It is our first July Fourth in France, a fitting place to recall the Revolution financed to a large measure by the French king Louis XVI who would later lose his head for, among other things, driving France to bankruptcy by it. (And let us not forget his wife Marie Antoinette who is said to have pawned jewels to buy John Paul Jones the Bonhomme Richard so he could triumph over HMS Serapis in sight of the coast of England.)
I touted up mentally and paid homage to various ancestors who participated in the war for Independence: John Blagg, Charles Campbell, Henry Jeffries, and even staunch Quaker Peter Dick in the Virginia militia; Jacob and Abraham Cassell in their Maryland unit; the four Corn brothers and their father with Pennsylvania irregulars at Vincennes; Grandpa Wright's ancestors fighting - and ingloriously retreating - with the North Carolina militia at Guilford's Courthouse and Cowpens.
Other than that, to celebrate American Independence Francesco and I worked all day!
But we did remember to tack our large 15-star flag to the highest pole we could find - a cable line at the end of our driveway - and had a pleasant, traditional picnic at dusk - hot dogs, hamburgers, Granny Peg's potato salad, etc. - with our new French friends Didier & Anne who Francesco has met through his Buddhist connections.
Projects for the day included my undercoating more shutters and doors, these from the second house, plus a settee, another flea market find, that we think will look nice in a bold yellow paint. Meanwhile, Francesco labored in the hot sun hacking more brambles and hauling the remains to our still-smoldering bonfire.
Vive la Révolution!
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