It’s been a week for sorrow. The ashes of USCP officer Brian D. Sicknick lay in honor in the Capitol rotunda he died to protect from insurrectionists last month. Following a service attended by his comrades and members of Congress, he was laid to rest in Arlington National Cemetery. Sicknick suffered fatal injuries when the Trumpists beat him with a fire extinguisher on 6 January.
Also
this week an Idaho National Guard Blackhawk crashed, killing three men, who
were known to one of my colleagues. As their commanding officer said, the Guard’s
aviation unit is a tight-knit community, and the loss has been very, very hard.
I’m
feeling the need to lament, and you know who really does laments? The Scots. “Flowers
of the Forest” is one that has always managed to start the tears flowing for
me, so that’s what we’re having.
The folk
song commemorates the Scottish defeat to the English at Flodden in 1513. As a
bagpipe piece, it is so thoroughly connected to the loss of life that some
pipers will only play it publicly at funerals or memorial services. I’ve seen
it associated in particular with military funerals, which seems apt.
This
instance is not technically a funeral, but close enough: it’s being played at
the nightly Last Post ceremony at Menin Gate, Ypres, Belgium, which commemorates
the British and Commonwealth soldiers who died in and around Flanders during
the First World War. Except for the period of German occupation, Belgian and
British officials have conducted the ceremony every night at 2000 since 1928.
Rest
in peace, Officer Sicknick, CWO Jesse Anderson, CWO George Laubhan and CWO
Matthew Peltzer.
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