Albany Hart
Mrs.Coleman
Ninth Hour
Compare & Contrast Essay
Paul Revere operated as an express rider for the Boston Task Force of Communication and The Massachusetts Response Team of Security in 1744 and 1745 to pass information, reports, and copies of vital documents as far as New York to Philadelphia. The "Historical narrative of Paul Revere" and "The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere" have some similarities and variations. The North Church tower would utilize a signal light to let colonists know whether the British were arriving on land or by sea, as portrayed in both sources. However, Paul Revere narrates his travel to Lexington and how he was held hostage in the historical account, but not in "The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere." Paul Revere and his night out on the town are the topics of an intriguing poem written by Henry Wadsworth that leans on history.
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and some other gentlemen that we would show two lanterns in the North East steeple if the British went out by water; and if by land, one as a signal" (para 2). You can determine from my research that Steeple certainly flashed lanterns to notify the colonists of the British's presence. The poem, which is similar to "The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere," also has a thing to say about lanterns. I am aware of this since lines 8 to 10 advise us to "Hang a lantern aloft in the belfry arch of those the North-Church-Tower, as a signal light, one if on land, and two by sea" (Longfellow 8-10). According to Longfellow, the lanterns act as a kind of symbol for the Colonists as the British arrive by land or by sea. The author intended to emphasize that an important choice was made using an extremely important