Sir Francis Drake used such weapons as rapier, cutlass, and early forms of black powder weapons. he sailed warships that had their own cannons, which practically destroyed the enemy ships. He might have used pikes and spears, as many infantry men had those as well. he used crossbows, and longbows as well.
Means about a kid who got bullied a lot and he got so sick and tired of people picking on him so he went inside his house and went to his dad's bedroom and got a revolver and shot his dad and the kids outside.
I think it's the first line of an ad that ran on tv38 some time in the 80's. The part i remember is, "it's summer again up in boston, the red sox are playing today, and once the first ball is thrown out, another game gets under way"There was another verse, something like the pitchers are pitching like crazy, the batters are hitting deep flysIt ended with "hey hey red sox, we're all here to give you a hand, hey hey red sox, the best doggone team in the land"If anyone knows more I'd love to knowI know the whole words to this song and I'm a Yankee Fan! lol It wasn't the '80's it was the '70's. I thought I was the only one who ever remembered this song because everyone I ask, doesn't remember it. Here are the lyrics."It's summer again up in Boston, the Red Sox are playing today. And once that first ball has been tosskin[sic], another game gets underway. The batters are swinging like crazy, the outfielder's' holdin their own. It's so good to be back in 'Ol Fenway, I consider it my second home. GO GO RED SOX! Where all here to lend you a hand. GO GO RED SOX! The best dog-on team in the land, the best dog-on team in the land."Do you remember the other tv38 commercial for the Red Sox. It went..."Take your shoes off, put your feet up! It's time to meet up with the Boston Red Sox, Boston born and Boston Red Sox. Relax and be aaaaa SOX WATCHER!!" Not bad for a Yankee Fan.This song was introduced as part of the promotional campaign in the 1972 pre-season, when Sox broadcasts moved to WBZ-4. They used a cartoon character of a broad-shouldered pilgrim (with Pilgrim hat) wearing a Sox uniform, holding a musket in his right hand and a bowl of baked beans in his left.
musketeer
james monroe
A british soldier normally carries a tomahawkm, a musket, a bayonet, and some flint and steel. A british soldier normally carries a tomahawk, a musket, a bayonet, and some flint and steel. Sorry
69
A soldier with a musket that doesn't need anything to hold it (like a tripod).
France
Waiter, there's a musket ball in my soup! That big oak tree in the town square still has an exposed musket ball in it's trunk.
A musket is an early kind of a gun. A musketeer was a soldier who had that gun as his main weapon.
A smoothbore shoulder fired weapon in use from the late 16th through the 18th century.
They drilled and and marched a lot. The muskets upgraded to musket-rifles which were much better.
Musketeers were an early modern type of infantry soldier equipped with a musket which was a type of firearm thus the name - musketeer .
That would have been the Model 1766 Charleville musket in .69 caliber and a bayonet.