Green Fields of France

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The Green Fields of France
A Daisy Isabella Bell Special
By
Rebecca Anna Coleman

In my grandmother's formal dining room in what we in the Bell family called “The Old Manor House” there hung an old oil painting of a young man with longish brown hair and crystal clear blue eyes that seemed almost ice cold. He was painted wearing an old fashioned three piece suit. I was five going on six when I first noticed the old oil painting. I remember looking at that picture when I was young and I could not help but think how scared and frightened he looked though the artist that had painted him, and the picture wanted to make him seem heroic, stoic, and bold.

My grandmother, Edith Josephine Bell said that it was the last known painting of one “James Alexander Bell” who at eighteen proved he was a “Real Man” by taking his life savings and boarding a train in downtown Vicksburg. He then had traveled to the fable Northern Lands. There under the cover of darkness he had crossed over the board and gone into Canada and as soon as he was safe across he had enlisted in their armed forces. He then boarded a troop ship in Nova Scotia and then he sailed to Liverpool where he then was put on a troop train that took him to Plymouth and from there another ship to France.

While there in France he was killed, shot through the heart by a German Marksman early on the morning of July 1, 1916. He fell in the opening shots of what became known as “The Battle of Somme”. My Grandmother proudly told me that I'd been named after him and that that was an honor and that I should do everything and anything to bring honor to his name. And that I should never do anything that would bring dishonor for him. For he had died a hero and he had fought and died for “The British Empire.” and since he died so young. It was up to me to carry on his name.

Now all that had gone to hell in a purse when I came out to my family as transgender. When that bit of news broke, my grandmother's sanity or what was left of it had snapped and she started on the warpath. First the old bitch had turned her wrath toward my father, saying if he'd been a real man I would have never turned out like this. She then turned her ire toward mother saying it had been her “Damn Yankee Blood” that had caused me to turn transgender. Finally she blamed her middle son, my uncle who I was staying with at the time in Benton.

Her twisted logic being that me coming out as transgender was fault of the Episcopal Church, and proof that her cherished Episcopal Church had gone 'Awoke' and that if her middle son was a priest worth his salt he would have beaten the “Devil” out of with a broad leather strap the moment such a goddamn foolish notion had ever interned my head. Anyway the suggestion had been that the Potter Family, a family that we'd Bell's once married into either once or twice in the last hundred fifty years would take me and in return I would drop the surname “Bell” and be given the surname “Potter”.

Because the old bitch could not phantom what her gin drinking friends at Vicksburg Country Club would say if they had somehow discovered one of her grandchildren had turned transgender. It was bad enough that my big sister, who I adored, was a tomboy.

Anyway that's how I went from being named “Daisy Isabella Bell” to just “Daisy Isabella Potter.” All of that aside. I decided to visit his grave. I just wanted to see where he had been laid to his final rest. And to see if anything remains of the old battlefield. My native state of Mississippi was filled with battlefields left over from the American Civil War, and as a child and later a teenager I'd walked them all. And I mean only a little over a hundred or so years had passed since the cannons and rifles had all fallen silent across the great Western Front. And in that brief period of time the word as they had known it had turned upside down.

Anyway I took a deep breath as I slowly climbed down from the old carriage the old steam tram was pulling. I swallowed hard and peered out at the vast meadow land that we'd been dropped off in. All around me, I could see tall, lush green grace that seemed to bend with the warm summer wind, and further afield I could see billions of lush red poppies swaying in the breeze. It felt unreal.

I closed my eyes and gently started to wade into the sea of lush, green grass and ruby red poppies. I was thankful that I'd decided today of all days to wear a sundress. The dress was a light flora cotton dress that seemed to swish around me as the wind blew. My golden colored blonde hair was worn down for once and a simple straw sunhat offered some protection from the sun.

I completed my outfit with a simple cloth purse with a daisy sewn onto the front and leather strappy sandals. And then decided to only trust my feet to guide me along the right path. I waded into this sea of lush green grass, this quilt of lush red poppies. The minutes of the day seemed to slip through the fingers of my hand like grains of sand through an hourglass. And then it happened.

I came face to face with a sight that chilled me to a bone. Row upon row of simple white crosses that seemed to extend as far as the eye could see, and clearly beyond the horizon. Each one appeared similar to the other in fact I would say they were almost identical to each other. It took my breath away.

Because I knew each cross represented a once breathing person. A person that had loved, been loved. They had been somebody's son, somebody's brother, somebody's husband, and or somebodies father. They had lives, hopes, dreams, and aspirations. All those things had been snuffed out in a blink of an eye.

Finally after hours of fruitless searching I found his headstone. The epitaph was brief. “Corporal James A. Bell. 1916.” Like I said briefly and to the point. And there I stood, peering at the resting place of the man I'd been named after. A man who was only nineteen when his life was taken from him by a lucky or unlucky shot by an unknown German Soldier.

“What were you fighting for?” I asked as I peered toward the stone. I did not expect an answer. “Cause you know it will happen again don't you? Twenty years after the rifles and cannons fell silent. It started again. And then again, and again.” I paused.

“I know you heard first hand accounts of Civil War battles from the older Bells. I know you wanted to like your dad who fought in the Spanish-American War.. But did you expect it to end here?” I paused again.

“I'm a Bell too. I was named after you, my old name used to be James Alexander Bell.. then I changed it to Daisy Isabella Bell.. then I had to drop the Bell surname and take the Potter surname cause my grandmother flipped her verbal shit when I came out as transgender.” I paused and looked at the stone again.

“You know your sister married a Potter? So I guess.. I don't know..” I paused again. And once more silence filled the air.

“Well the reason I traveled halfway across the world.. is I wanted to ask you a question. James, when you were alive did you ever struggle with the feeling that you'd been born in the wrong body? That when God was putting you together he got your soul mixed up and instead of putting your soul into a girl's body, he put your soul inside a boy's body?” I paused expecting an answer but none came.

“Because that's how I felt most of my life. And I thought that if I died I'd get a factory reset. But I could never get myself off. So I took to fighting. I fought every bully that ever crossed my path. I even fought the biggest, baddest mother fucker at Benton Academy, some brute of a boy called 'The Beast'.”
I paused again and looked down at the stone, expecting a response.

“Anyway when the war broke out. Did you see this war as a chance to get a factory reset without really doing it yourself? Or did you figure if you somehow managed to earn a medal for bravery you'll put those desires behind you? And prove once and for all you are a real man?” Silence again.

“But I learned to live with myself and accept myself..” I paused again.

I then stood up and walked over to the stone and without thinking I bent down and placed my freshly glossed lips upon it. Yes I kissed the tombstone. It just felt right. It was not a romantic kiss, more of a good-bye kiss. Because I knew the chances of me ever returning here to this hollow place was slim. And ninety years down the road I knew I wound myself resting under the broad oak and willow trees that grew on the banks of the Yazoo River.

I would find myself resting in the shadow of Saint Mary's with the rest of the Potters.

And with that I stood up and walked away. I walked away from those lush, green fields, and those millions of bright red poppies and as I walked I felt a tear roll down my face.

The End.

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Comments

Beautiful, Rebecca

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Yes, I’m sure plenty of us went to fight, seeking either a sense of self-worth, or else release.

Your story echoes the song of the same name, the ballad of young Willie McBride. Someday I will find my way to those green fields, to bear witness to the generation that was crushed in that horrible conflict.

Emma

That song

Is actually called 'No Man's Land' and was written by the lovely Eric Bogle, a Scot who emigrated to Australia. I quote it a couple of times in my cycling book, as, when we met, Eric simply asked for a copy of what context I would be using his words in, and then sent me an e-mail saying "Absolutely fine, mate".

The song was renamed and altered by some Irish musicians. Eric's take on that was "I'm a Scot, so obviously I simply copyrighted both titles"

The alteration I find worst was in the chorus. Eric's take is about senseless slaughter, "A whole generation who were butchered and damned", and his couplet runs "I hope you died quick, and I hope you died clean, or, Willy McBride, was it slow, and obscene"

The change was to "I hope you died well etc", and that is a profoundly different sentiment. It smacks of a brave soldier, jaw jutting [add jingoism to taste]. Eric sang of a poor, butchered manchild. Very, very different.

The sentiment is expressed in the lines about a just cause:

And I can't help but wonder now Willie McBride
Do all those who lie here know why they died?
Did you really believe them when they told you the cause?
Did you really believe them that this war would end war?
But the suffering, the sorrow, the glory, the shame -
The killing, the dying - it was all done in vain
For Willie McBride, it's all happened again
And again, and again, and again, and again

Family History.

Sunflowerchan's picture

CPL. William A. Bell would have grown up hearing first hand accounts of battle from both his two uncles. Both who had fought for the south in the American Civil War. And from hearing stories of valor from his father who fought in the Spanish American War. These stories would have droven him to enlist. While may never flesh this character out, I think accounts that have come down from the generations paint him as a shy, bookish young man who was a weaklying and better suited for the priesthood that the field of battle. Thank you for the lovely comment Emma.

Factory Reset — A new word picture

I thought that if I died I'd get a factory reset. But I could never get myself off.

That is a new word picture for me, but I really like it and appreciate it a lot. That sentiment really resonates with how I have felt most of my life. Even through all my depressions, feelings of worthlessness, questioning my purpose in life, and wondering if it is even worth to continue living, the sanctity of life is still rooted so deeply in myself that the thought of suicide makes me sick.

I want to leave you all with a quote that I found many years ago here on BigCloset, and that I printed with a huge font size and pinned up over my desk for many years.

Suicide is a permanent solution to temporary problems.

Daisy had hoped.

Sunflowerchan's picture

Daisy had hoped for a "Factor Reset" twice in her series of stories. The first time was in "Saved by the Bell" and the second time was in "Daisy Red Badge of Courage". Raised in the high traditions of the Episcopal Church, she knew suicide was a sin, and refused to take her own life. But figured if she got pounded into hamber meat then well she could her reset and maybe leave the world a better place than she found it. Thank you for the lovely and thoughtful comment Jessica!

Black Watch

My grandfather was in the Black Watch Scottish regiment which fought in the Battle of the Somme with heavy casualties. Fortunately for my existence he had a cleft palate and had difficulty speaking. His rank was lieutenant and the powers that be decided his speech impediment made him unfit for front line service. He spent the war commanding a squad that defending the Forth Bridge near Edinburgh in Scotland. If not for his speech impediment I might not exist. The song always brings me close to tears.

Favourite song that

Alice-s's picture

The again and again and again and again tells me that the name of the story is taken from the song. Good job, I really liked it.