Home » Veterans Day, Armistice Day

Comments

Veterans Day, Armistice Day — 11 Comments

  1. Hi #NAME#. Just found your site via cheap tickets. Although I was looking for cheap tickets I was glad i came upon your site. Thanks for the read!

  2. The Pogues have a most fantastic version of Waltzing Matilda — Australians caught in Galipoli (fine flick) in WW I.

    We WILL have a world at “peace” — no nation states fighting — when we have a world without dictators, when every country is having free & fair elections.

    There’s been lots of progress in the last 250 years; I think China won’t be quite the last, but when it goes democratic, it will be easier to push out all other dictators.

    I guess 2050 for China… I hope sooner. Bush’s success in Iraq may push it up to 2040.

  3. The WWII generation is dieing off, but so is the Baby Boomer generation. The cycle of renewal is necessary lest the previous generation sort of won’t wanna let go of past glories.

    I don’t see it with sadness so much as inevitability.

  4. Thanks for remembering and honoring us on this day, our day. I loafed the whole day. I sat in the warm sun, remembering fallen buddies and enemies, a free man. Holmes – I would say it is not guilt you feel but rather profound gratitude.

  5. I walked out of the coffee shop this morning, after reading some law scrolls, to see the Veterens Day parade troops and veterans preparing themselves for the parade. The image was moving, seeing the New Guard and Old Guard mixed together. The Old Guard’s numbers were very thin, and it is sad to realize that the WWII generation is dying off rapidly.

    Maybe our resident therapist could answer why I feel moved to tears at such sights these days. Is it the guilt of realizing I will never do as much for these people as they have done for me?

  6. This brings back some real memories. Back in 1954 as a Sr in high school my essay was on WWI and I illustrated it with “In Flanders Field,” including my idea of what the field looked like and the poem hand written on the cover. I found it when my mother died 5 years ago, she had kept it all that time. It is one site I would like to see because of its significance.

  7. Some historians already consider WWI and WWII two phases of the same war.

  8. Ma’am, I have to take issue with it not being good poetry. Compared to what passes for poetry these days it is an outstanding piece.

    For my money Alan Seeger’s Rendevous With Death is a much better poem. And his story is better than McCrae’s. He was an American in the Foreign Legion who joined specifically to fight in the war. In his last charge he stayed true to his pledge. He was shot, fell, and spent hours dying. His friends couldn’t reach him and had to listen while he cried for his mother.

  9. My “Queens parks” example might be clearer as parks in New York being “New York parks.” No confusing “s” there.

  10. It’s not being picky to be accurate. Here are your answers.

    Fields in Flanders are “Flanders fields” just as parks in Queens are “Queens parks.” The “s” is part of the place name.

    It’s “Veterans Day” because we are celebrating veterans, not because they own it. The “s” is plural, not possessive.

  11. For Veterans everywhere and this one in particular….thank you for the comments.

    I attended one of my more memorable Veterans Day events yesterday sponsored by the kids and teachers of Rusk Elementary, Midland Texas. A few photos here at Rusk Veterans Salute

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

HTML tags allowed in your comment: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>