The glare of rockets and bombs allowed Key to see your mom
The light from the red glare you would be able to see it.
to stare mean looking at someone for any reason but glare is an anger look.
Rockets take off to carry things (called payloads) into space. Do you mean 'how' do rockets take off, or how do rockets work?
Thanks to the rocket's red glare and the bombs bursting in air, we were able to see through the night, that the flag was still there.
Rockets Red Glare ended in 2003.
Rockets Red Glare was created in 1999.
A rockets red glare? But what this has to do with cattle I don't know.
Father Murphy - 1981 The Rockets' Red Glare 2-12 is rated/received certificates of: USA:G
And the Rockets' Dead Glare was created on 1993-03-17.
The English lobbed exploding rockets at Napoleon at Waterloo, and they also used them against the Americans in the War of 1812. (When the British warship Erebus bombarded Fort McHenry during that war, the nightlong barrage of rocket-propelled bombs provided "the rockets red glare" mentioned by Francis Scott Key in The Star Spangled Banner.)
The English lobbed exploding rockets at Napoleon at Waterloo, and they also used them against the Americans in the War of 1812. (When the British warship Erebus bombarded Fort McHenry during that war, the nightlong barrage of rocket-propelled bombs provided "the rockets red glare" mentioned by Francis Scott Key in The Star Spangled Banner.)
American Revolution
The glare of rockets and bombs allowed Key to see your mom
Mortimer W. Lawrence has written: 'The rockets' red glare'
The English lobbed exploding rockets at Napoleon at Waterloo, and they also used them against the Americans in the War of 1812. (When the British warship Erebus bombarded Fort McHenry during that war, the nightlong barrage of rocket-propelled bombs provided "the rockets red glare" mentioned by Francis Scott Key in The Star Spangled Banner.) (excerpt from space.com)
The English lobbed exploding rockets at Napoleon at Waterloo, and they also used them against the Americans in the War of 1812. (When the British warship Erebus bombarded Fort McHenry during that war, the nightlong barrage of rocket-propelled bombs provided "the rockets red glare" mentioned by Francis Scott Key in The Star Spangled Banner.)