Friday 5 February 2016

Poem ~ Incendiary Mystery on Parliament Hill - Saturday, 5 February to Sunday, 6 February 1916

Source: File: The Parliament buildings in Ottawa the morning after the Great Fire of 1916. Ottawa, Canada..jpg. [online] An original image is Available at: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parliament_Hill> [Accessed: 5 February 2016]

i
In formation of an impressive facade,
The seat of Canada's government
Was located upon 'The Hill' - what had been
A military base had been significantly
Chosen by Queen Victoria for Bytown -
To become the capital Province of Canada.

Built upon the southern banks of river
Ottawa, extensive buildings led from
The Édifice du Centre - by time of Europe's
War, Parliament Hill became established
As Canadian seat of power, in gothic revival
Style - possibly to echo an English Parliament.

This unique edifice being impressive
In its setting of Parliament Hill -
Once Barrack Hill  - began an ascent
December 1859, when blasting bedrock
Altered the design; in April 1860 formed
Stones of Nepean, freestone and sandstone.

By 1866 the first Parliaments sat, with
The United Province of Canada
For one time only - when Dominion
Of Canada formed 1867 inherited the
Hill, whose central tower was carved by
Emblems of France and United Kingdom.

In 1914 Canada, as part of British
Empire, was closely bound by
The declaration of war to an English
King, who had pledge to honour
Belgium's Sovereignty, under threat
Of Germany's invasion of aggression.

1916: almost half a century after
The Hill's induction, witnessed
A burning blow on a bitter cold day.
3 February: in the ending of what had
Been normal day of affairs in the house
Of Commons, saw evening darkness fall.

ii
Within the Commons reading room,
Smolders began within a paper
Bin - the time 8.37p.m., flames flew
And quickly caught the wood panelled
Room - taking to the old ventilation
System, a raging fire began to spread.

Strangely a few weeks prior to this
Time, a businessman in America
Informed an editor of a newspaper,
How Canada's government buildings
Were under threat from the Germans;
But such rumours remained in the USA.

Shouts began to ring out warning
The Commons sitting - 'fire, fire!'
As one quick-witted employee ran
And slammed close iron fire doors,
Saving thousands of priceless books;
People panicked to escape the flames.

Angry yellow and wild, furious reds
Spread about, as the speaker
Went to save his wife and children
From his quarters - amid the craziness
The fire brigade arrived with a net,
To catch one guest leaping from a floor.

With the fanning flames flying about,
The senate foyer employees leapt
To the large painting there, of Queen
Victoria, cutting canvas from the frame.
Elsewhere a reporter leapt through
An office window to save his typewriters.

With the central tower fully ablaze,
A gathering crowd watched
People jump for their lives from
Windows into the snow - the tower
Stood, flames all about the clock,
That glowed hot, still striking the hour.

Unable to resist the destruction
Of burning, the tower's supports
Gave in - the edifice crumbled
Into the front concourse, to toss
A cloudy myriad of golden embers,
Into the bitter, dark night of winter.

iii
A tragedy of fallen magnificence,
Saw light of 4 February in smoulder
Of a burnt shell - with sole exception
For the library and the northwest wing -
A sorry sight for speaker Albert Savigny;
Within two days theories began.

Ideas emerged for conspiracy plots -
How Germany had prompted burning
Of the Canadian Parliamentary buildings.
A member of the Parliament ,who was
First aware of fire claimed explosions
Followed by another, to suggest intentions.

Likeliness was incendiary bombs backed
Up by the rapidity of fire - to spread from
Centre of the building at the reading room,
Where wood lined corridors converged -
To provide adequate fuel for a fire's spread,

Fanned by a draft from the ventilation system.

Within the rumours of this deliberate
Destruction, at a cost of $8,000,000 -
In comparison to other threats within
The country - a probable outcome could
Lead to strict regulations, over freedom
Of movements regarding alien enemies.

by Jamie Mann.

Anon.,1916. German Activities - 'At Least One Explosion'. The Daily Telegraph, [online] 5 February 1916. P.9. Col.4. Available at: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ww1-archive/12138785/Daily-Telegraph-February-5-1916.html [Accessed: 5 February 2016].

Source: File: Parliament Hill fire a mystery still unsolved a 100 years later. Jennifer Ditchburn The Canadian Press, Sun Jan 31 2016. Online. Available at: <http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2016/01/31/parliament-hill-fire-a-mystery-still-unsolved-a-100-years-later.html> Accessed 5 February 2016

Source: File: Parliament Hill fire mystery still unsolved 100 years later. By Jennifer Ditchburn, The Canadian Press. Online. Available at: <http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/parliament-hill-fire-100-years-ago-1.3428235> Accessed 5 February 2016

Source: File: Parliament PF Canada - The Parliament Buildings. Online. Available at: <http://www.lop.parl.gc.ca/About/Parliament/Publications/parliamentbuildings/parlblgs-e.asp> Accessed 5 February 2016



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