Sickened by what he had seen during the Boer War, John McCrae nevertheless
signed up in August 1914, and headed for France with his horse, Bonfire,
in tow. He would have found few opportunities for riding in that hell on
earth. Knee deep in mud and freezing water, men's feet rotted where they
stood, waiting for the next attack of gas to insinuate its way down the
trenches, or the signal to go "over the top", often into direct
machine gun fire. McCrae wrote "In Flanders Fields" the day after
presiding at the funeral of a friend and former student. The original poem
(as written) appears above. McCrae was to number among the 9,000,000 fatalities
that vicious, fratricidal war of attrition would claim. His asthmatic condition,
exacerbated by poison gas, eventually led to pneumonia and meningitis in
January of 1918. Here, you see his funeral procession. Note the rider's
boots have been reversed in Bonfire's stirrups.
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McCrae and his dog,
Bonneau, a stray he'd rescued from No Man's Land
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