Author Topic: Sweet and Seemly it Still Is to Die for One's Country By Clarice Feldman  (Read 213 times)

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May 26, 2019
Sweet and Seemly it Still Is to Die for One's Country
By Clarice Feldman

Adapting the phrase from the Roman poet Horace, Wilfred Owen during World War I turned "it is was sweet and seemly to die for one’s country" into an anti-war poem. He may have had a point when it came to that war, a war that destroyed the very best of Europe’s young men and, in my view, set it on a downward spiral. Today Western Europe, with all its glorious architecture, art, and music seems like a living Disneyland.

Take, for example, the fire that gobbled up the roof and spire of one of Paris’ most enduring symbols, Notre Dame. The cathedral was built over a long period of time (almost two centuries) as a testament to faith and a binding treasure of a nation. The embers still glowed when architects floated notions of redoing it into, among others, the base of an amusement-meditation center with a swimming pool rooftop:

Read more: https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2019/05/sweet_and_seemly_it_still_is_to_die_for_ones_country.html#ixzz5p2ODfZRK
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