Ah,
Independence Day. A time for all USians to come together and remember the
heroes of our country’s founding, and the heroic acts they performed heroically.
Today
I’m tackling the ride of Paul Revere. If you’re from the US, you’ve probably
heard the poem about him. It starts off like this:
Listen
my children and you shall hear
Of
the midnight ride of Paul Revere,
On
the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five;
Hardly
a man is now alive
Who
remembers that famous day and year.
This
was written in 1860, 85 years after the actual ride. I’m pretty sure it was
safe to say that “no man who is now alive.” A couple of women might have
remembered it though.
Paul Revere by John Singleton Copley, c. 1768–70
Did you know Revere's day job was being a silversmith AND a dentist?
Few
people know all 13 verses of “The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere”, but most people raised in the
US school system know the basics:
1)
Paul Revere warned everyone that the British were coming by bravely riding through
the night warning everyone singlehandedly.
2)
He knew if they were coming by land or by sea because lamps in a lighthouse
told him so.
3)
He yelled “"The British are Coming!" as he rode along, to warn all of
the Americans.
4)
He completed his ride Revere rode triumphantly into Concord, having safely
completed his journey.
Sounds
about like I was taught, and my school couldn't have gotten it that wrong, right?
Ha.