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Monologue From A Midsummer Night's Lover

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The sun had just risen in Lexington where I lived on the morning of April 19, 1775. This was just after my good distant friend, Paul Revere, had just came in the middle of the night to warn us that the red coats were coming to Lexington and Concord. I was making breakfast for my husband and daughters when I heard a group of loud marching near the bridge that's just a mile or two away from home. Suddenly I heard militia men trying to round up as many men as possible. And I immediately begged my husband not to go but like the stubborn man he is he refused and ordered me to go upstairs and take cover with our children. That was probably the scariest moment of my life. The next day my best friend Isabella Camelo said that she saw my husband die.

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