Article by John Derbyshire |
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Valiant Hearts Veterans’
Day, November 11th, is getting some extra respect this year.
Not much mystery about why; and there is the coincidence of that
now-ominous number 11 to drive home the significance of this day.
(How odd, and what a gift to newspaper cartoonists and the makers
of memorabilia, is the resemblance of that number to the outline of the
Twin Towers!) For
me, Veterans’ Day in the U.S. has always had something anticlimactic
about it. In this country,
most of the sentiments associated with remembrance of wars are
concentrated on Memorial Day, so that Veterans’ Day is a secondary
event. In England we have no Memorial Day, so November 11th, which
we call “Remembrance Day,” is the whole deal.
Another difference is that for English people, Remembrance Day is
indeliby connected with the appalling slaughters of WW1, which people of
my grandparents’ generation still referred to as “the Great War.”
America came late to that war, so while your losses were heavy,
they were over a shorter period, and made less impression.
I
think every country reserves a special place in the collective memory for
her bloodiest war. For the
U.S., that was the Civil War, which killed more Americans — from a
smaller population — than all other wars since, combined.
For us English, the Great War was WW1, and to this day we wear
poppies in our lapels on Remembrance Day.
The Flanders poppy was a symbol of all those who died on the
western front in 1914-18, immortalized in the poem by John McCrae (who was
actually a Canadian): In
Flanders fields the poppies blow Between
the crosses, row on row That
mark our place... I
think there was no family in England that was left unscarred by that first
war. Certainly there was no
place so small it did not take losses.
My father, who was large and fearless, was a repo man for a
furniture store in the small English country town where we lived, and one
of his secondary responsibilities was the checking of references. People who wanted to buy furniture on the instalment plan had
to give references, usually of local tradespeople near their homes.
Dad used to drive round the little country villages of our
district, checking these references. Sometimes he would take me with him, and I got to know all
those villages — tiny places, most of them, registered in the Domesday
Book of nine hundred years before, with unfathomable Saxon or
Norman-French names: Nobottle,
Shutlanger, Bugbrooke, Yardley Gobion, Stony Stratford, Easton Maudit,
Hanging Houghton, Grafton Regis, Castle Ashby.
Every one of them, even the tiniest and most inconsequential, had
its own little war memorial on the village green, with a list of names
under the heading “1914-18,” and sometimes, tacked on as an
afterthought, one or two more names under “1939-45”.* The
secondary school I went to — that is, under the English system, from age
11 to 18 — had a cadet
force with all three major services represented.
On Remembrance Day we held a full-dress ceremony in front of the
school’s own honor roll, with us cadets all in uniform and the entire
school — about a thousand boys and fifty masters, many of them veterans
— standing at attention in the main hall.
The bugler played “Last Post” (which you call “Taps”), and
we all sang John Stanhope Arkwright’s hymn “O Valiant Hearts”.
I can’t resist giving the full words of that hymn here. Even just read off the page, it is exceptionally beautiful,
though to get the full force of the thing, you need to hear it sung as we
sang it, to the tune by Gustav Holst.
(If your computer can pick up a MIDI file, you can play a tinny
version of Holst’s
tune direct from the Web.) O
valiant hearts who to your glory came Now
we are at war again. We lost
5,000 people on the first day of this war.
As grisly as WW1 was, it was a bad day on the western front when
5,000 died in a single morning. (At
Antietam, the worst one-day battle of the American Civil War, the
“butcher’s bill” was 3,650, though of course many more later died of
wounds received.) The
husbands, wives, children, parents, friends, colleagues and lovers of our
5,000 are now enduring their own Calvaries.
Undoubtedly, more of us will be visited by death, or grief, before
this war is over; and it is in the nature of modern war, and of the
bestial amoral ruthlessness of our enemies in this particular war, that
anybody — you, me, the richest or poorest of us, the oldest or youngest,
the grandest or least of us — might be numbered among the victims.
I was talking last week to a journalist colleague, a man who knows
far more than you or I do about these things, on the topic of nuclear
terrorism. Quite
matter-of-factly, he said: “We’re probably going to lose a couple of
cities before it’s finished.” God
help us all. Which,
of course, He will. It is the
oldest of atheist clichés that in a war, all participants believe they
have God on their side. Our
current enemy certainly believes that, with a fervor few of us can match. For myself, I take the old-fashioned and no doubt absurdly naïve
point of view that since God went to the trouble of creating the human
race, and equipping us with the power to improve ourselves in a way no
lesser creature can, He wants us to use that power.
Parable of the talents: If
we slam the door on the modern world and revert to the habits of thought,
law codes, and political arrangements of the seventh century, as the
Moslem fanatics want us to, we stand in defiance of His will.
I believe humanity was made to struggle onward and upward, not to
vegetate content in the security of familiar ways and of “truth” fixed
once and for all by infallible sages.
I also believe the things John Stanhope Arkwright plainly believed:
that the process of improving ourselves — either individually or
as a species — is not designed to be easy, that from time to time it
will get very gruelling indeed, that to keep the banner of progress and
civilization aloft will need sacrifice, sometimes terrible, heart-breaking
sacrifice, and that an especially pure, especially inspiring example of
sacrifice was provided for us all twenty centuries ago in Palestine, “as
earth lay dark and still.” That,
of course, is a Christian point of view, and I don’t expect every reader
to share it. I think that
some such argument can be “mapped” (as mathematicians say) into any
serious religion, though. If
you are not an utter atheist — and if you are, I probably lost you
several paragraphs ago — you know that there are higher purposes to life
than mere feeding and breeding, and you surely feel that those purposes
are not likely to be fulfilled by a human race that has shut down its
critical faculties and imprisoned its spirit in a jail of ignorance and
despotism. Every war is a
call to sacrifice; but every war is about something, and the
sacrifices are not in vain. I
think we all know what this war is about.
This week of Veterans’ Day — Remembrance Day — let’s brace
ourselves for whatever sacrifice any one of us might be called on to make
in the months and years ahead, in the remembrance of, and in the spirit
of, those who went before us “into the light that nevermore shall
fade” — those who, to save mankind, scorned to save themselves. --------------------------------------------------------- |