Fireworks!!
Summertime and the livin’ is…
George Gershwin
Once upon a time, the very first fireworks were concocted in a cooking pot: cooked up by a Chinese cook in her kitchen. At least, so the legend goes. Apparently the combustible ingredients were right there in her spice cabinet: saltpeter, charcoal, sulfur, and a dash of who knows what. A happy and dangerous accident, the recipe erupted pyrotechnically.
Stuff this stuff into bamboo sticks, throw the sticks on the fire, and “POOF! BANG! BOOM!”, fireworks are born.

Great for warding off evil spirits.
Grand for celebrations of state occasions.
Glittering demonstrations of prowess and power.
“Picture a Tudor king’s wedding day, the coronation of a Scottish king, pyrotechnic displays at Czar Peter’s palace, and bright illuminations at Versailles,” a Wikipedia article suggests.
And this 4th of July, Roman Candles stand ready to light up our skies (depending on the laws of your jurisdiction.😊) Stand up and sing with me the poetry Francis Scott Key scribbled patriotically after the Battle of Fort McHenry, 1814:
O say can you see,
By the dawn’s early light,
What so proudly we hailed,
At the twilight’s last gleaming?
Whose broad stripes and bright stars,
Through the perilous fight,
O’er the ramparts we watched,
Were so gallantly streaming.
And the rocket’s red glare,
The bombs bursting in air,
Gave proof through the night
That our flag was still there.
And it was on the eve of the very first 4th, that John Adams, our second president, presciently described how future Americans would celebrate the day.
“…with pomp and parade, bonfires, and illuminations from one end of the continent to the other, from this time forward forevermore.”
In other words — fireworks!!
Many-a-time, downtown on the Mall by the Reflecting Pool, in my hometown of Washington, D.C. I have seen those fireworks fly.
In the bicentennial days of my marriage, there was no holier day than Independence Day: the most romantic day of the year.
We’d pack a picnic of peanut butter sandwiches, cookies, and fruit, and a six-pack of clearly illegal beer. We’d stuff our duffle bag with baseball hats, books, and bug spray: all for the marvelous day.
We’d head out early on Metro — crowded into subway cars with the tourists – all vying for prime locations and the very best views.
We’d stake out our claim and spread our old cotton quilt on the ground. We’d plop ourselves down and stretch out under the setting sun, waiting for the blanket of dark to come.
We’d read to each other from Herman Hesse and tune into WHFS. We’d talk and talk and talk and then just be quiet: that lovely intimate quiet wrapped in each other’s arms:
Fireworks — of a different kind.
We did not make it “until death do us part.” Eighteen years now, he has lived his life by the sea. Eighteen years now, my Alexandria life has been my own. And that is how it is supposed to be. The happiest place for me in all of my years. And yet it is so strange, that my ex-husband is a stranger to me.
I harbor no resentment and I wish him well. It has been ancient of days since I have missed the man.
But what I do miss and what I hope to find are those fireworks of the intimate kind: the easy conversation; the comfortable silence; bright bursts of passion: a meeting of the minds. “POOF! BANG! BOOM!”
On a blanket,
On the mall,
On the 4th of July.
Fireworks!!

Spirituality The Episcopal Church "Summertime and the Livin' is ..." Independence Day Podcast The Fourth of July The Rev. Joan L. Peacock