djfish's studio

10/27/2008

The Poppy is for Sacrifice [z]

The Poppy is for Sacrifice


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November is poppy month, the time of the year
when by the wearing of a simple emblem, a red poppy, we salute the memory
of those who sacrificed their health, their strength, even their lives,
that we might live in a free country.


Long known as the corn poppy (Papaver rhoeas)
because it flourishes as a weed in grain fields, the Flanders poppy as it
is now usually called, grew profusely in the trenches and craters of the
war zone. Artillery shells and shrapnel stirred up the earth and exposed
the seeds to the light they needed to germinate.


This same poppy also flowers in Turkey in
early spring - as it did in April 1915 when the ANZACs landed at
Gallipoli. According to Australia’s official war historian C.E.W.Bean, a
valley south of ANZAC beach got its name Poppy Valley “from the field of
brilliant red poppies near its mouth”.


Whilst the red poppy is a symbol of modern
times, legend has it that the poppy goes back to the time of the Mogul
leader, Genghis Khan, as the flower associated with human sacrifice. In
the 12th and 13th centuries, the Mogul Emperor led his warrior hordes on
campaigns south to India, and west to envelop Russia as far as the shores
of the Black Sea. The policy adopted by the armies of Genghis Khan was
simple and effective. They would isolate their enemies, surround and
completely annihilate them. The legend states that on the battlefields
that were literally drenched with blood, white poppies grew in vast
profusion.


The modern story of the poppy is, of course,
no legend. In the years immediately following World War 1, governments and
the whole of society, had not accepted the responsibility for those
incapacitated and bereft as a result of war. In Britain, unemployment
accentuated the problem. Earl Haig, the British Commander-in-Chief,
undertook the task of organising the British Legion as a means of coping
with the problems of hundreds and thousands of men who had served under
him in battle.


In 1921, a group of widows of French
ex-servicemen called on him at the British Legion Headquarters. They
brought with them from France some poppies they had made, and suggested
that they might be sold as a means of raising money to aid the distressed
among those who were incapacitated as a result of the war. The first red
poppies to come to Australia, in 1921, were made in France.


In Australia, single poppies are not usually
worn on ANZAC Day - the poppy belongs to Remembrance Day, 11 November.
However, wreaths of poppies are traditionally placed at memorials and
honour boards on ANZAC Day.


The red Flanders’ poppy was first described
as a flower of remembrance by Colonel John McCrae, who was Professor of
Medicine at McGill University of Canada before World War One. Colonel
McCrae had served as a gunner in the Boer War, but went to France in World
War One as a medical Officer with the first Canadian Contingent.


At the second battle of Ypres in 1915, when
in charge of a small first-aid post, he wrote in pencil on a page torn
from his despatch book:


In Flanders’ fields the poppies blow

Between the crosses, row on row

That mark our place, and in the sky

The larks still bravely singing, fly

Scarce heard amid the guns below.


We are the dead, short days ago

We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow.

Loved, and were loved, and now we lie

In Flanders’ fields.


Take up our quarrel with the foe,

To you from failing hands we throw

The Torch: be yours to hold it high!

If ye break faith with us who die

We shall not sleep, though poppies grow

In Flanders’ fields.


The verses were apparently sent anonymously
to the English magazine, Punch, which published them under the title, In
Flanders’ Fields. Colonel McCrae died while on active duty in May 1918.
On the eve of his death he allegedly said to his doctor, “Tell them
this. If ye break the faith with us who die we shall not sleep”. His
volume of poetry, In Flanders’ Fields and Other Poems, was published in
1919.


An American, Miss Moira Michael, read In
Flanders’ Fields and wrote a reply entitled We Shall Keep the Faith:


Oh! You who sleep in Flanders’ fields,

Sleep sweet - to rise anew,

We caught the torch you threw,

And holding high we kept

The faith with those who died.

We cherish too, the poppy red

That grows on fields where valour led.


It seems to signal to the skies

That blood of heroes never dies,

But lends a lustre to the red

Of the flower that blooms above the dead

In Flanders’ fields.


And now the torch and poppy red

Wear in honour of our dead.

Fear not that ye have died for naught

We’ve learned the lesson that ye taught

In Flanders’ fields.


Other poets of the time were also stirred
to write responses to McCrae’s poem.


America’s Answer


Rest ye in peace, ye Flanders’ dead.

The fight that ye so bravely led

We’ve taken up. And we will keep

True faith with you who lie asleep

With a cross to mark his bed,

In Flanders’ fields.


Fear not that ye have died for naught.

The torch ye threw to us we caught.

Ten million hands will hold it high,

And Freedom’s light shall never die!

We’ve learned the lesson that ye taught

In Flanders’ fields.


R.W. Lilliard


Reply to In Flanders’ Fields


In Flanders’ fields the cannons boom,

And fitful flashes light the gloom;

While up above, like eagles, fly

The fierce destroyers of the sky;

With stains the earth wherein you lie

Is redder than the poppy bloom,

In Flanders’ fields.


Sleep on, ye brave! The shrieking shell,

The quaking trench, the startling yell,

The fury of the battle hell

Shall wake you not, for all is well;

Sleep peacefully, for all is well.


Your flaming torch aloft we bear,

With burning heart and oath we swear

To keep the faith, to fight it through,

To crush the foe, or sleep with you,

In Flanders’ fields.


J. A. Armstrong


Reply to Flanders’ Fields


Oh! sleep in peace where poppies grow;

The torch your falling hands let go

Was caught by us, again held high,

A beacon light in Flanders’ sky

That dims the stars to those below.

Your are our dead, you held the foe

And ere the poppies cease to blow,

We’ll prove our faith in you who lie

In Flanders’ fields.


Oh! rest in peace, we quickly go

To you who bravely died, and know

In other fields was heard the cry,

For freedom’s cause, of you who lie,

So still asleep where poppies grow,

In Flanders’ fields.


As in rumbling sound, to and fro,

The lightning flashes, sky aglow,

The mighty hosts appear, and high

Above the din of battle cry,

Scarce heard amidst the guns below,

Are fearless hearts who fight the foe,

And guard the place where poppies grow.

Oh! sleep in peace, all you who lie

In Flanders’ fields.


And still the poppies gently blow,

Between the crosses, row on row.

The larks, still bravely soaring high,

Are singing now their lullaby

To you who sleep where poppies grow

In Flanders’ fields.


John Mitchell

z:http://www.anzacday.org.au/education/tff/poppy.html