may even have been
kicking off beards and novels! One reader submitted some particularly
impressive beards to strive for.
Interestingly, this list of 10 epic beards also brings to light the
important connection between hat and facial hair. The proper pairing is
crucial, it would appear.
And speaking of hat-hair combinations, let us discuss the famous combination of the day. The black hat, creepy mask that is the face of today, November 5, or Guy Fawkes Day. Guy Fawkes Day (or Night) has been celebrated in Britain for years, as a celebration of the arrest of Guy Fawkes on November 5, 1605, as he guarded explosives intended to destroy the House of Lords. Now the holiday is commemorated with fireworks and bonfires, often including the burning of an effigy (usually of Guy Fawkes, though some towns make controversial picks...) The holiday is also celebrated by comic book nerds, action movie fans, and Natalie Portman lovers worldwide, as they use it as an excuse to watch the Fawkes-themed V for Vendetta. (Not to be confused with the equally harrowing C for Cookie.)
But when we "Remember remember the 5th of November"
for Guy Fawkes alone, what are we "Forgetting, forgetting?" I've picked
two things that we should remember not to forget in all of our
remembering.
Remember 1: Bryan and Ryan
Adams' Birthday. Okay, so this is technically two things. But
seriously, how weird is it that two similarly named but unrelated
musicians have the SAME birthday?! Now, to be perfectly honest, I don't
know too much about Ryan Adams, though a quick YouTube search led me to
this beautiful song. He's also got a damn good cover of Wonderwall
that totally changes the song. Seriously, I am probably saying stuff
that everybody who knows about music already knows. I'm just
discovering this stuff for the first time. I'm much more well-versed in
the music of Canada's second-greatest export, Bryan Adams. (Sorry,
Celine, Martin Short is first greatest.) The Bryan Adams compilation
album "So Far So Good,"
with that iconic muddy tire cover was a regular rider on the three-disc
carousel of my family's stereo, and I was the one who kept granting it
admission. And my knowledge of "Summer of '69"
once earned me bonus points on a high school English exam, as I
finished the sentence "I got my first real six-string, bought it at the five and dime." I could sing-along to pretty much the whole album, from the best thing about Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves*, "(Everything I Do) I Do It For You," to "Can't Stop This Thing We Started."
So, at the very least, if you don't want to Remember, Remember Bryan
and Ryan today, Imagine Imagine me at age seven dancing around my living
room singing this.
Remember 2: Of much greater historical significance than Messrs. Ryan and Ryan, 150 years ago today, on November 5, 1872, Susan B. Anthony
cast her vote in the 1872 presidential election. Though she backed the
winning candidate, Ulysses S Grant, when she "positively voted the
Republican ticket," she ended up with a $100 fine for her action. She
never paid this fine, but her arrest, her sham of a trial under justice Ward Hunt,
and her fine, all served to further the women's suffrage movement, as
Anthony addressed the question, "Is it a crime for a citizen of the
United States to vote?"
Even more than Guy Fawkes day; even more than Bryan
and Ryan Adams; and even more than adorable, pajama-clad, seven-year-old
Evan looking back now at a summer that seemed to last forever, Readers,
remember, remember the vote of Susan B Anthony today. Specifically,
remember it in preparation to commemorate it tomorrow. When asked the
question that Susan B. Anthony posed following her vote 150 years ago,
"Is it a crime for a citizen of the United States to vote?," I encourage
the readership of the Morning Report to answer not with words, but with
actions, by voting in tomorrow's election.
*How about that for a negatively positive review of a song?
*** FOLLOW-UP ***
Following on the Guy Fawkes description, one reader asked: "Were the explosively [sic] to be placed just beneath the chamber of the House
of Lords? Would the explosion not have destroyed the Palace of
Westminster in its entirety, and therefore the Commons as well?"
I did a bit of history digging and found out more:
I did some digging and found this map of Westminster from the mid
18th century. A bit later than we are discussing, but let us assume the
layout was the same.
Fawkes
was found guarding 36 barrels of gunpowder. Enough to obliterate the
House of Lords and kill the not-Catholic King James I, but not enough to
reduce the Palace to rubble. The goal was ultimately to eliminate James
and replace him with his Catholic daughter. James' supporters would no
doubt also be taken out in this assassination attempt, but the symbolic
destruction of the establishment ended there, not with the total
destruction of the building/government as it did for the masked and
revenge-driven anarchist of Alan Moore's creation.
H of L indicates the House of Lords, while H of Commons indicates the House of Commons.
While
V was able to take down the whole building, the explosives available to
Mr Fawkes and the rest of the Gunpowder Plotters were far more
rudimentary than those of the dystopic future.
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