regshoe: A grey heron in flight over water (Heron)
regshoe ([personal profile] regshoe) wrote2022-01-15 05:50 pm

Flight of the Heron read-along: Part V chapter 5 and Epilogue

Better loved ye cannae be...

The final chapter.

I'm planning to do a sort of wrap-up post in a couple of days' time for any last thoughts, and to recommend some Flight of the Heron fic and some other books that may be of interest. I will say goodbye and thank you properly then!
hyarrowen: (Action Hero)

[personal profile] hyarrowen 2022-01-17 03:26 am (UTC)(link)
I've got a friend with a young grandson in the RAAF as an apprentice, though I don't know his exact age. And drummer boys were a thing in the Napoleonic Wars, which just seems wrong to me. 12 year olds? Leading troops into battle? D: But Angus' attempt at self-sacrifice just seems the wrong way round to me - it's Ewen who should be protecting his people's kids (and I'm glad to note that he did just that.)

I hadn't considered that the situation in your ROT'd para is odd, but it really is! A case of Homer nodding, perhaps?
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)

[personal profile] luzula 2022-01-17 05:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Midshipmen were also very young, of course! And ensigns: I read that holding the colors, which they often did, was dangerous because the enemy aimed their guns there. Apparently at some 18th century battle (can't recall which) 14 ensigns were successively shot down holding the colors of a regiment...
hyarrowen: (Action Hero)

[personal profile] hyarrowen 2022-01-18 02:23 am (UTC)(link)
Ah yes, I'd forgotten about midshipmen! The squeakers, poor little things. I suppose it was necessary to get them onto a career path as early as possible. As for those ensigns... well, you can see why taking the colours into battle is no longer a thing. We've come on a little way since then - if only a little way.
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)

[personal profile] luzula 2022-01-18 10:25 am (UTC)(link)
Well, the colors did serve a purpose, didn't they? - to show everyone in the regiment where to go if they needed to re-form. But they could've just planted them in the ground.
hyarrowen: (Action Hero)

[personal profile] hyarrowen 2022-01-18 10:32 am (UTC)(link)
Much less inspiring, though! And the bagpipes served a similar though not identical purpose in Highland regiments at least until WW2. George MacDonald Fraser describes how the pipers swept everyone up in a charge in an advance on a village occupied by Japanese forces - it's in "The General Danced at Dawn" and it's got the same sort of feel to it. Tradition and pride and all that.
owl: Stylized barn owl (Default)

[personal profile] owl 2022-01-18 07:07 pm (UTC)(link)
The pipes seemed to be considered something of an offensive weapon by themselves (Keith would probably agree...). When the Colonel orders 'young Dand' aka GMF to take his platoon to guard a remote desert fort for a fortnight, he adds, 'And I'll send you with a piper.'

Keith would definitely sympathise with the junior officers of the battalion when the reveille for the battalion consists of the pipe band playing 'Hey Johnny Cope' right outside their windows at 6am....
hyarrowen: (Action Hero)

[personal profile] hyarrowen 2022-01-18 10:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Being woken up by "Johnny Cope" at a distance of six feet is obviously the sort of experience that stays with you for life... I love those stories; they are of their time, but the family feel of the Regiment is all there, and the Colonel and the sergeants obviously did a wonderful job of keeping things running smoothly.