
"Tell
them of us and say,
For their tomorrow,
We gave our today."
The Kohima Epitaph
The Kohima
Epitaph appears on a monument at the British military cemetery at Kohima,
Assam, India,
in memory of those who died in World War II's largest
Asian land battle near there in 1944.

Taps
Composed By Major
General Daniel Butterfield
Army of the Potomac, Civil War
Fading light
Dims the
sight,
And a star gems the sky
Gleaming bright.
From afar
Drawing nigh
Falls the night.
Day is done,
gone the
sun,
From the lake,
from the hills,
from the sky.
All is well,
safely rest,
God is nigh.
Then good night,
peaceful
night,
Till the light of the dawn
shineth bright,
God is near
Do not fear
Friend, good night.
"TAPS is the most
beautiful bugle call. Played slowly and softly, it has a smooth, tender
and touching character. The bugle call was written during the Peninsula
Campaign of the Civil War by General Butterfield, with an assist from
his bugler, Oliver W. Norton, in 1862.
"TAPS" went
on from its origin as an alternative to "Lights Out" to become
not only a signal
that day was done, but also to say good-bye to a
fallen comrade.
"TAPS" is
customarily played at funerals at Arlington national Cemetery as well as
at ceremonies
at the Tomb of the Unknowns there.
Its composer is
buried in the Post Cemetery at the United States Military Academy at
West Point
(even though he did not graduate from the Academy).

Please join us in putting "Memorial"
back into Memorial Day.
Please consider passing this message
along to your family and friends
as a reminder to them as well.


A Holiday Greeting from
my-TGIF.

Special thanks to
Michael Robert Patterson for sharing information for this page.
Please click on the award below to visit his wonderful web site.
