1974
It was early one Sunday morning on the way to Cambridge,
England from our home in Oxford that we saw a sign stating that the American
Cemetery was situated around the next bend in the road. We were quite surprised
because we did not know that there was one in England. So of course we
stopped and parked the car.
It was one of those fresh dewy mornings, for which
England is known. We walked under the arch which was the entrance between
high stone walls which enclosed the cemetery and an unforgettable scene
lay before us. Row upon row of white crosses stretched over acres of brilliant
green meadow, still wet with dew. It was awesomely quiet, and we were alone
with our American boys who were buried there. The sun was shining over
the edge of the wall, bathing all in a clear brilliant light, as if saying,
"God in here and it is My Day, and I have not forgotten these men who lie
here awaiting the final reveille." Tears filled our eyes and silently rolled
down our cheeks. And through our tears we saw a lovely bouquet of fresh
flowers placed before one of the crosses. Someone else had been there that
morning. Was it a friend or lover, or someone dearer whose name was on
that cross?
Then we turned and read some of the hundreds of
names carved in the inner, smooth marble surface of the huge walls bordering
the cemetery. Each name with the dates and the city and state from which
the boys came, recorded there so that time would not forget them. Row upon
row of names, and row upon row of white crosses. We silently entered the
small chapel just inside the gate, and prayed for the living and the dead,
and for the country whose people were so gratefully tending the graves
of the American boys whose lives were given defending the country of England.
England, 1961 |