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The Power of Words โ€“ CWGC epitaphs of the Great War

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission has become synonymous with commemoration of war dead. The commission was founded by Sir Fabian Ware whose moral and political leanings helped shape the guiding principles of the organisation, most notably that of โ€˜equality in deathโ€™. He was a passionate believer in social reform, believing strongly that collectivism i.e. putting … Continue reading The Power of Words โ€“ CWGC epitaphs of the Great War

‘Nostalgia โ€“ that’s the autumn, dreaming through September’

I'm looking forward to being back in France and Belgium next week, for the first time in around 18 months! Although I'll be working, I hope to find some time in the early morning and evenings to visit some sites and wander some paths that I've not seen in many months, to reconnect with the … Continue reading ‘Nostalgia โ€“ that’s the autumn, dreaming through September’

‘Maybe you had to leave in order to really miss a place’

Next month will mark a year since I last set foot on the battlefields of the Western Front, a place I had visited pretty much monthly in the years preceding COVID 19. To say I miss it is an understatement. I recently read a quote from an Aboriginal Elder of Uluru, Bob Randall who said:   … Continue reading ‘Maybe you had to leave in order to really miss a place’

‘A stupid mule is still smarter than a good horse, or a bad man’

The horse looms large in our popular memory of the Great War. This is perhaps based more on myth than fact; drawing upon romantic symbolism of the horse that goes back long before 1914, and a raft of more general Great War mythology, but the horse's part in the story is represented nonetheless. Yet whilst … Continue reading ‘A stupid mule is still smarter than a good horse, or a bad man’