FLAG: We received a copy of a poem by Marion G. Mahoney called “Those Honored Dead.”
Today seems a fitting day to include it.
“Why do you fly the flag today?”
My grandson wants to know.
I fly it for the graveyards
where the countless crosses grow.
I fly the flag for children
whose fathers are a name.
A half-remembered memory
of a face within a frame.
I fly it for the families
of sons and daughters lost.
They know the price of liberty
how terrible the cost!
I fly the flag for veterans
who lost their youth in blood.
And saw their comrades slaughtered
in the carnage and the mud.
I fly it for the ones who marched
in cadence off to war
to close their eyes forever
upon some foreign shore.
I fly the flag for grief poured out
upon a granite wall.
The laying-on of hands that heals
the scars within us all.
I fly it for the sounds of Taps
that melancholy tune
that lays to rest those honored dead
who always die too soon.
FLAG: What is the flag etiquette for Memorial Day? Some say the flag should remain at half staff all day long.
“On Memorial Day the flag should be flown at half-staff from sunrise until noon only, then raised briskly to the top of the staff until sunset, in honor of the nation’s battle heroes.”
This came right from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, so we think it’s the one to follow.
As always, do not let the flag touch the ground. Do not fly the flag upside down unless there is an emergency. Do not carry the flag flat, or carry things in it.
Do not use the flag as clothing.