I have seen several bloggers and writers who have made the
assumption that ‘illuminations’ referred to fireworks, but this is not actually
the case. The earliest reference to
illuminations and fireworks that I could find was in 1717, in a letter from
Fox, reported in the newspaper, viz:
Yesterday being the
Prince’s Birth-Day, the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury, the Lord Chancellor, the
Nobility and Gentry, with the Foreign Ambassadors in town, went to St James’s,
to congratulate his Royal Highness; and in the Cities of Westminster and
London, there was Bon-fires, Fireworks and Illuminations in an extraordinary
manner in the Evening.
So what were Illuminations? As far as I can ascertain, it
became custom some time probably in the late seventeenth century to celebrate
nationally important events – and presumably local ones, in each town – by
displaying a candle or lantern in as many windows of a house as might be
afforded by the householder, showing it all lit up as a sign of approval. As time went on, and probably in the same
spirit in which one today might trace the competition in a suburban street by
the increase in the level of decoration of lace curtains as one walks down the
street, illuminations became in many cases more than just candles or lanterns
in windows. Houses ‘festooned’ must have
had whole rows of lamps strung up outside, coloured glass doing its bit to add
to the display, and by 1814 ‘transparencies’ are described, which appear to have
been painted glass with wording or pictures thus painted, and lit from
behind. The Gas Company surpassed all
other illuminations with their display, though it is worth noting that even gas lighting left pools of darkness, and the uncertain lighting in the shadows left by the illuminations give a sinister setting in my novel 'The Hasty Betrothal' for skulduggery to be planned.
This is the opening of the four-column description of the
illuminations of the 11th, 12th and 13th of
April 1814:
And this is an excerpt from my book now probably to be
titled ‘The Hasty Betrothal’, in which the heroine enjoys the illuminations.
As it happened, Edward was
also taking Letty and Beth to see the illuminations; he chose to take them to
Somerset House, where the decorations were quite sumptuous, and some took the
part of lit inscriptions, with the Latin tag along the front,
Europa Instaurata, Auspice Britanniae;
Tyrannide subversa, Vindice Liberatis.
“I may have little Latin,
but even I can puzzle that out,” said Beth.
“Europe restored, under the protection of Britain, tyranny overthrown, the
vindication of liberty.”
“Near enough,” said
Edward. “Europe set up under the
protection of Britain,
Tyranny overthrown, the champion freed, as I make it.”
“I like the pictures
better,” said Beth, pointing to another building that displayed an illuminated
painted transparency caricature of Bonaparte, tumbling from the mount of
Republicanism into the arms of a demon.
“Why does it say ‘To Hell-bay’?”
“No idea,” said Edward,
“unless it’s a forced pun on the name of the island he is to be exiled to, Elba.”
“It’s not a good pun if
so,” said Beth, disapprovingly. “But an amusing idea to have him tumble from
hubris.”
They wandered the streets,
exclaiming at the ingenuity of some of the illuminations, expressions of
loyalty to the King and Regent, as well as praising Wellington, expressions of support to the
House of Bourbon, and a myriad of coloured lamps as well as transparencies.
Edward was insistent that
the ladies should repair with him to Fleet Street.
“The Knight’s Gas Company
have a most ingenious display,” he told them.
Beth gasped as she saw what
the gas company had managed, a tree made of laurel leaves and festooned with
blossoms made with gas lights, and throwing all other illuminations into the
shade with the unparalleled brightness of the burning gas.
“Magnificent!” breathed
Beth.
“Thought you’d like that,”
said Edward. “One day, all London’s streets will be
illumined with gas lighting, and it will be a much safer place to be.”
“Indeed, yes!” said
Beth. “Why, I am sometimes afraid at
night of turning my foot betwixt door and carriage, without having to stop to
consider the possibility of footpads taking advantage of the confusion as
people seek their carriages outside a house where a ball has been held, for
once outside the pool of the lights at the entrance, the darkness appears the
more Stygian by contrast. I cannot help
wondering whether one of the reasons to continue a ball until dawn is to permit
safer passage home for the guests, once the crepuscular gloom as the sun rises
has given way to morning.”
“I wouldn’t say you were
wrong at that,” said Edward. “Worth
braving the cold of the evening?”
“Eminently
so,” said Beth…
The nasty side of illuminations was that the mobs vandalized houses and businesses they thought weren't decorated enough. Houses of important men in government were vandalized for not illuminating. There was an account of a flaming piece of wood being thrust into a carriage at one illumination because one reveller thought the carriage not illuminated enough. The clothes of the occupants were singed and they suffered from the smoke but weren't otherwise harmed.
ReplyDeleteAs usual once people became intoxicated, it wasn't safe for anyone to be on the street unarmed.
Good point, and thank you for raising it. I read a few newspaper reports of sides being taken in earlier illuminations too, when those opposed to the celebration attacked the houses of anyone with lighted windows. People, and especially mobs, lubricated by alcohol, can be very destructive.
ReplyDeleteWhat a brilliant idea to match historical facts with an excerpt from your novel. Congratulations!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Anna! I wish I'd thought of it for the other posts associated with this novel....
ReplyDeleteI must admit I too had always thought of illuminations & fireworks being one and the same. Nowadays I suppose it is in Christmas lights that neighbours compete to outdo one another in illuminating their homes
ReplyDeleteHaha, yes indeed, the displays that get more and more lurid and fit-inducing as you go up the street....
ReplyDelete