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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 amid 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. |
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John
McCrae is the author of the famed poem, In Flanders Field,
written during the First World War.
John was
born in 1872 and raised in Guelph, Ontario and is remembered as one of
Guelph's most famous sons.
McCrae was more than a poet, and was in
fact a doctor, soldier, author and artist. The paternal grandparents
of John McCrae, Thomas and Jean (nee Campbell) emigrated to Canada
from Scotland in 1849 and settled in Guelph. Their son
David
married Janet Eckford and they had three children; Thomas (1870), John (1872) and Geills
(1878). John's early education was received in Guelph, first at
Central Public School and subsequently at Guelph Collegiate Institute. |
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While
at Guelph Collegiate, John joined the Highland
Cadet Corps
which was affiliated with the school. One year later, at the age of 15,
McCrae became a bugler in the local militia regiment of artillery
commanded by his father. He later joined this same regiment as a gunner.
At the age
of 16, John was awarded a scholarship to the University of Toronto (left
photo) due to his academic achievement at Guelph Collegiate. McCrae
attended classes at the University of Toronto until 1892-3, when
he
took a year off his studies due to recurring problems with asthma. During
this break from university John was a resident master in English and
Mathematics at the Ontario
Agricultural College (O.A.C.)
in Guelph. After returning to Toronto and completing his B.A., John
commenced studies in medicine at the University of Toronto and did a
medical residency at the Garrett Hospital, a Maryland children's
convalescent home.
While at university, John maintained his military ties with the No. 2
Battery in Guelph. He remained a member of the Guelph militia regiment and
was promoted several times, finally making the rank of Lieutenant. At the
same time he was also involved with a Toronto militia, the Queen's Own
Rifles, in which he rose to the rank of Captain and commanded the company.
It
was also while John was still at University that some of his early poems
were first published. Although McCrae is widely known as a poet, his
literary efforts were not confined to one genre. While at university he
also had some of his short stories published and he later went on to write
scientific articles and medical textbooks. As well as his literary
efforts, John dabbled in the visual arts, making numerous
sketches
throughout his life.
John McCrae
graduated at the top of his class in medicine at the University of
Toronto, and in 1899 was awarded a fellowship in pathology to McGill
University in Montreal. This award coincided with the start of the Boer
War (1899-1902) and John put off accepting the fellowship in order to go
to South Africa with the artillery. McCrae left for South Africa in 1900
in command of the left section of D Battery of the Royal Canadian
Artillery attached to the Second Canadian Contingent. This contingent
returned to Canada in 1901 after participating in several major campaigns.
With his return McCrae accepted the fellowship at McGill, which he
completed in 1905.
While
still working on this fellowship, McCrae was appointed special professor
in pathology at the University of Vermont, a position he held until 1911.
During this time he was also appointed an associate of medicine at the
Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal and was a lecturer in pathology and
medicine at McGill University. After completing the fellowship McCrae was
employed as a pathologist at Montreal General Hospital and as a physician
at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Infectious Diseases, also in Montreal.
In 1910, Lord Grey, then Governor General of Canada, undertook an
expedition
by canoe
from Lake Winnipeg to Hudson's Bay. John McCrae accompanied this voyage as
expedition doctor.
When
the first World War began in 1914, McCrae again offered his services to
the military. He was conditionally offered the position of Brigade Surgeon
in the First Brigade of Canadian Field Artillery by E.W.B. Morrison, the
brigade commander and a friend of McCrae. McCrae was formally confirmed in
this position in the fall of 1914. While Brigade Surgeon, John was
responsible for a field dressing station at the front and treated those
wounded during the Second Battle of Ypres (Ieper) in the spring of 1915.
As well as performing his duties as surgeon, he also served on the guns
when needed and occasionally performed burial services. It was after
performing the service for a friend, Alexis Helmer, that McCrae was
inspired to write In Flanders
Fields.
The poem was written May 3, 1915 and first published in Punch
that same year.
In the
summer of 1915, McCrae was transferred from the artillery Brigade to the
Number 3 Canadian General Hospital in France, where he was second in
command of medical services. During McCrae's time there, the Number 3
Hospital received a visit from Queen Mary, who toured the hospital. McCrae
disliked these official visits as he felt they detracted from the real
work of the hospital.
While
still at this hospital in January 1918, McCrae became ill with pneumonia,
which was soon complicated by meningitis. Four days before he died, he was
honoured by being the first Canadian appointed as consulting physician to
the First British Army. John McCrae died on 28 January 1918, and was
buried with military honours at Wimereaux Cemetery in France. At McCrae's
funeral procession, 75 nursing sisters stood by to watch and McCrae's
horse, Bonfire, wore his master's boots backwards in military tradition.
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