tycho wrote:
Stephen:
there's more on Nelson's faults on page 8 of the forum 'A Flawed Hero' when quite a few of us threw in our four penn'orth about the hero's failings.
May I add a paragraph from my birthday tribute in the book of poems I collected to mark his birthday last year in which I repeated some of the points I made in that thread:
'In the two hundred years since Nelson's death, the image of the pasteboard hero, th artificial construct of unblemished virtue, has given way to a more balanced and truer picture: a hero, no doubt, but also a flawed and fallible human being. Yet we admire him no less, perhaps because every fault is counterbalanced by many and greater virtues. Irascible, vain, stubborn, reckless he may, on occasions have been, and he certainly 'went to the deuce for a woman'; but generous, affectionate, dutiful, courageous and great-hearted he always was. When great men stoop to less than greatness, they can often appear monstrous. Nelson becomes simply more human.
Well I am not going to say much, but as Kester says, Nelson had his human side which we all have, warts & all........but in the end I wish I had lived my life the way he had or rather I wish I could have been the person he was........................I was down below in Victory last week and I saluted his death place and was asked what I was doing by some other guests, so I explained that to me this was the most famous naval hero I could try and live up to................Sorry am whoffling!
Robbie
Anna, your poem is fabulous!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! thanks
