The Telegram (St. John's)

Rememberin­g Wilfred Owen’s powerful poem

-

I dutifully bought my poppy the other day but unlike prior years, perhaps because the world seems in the grip of tectonic frictions seemingly similar to those that resulted in the wars we commemorat­e, and many we don’t, I sat down to think about what I was doing by buying this symbol.

Was I acknowledg­ing sacrifice in pursuit of freedom? Yes, to some extent. Was I wanting to be seen as caring by demonstrat­ing my commitment through a public un-missable display of solidarity? Yes, that too.

As I thought this through I delved into my memory to unearth some of the other war poems that have been perhaps buried under the poppies of John Mcrae’s “In Flanders Field.”

Mcrae urges the living to fight on, taking the torch from the dead in a grisly relay. Wilfred Owen, on the other hand speaks to us as follows:

“If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood/come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs ... My friend, you would not tell with such high zest/ To children ardent for some desperate glory/ The old lie: Dulce et decorum est/ Pro patria mori.”

Let us acknowledg­e the sacrifice of our forbears.

Let us also be sure to remember the message, even if it is in contemplat­ive reading of a poem, that war is hell and there is no sweetness in dying and that the only glory for the men who went to their deaths in the mud is now played out in lapel pins they cannot see.

William Radford St John’s

 ?? CP PHOTO ??
CP PHOTO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada