. The Varsity war supplement 1917. ed, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,Loved and were loved, and now we lieIn Flanders fields. Take up our quarrel with the foe,To you from falling hands we throwThe Torch—be yours to hold it high;If ye break faith with us who die,We shall not sleep though poppies growIn Flanders fields. 112 THE VARSITY MAGAZINE SUPPLEMENT Women Students on Active Service By Mossie Waddington, ONE phrase has been heard recurringly since August 1914:the war has not come home to Canada yet. Notreproachfully so much as wonderingly it was we were glad and proud to share in
. The Varsity war supplement 1917. ed, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,Loved and were loved, and now we lieIn Flanders fields. Take up our quarrel with the foe,To you from falling hands we throwThe Torch—be yours to hold it high;If ye break faith with us who die,We shall not sleep though poppies growIn Flanders fields. 112 THE VARSITY MAGAZINE SUPPLEMENT Women Students on Active Service By Mossie Waddington, ONE phrase has been heard recurringly since August 1914:the war has not come home to Canada yet. Notreproachfully so much as wonderingly it was we were glad and proud to share in the Empiresstruggle—yet the thousands of miles of sea between usand the conflict, theunchanged peace ofour land, thesmoothrunning of businessand home and farmall kept the mightychange in the life ofEurope an ungrip-ped mystery — outthere, always be-yond us. It is truewe felt wars trage-dy. One loved oneand another left us,and often we werecalled to say, Ishall go to him, buthe shall not returnto me. Then itwas that we envied.
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