“In Flanders Fields” Summary
The speaker describes the poppies (beautiful red flowers) that grow in a place called Flanders fields. Along with the poppies, there are rows of crosses marking graves throughout the fields. The speaker also notes that larks (a particular kind of bird) fly high above the fields, singing their songs. However, the birds' songs can barely be heard on the ground below, because the noise of guns—most likely from some kind of battle—is too loud.
The speaker then reveals that they are actually multiple speakers, a group of people who are all dead and presumably died in this location. Until recently, the speakers were alive, experiencing the beauties of sunrise and sunset, as well as loving relationships with other people. Now, the speakers are dead and buried in Flanders fields.
The speakers go on to ask the reader to continue their fight. They liken their struggle to a torch that they are now passing off to the people who are still alive, because they themselves cannot hold it anymore. They ask that the reader take this responsibility seriously. The speakers conclude by saying that if the reader betrays the speakers by not continuing their fight, the speakers will never be peaceful in death, even though the field where they lie is covered in beautiful flowers.