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The Monday Morning Memo

MARY: “Ever since the Armistice, the churches have been empty and the dance halls full. You’d think we fought the war for the right to be frivolous.”

STEPHEN: “And what did we fight for?”

MARY: “Stephen!”

STEPHEN: “No, go on, tell me.”

MARY: “You know full well!”

STEPHEN: “Tell me it was for king and country, for honor and freedom. I’d like to remember that. [pause] Because when you’re there, with that noise in your head, and you’re stepping over corpses so you can run and hide, then you’re fighting for just one thing; to stay alive. [pause] You talk to a man, sitting there in the cold, and you tell him everything. Your whole life. Things you’d never said before. And then you’d find that man with a bullet in his head.”

– Stephen Bannerman, speaking with his grandmother, Mary Bannerman, shortly after returning to England from the front lines of World War I. The Grand, (1997) episode 1

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Random Quote:

“This wasn’t what I hung that boxcar for, nor hugged that iron ladder for, nor bellied down on top of that high rolling freight train for. The train was laughing and cussing and alive and pushing me down the road in the rain. The bridge was alive with friends under it. The river was alive and arguing with the fog and the fog was wrestling the wind and boxing the sun.”

- Woody Guthrie, at the moment he has finally arrived in California and knocked on the door of some rich people who, he has been assured, will take him in. From his autobiography, "Bound for Glory."

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