The last word of this first line of a poem titled for this region has been disputed between being “blow” or “grow.” For 10 points each:
[10e] The lines “the poppies blow / between the crosses, row on row” appear in a World War I poem often used at Remembrance ceremonies titled for what region’s “fields”?
ANSWER: Flanders [or Vlaanderen; accept “In Flanders Fields”]
[10m] This Canadian soldier and physician wrote the poem “In Flanders Fields” in 1915 after the death of his friend Alexis Helmer.
ANSWER: John McCrae
[10h] The collection Lundy’s Lane and Other Poems was written in 1916 by a Canadian war poet with this surname. In a short story, the death of a man with this surname inspires the protagonist to ask “Isn’t life…”
ANSWER: Scott [accept Duncan Campbell Scott or Mr Scott] (The latter story is “The Garden Party” by Katherine Mansfield.)