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<text>
<title>
(Roosevelt) Bugler:Sound Taps
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--FDR Portrait
</history>
<link 00101><article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
April 23, 1945
Bugler: Sound Taps
</hdr>
<body>
<p> In the capital's hush every sound was audible--the twitter
of birds in new-leafed shade trees; the soft, rhythmic scuffling
of massed, marching men in the street; the clattering exhaust of
armored scout cars moving past, their machine guns cocked
skyward. And the beat of muffled drums. As Franklin Roosevelt's
flag-draped coffin passed slowly by on its black caisson, the
hoofbeats of the white horses, the grind of iron-rimmed wheels on
pavement overrode all other sounds.
</p>
<p> Men stood bareheaded. Few people wept, so that the
occasional sounds of sobbing seemed shockingly loud. As the
coffin went past, part of the crowd began jostling quietly to
move along, to keep it in sight. On Pennsylvania Avenue an
elderly weeping Negro woman sat on the curb, rocking and crying:
</p>
<p> "Oh, he's gone. He's gone forever. I loved him so. He's
never coming back...."
</p>
<p> To the White House. The caisson and its bright-colored
burden rolled slowly along, small in the broad street from which
Franklin Roosevelt had so often waved to cheering thousands. The
sun seemed to grow hotter, the drums throbbed and muttered on &
on. At last, the caisson ground up the graveled White House
drive. The coffin was carried out of sight into the executive
mansion.
</p>
<p> It was put in the East Room. Here, on another April
afternoon, Abraham Lincoln's body had lain, his little sons Tad
and Robert sitting at his feet, General Ulysses S. Grant in sash
and white gloves at his head. Lincoln's coffin had rested under a
black canopy so high it almost touched the ceiling. Windows,
mirrors and chandeliers had been smothered in crepe and the room
had been ostentatiously gloomy. Now the East Room was just a
corner of a big house, long lived-in.
</p>
<p> Franklin Roosevelt's wheel chair stood near the wall. Chairs
had been arranged, a small lectern, and a piano. The warm,
flower-scented room filled with Franklin Roosevelt's family and
friends, the top men of the U.S., representatives of the foreign
world--the new President, Harry Truman, the cabinet, Britain's
Anthony Eden, Russia's Andrei Gromyko, King Ibn Saud's son Emir
Faisal, stately in an Arab burnoose. The pianist struck a chord,
the mourners stood to sing the hymn, "Eternal Father, Strong to
Save."
</p>
<p> Mrs. Roosevelt listened, pale but dry-eyed, beside her son,
Brigadier General Elliott Roosevelt, her daughter Mrs. Anna
Roosevelt Boettinger. (Colonel James Roosevelt, who flew to the
U.S. from Manila, arrived an hour and a half after his father's
burial.) But many near her could not control themselves. Harry
Hopkins, who had hurried East from the Mayo Clinic, stood almost
fainting beside his chair, white as death and racked by sobs.
</p>
<p> As the 23-minute service drew to a close, the voices joined
in another hymn: Faith of Our Fathers. Bishop Angus Dun repeated
once more the remembered words from the President's first
inaugural address: "The only thing we have to fear is fear
itself." Then: "Through Jesus Christ to whom be glory for ever
and ever. Amen."
</p>
<p> Slowly the room emptied.
</p>
<p> To Hyde Park. That night, aboard a special train again, the
President's body traveled his old route, along the Pennsylvania
Railroad's main line through Philadelphia, and into Manhattan;
then across Hell Gate and up the New York Central's Hudson
division to Hyde Park.
</p>
<p> In the morning, the Hudson Valley countryside--where as a
boy Franklin Roosevelt had run and played and ridden his pony
beside his father's horse--lay fresh and green in the sunshine.
Once more the coffin moved on a black caisson. This time it was
followed by a black-hooded horse, with a saber hung on the near
side and empty boots in the stirrups of an empty saddle. It was
the old military tradition for a leader who was dead. The valley
began to echo with the sound of cannon, firing the presidential
salute from the Hyde Park grounds.
</p>
<p> In the green-hedged garden of the ancestral home--the
"boxed-in garden" where Franklin Roosevelt had asked years ago
that he be buried--two carloads of flowers lay heaped beside
the open grave. Near it were gathered friends, relatives, the new
President of the United States, old neighbors, the secretaries
and ambassadors. The Rev. Dr. W. George W. Anthony, a white-
haired, white-surpliced clergyman, spoke the Episcopal burial
service:
</p>
<p> "...We commit his body to the ground; earth to earth,
dust to dust.... Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord.... Lord
have mercy on us. Christ, have mercy on us...."
</p>
<p> A squad of West Point cadets raised rifles at the graveside,
fired a volley, then another and another. A bugle sounded the
long notes of taps. The crowd heard the order "March!" The grey-
clad cadets swung smartly away. It was 10:45 a.m. The crowd
slowly scattered.
</p>
<p> After a while Eleanor Roosevelt walked back through a wide
opening in the hedge. She stood alone, silently watching the
workmen shoveling soil into her husband's grave. Then, silent and
alone, she walked away again. On her black dress she wore the
small pearl Fleur-de-Lis which he had given her as a wedding
present.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>