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11-04-2002 09:57 PM

i have a 50 foot flag pole in the center of my yard with the flags of over 100 nations . GREAT!

Old Reliable 11-04-2002 09:58 PM

i have a meeechigan flag

intrestedviewer 11-04-2002 10:44 PM

I own the UN. biggrin:

ninty 11-04-2002 11:03 PM

http://www.colba.net/~brock/2000b/11-11.htm

November 11 is Remembrance Day in Canada; Veteran's Day in the US; and is similarly commemorated in other countries because November 11 was the day that World War I ended in 1918.

I wrote a Remembrance Day entry last year but since I consider this day a bit more important than Halloween, I think it deserves annual mention and I consider this a continuation of last year's entry.

As far back as I can remember, people have worn poppy pins for the two or three weeks preceding Remembrance Day as a symbol honouring fallen soldiers. This isn't strictly a Canadian thing but it's observed pretty faithfully here. Poppies are sold (actually, exchanged for donations) in public places (malls, subway stations) by uniformed volunteers of the Royal Canadian Legion, a nationwide veterans' and community service organization.

Politicians wear them; newscasters wear them on the air; my father wears his proudly and so do I. They're simple pins, made of red and green felt-like material, with a plain bent pin through the middle.



Why a poppy? Those flowers grew wild in the battlefields of Belgium and France and quickly overgrew the soldiers' graves. Although it had been noted before, the effect was best memorialized in the poem, In Flanders Fields (see below), written by John McCrae, a Canadian Medical Officer in World War I.

A brief account of the story of the poppy and the significance of the associated fund raising effort can be found on the Legion website.

The CBC put together an informative site too, including reporters' sound clips recorded during World War II, and a section on symbols of remembrance, including of course the poppy.




In Flanders Fields
by John McCrae

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 amidst 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.

Pyro 11-04-2002 11:06 PM

I like his last name

ninty 11-04-2002 11:09 PM

Doesn't yours have a space in it?

Pyro 11-04-2002 11:09 PM

ya but they sound the same

ninty 11-04-2002 11:11 PM

Whatever.

11-04-2002 11:14 PM

in the poppie field the larks blow in the direction the gun blaze throught the nmight we stand in flag with cron wtill bright

11-04-2002 11:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Germ
in the poppie field the larks blow in the direction the gun blaze throught the nmight we stand in flag with cron wtill bright

what the fuck was that?

11-04-2002 11:19 PM

a poem of love, lonelyness, and bravery

KTOG 11-04-2002 11:24 PM

it touched me, ecspecially all the broken english in it.

mr.miyagi 11-04-2002 11:26 PM

germ ...you are one messed up individual

11-04-2002 11:28 PM

yeah i know. life as a freak can be hard soemtimes.

also are u posting from dallas now?

Pyro 11-04-2002 11:30 PM

his location says still in uk...


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