“most people know the first lines of the poem, ‘in flanders fields, the poppies blow,’ and the larks are singing, it sounds very friendly,” he said. “some people think it’s not a war poem, and i say, ‘no, no, you haven’t read it properly.’”
“it’s of course the last verse which is most important, ‘take up our quarrel with the foe.’ this is a recruiting poem. and that’s of course why it became so popular at the moment,” ureel said.
local guide erwin ureel describes the battle of passchendaele during first world war at tyne cot cemetery just outside of ypres, belgium, on saturday, nov. 9, 2024.
chris doucette
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toronto sun/postmedia network
he’s also suspicious of the notion that mccrae saw poppies in belgium at a time of year when the flowers would be just starting to bloom.
“john mccrae must have known poppies in canada, i guess,” ureel speculates.
“you can have a few poppies here (at that time), but certainly not massive at this moment,” he said. “so, i think he probably saw them, recognized them, knew what our poppy fields would look like (when they are in full bloom), and then elaborated from that in his poem.”
there are numerous war memorials and cemeteries, like essex farm, scattered throughout the countryside in flanders fields – the biggest being tyne cot cemetery where 11,956 british commonwealth war dead are laid to rest, including 1,011 canadians, most of whom fell at the battle of passchendaele in 1917.