<h2 class="space"><SPAN name="guy" id="guy"></SPAN><b>Guy Fawkes</b></h2>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>In the time of James I, many of the English people
were very hardly treated because of their religion. At
last they could bear the ill-usage no longer, and they
thought of a plan to get rid of the king and queen and
their eldest son.</p>
<p>Many barrels of gunpowder were secretly put into a
cellar under the Parliament House, where James was to
meet his lords and commons on November 5; and a man
named Guy Fawkes was hired to set fire to it at the right
time, and so to blow up the hall above, and all in it.</p>
<p>All was ready, when one of the plotters remembered that
a friend of his would be at the meeting next day. As he
did not wish him to be killed, he sent him a letter, without
signing his name, saying: "Do not go to the House, for
there shall be a sudden blow to many, and they shall not
see who hurts them".</p>
<p>The lord who received this letter took it to the King's
Council, and when King James saw it, he guessed what the
"sudden blow" would be. Men were sent to search the
cellars, and there, on the very night before the deed was
to be done, Guy Fawkes was found waiting till the time
should come to set fire to the powder. He was cruelly
tortured to make him tell all he knew, but he was a brave
man, and he died without betraying his friends.</p>
<p>Since that time, every year, on the 5th of November,
bonfires have been lighted in many places in England, and
"guys" burned, to remind people how an English king
was once saved from a great danger.</p>
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<ANTIMG src="images/il082s.jpg" class="png" height-obs="400" width-obs="275" alt="THE ARREST OF GUY FAWKES" title="THE ARREST OF GUY FAWKES" />
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