Britain | Past tense

What does it mean to wear a poppy today?

Remembrance is part of it. So is jingoism

A life size knitted soldier surrounded by poppies.
Row on rowPhotograph: LNP

Corpses were the cause. If you have ever looked at a lapel in November and wondered why the poppy is the flower pinned to it, then the answer is corpses, and chemistry. Today, the poppy is associated with Flanders fields. It shouldn’t be: the soil is too poor for them. But, from 1914 onwards, there was in the corner of that foreign field a richer dust concealed. Or, to be more precise, there were corpses: rotting, festering, fly-blown corpses, decomposing and covering the mud in a “plastering slime” as Siegfried Sassoon, a poet, wrote. The soldiers were repelled; the poppies flourished. “In Flanders fields the poppies blow,” wrote one soldier in 1915, “Between the crosses, row on row”.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Past tense”

From the November 9th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Someone with their eyes blindfolded

Are British voters as clueless as Labour’s intelligentsia thinks? 

How the idea of false consciousness conquered the governing party

A nurse attending to a pateient behind curtains, the light coming through the blinds

Blighty newsletter: Starmer’s silence puts the assisted-dying bill at risk


The best British companies to work for to get ahead

A new ranking of firms by pay, promotions and hiring practices


How the best British employers find and promote their staff

No degree? Some employers care much less than others

A Northern Irish experiment in recycling

The tiny island aiming to get to net zero

A sticking-plaster policy for Britain’s strained courts

Magistrates get more power. Will they get punch-drunk on it?