This was my story for the last week of the course...
“Hurry up Mum. Open the box. I want to see what’s in it,” seven year old Colin demanded as his mother loosened the string tied firmly around the medium sized cardboard box that she had ordered especially from Sydney.
“Just a moment…don’t rush me.” said Daisy. “Nearly there. Ah, here we go.” The string snapped and the box lid flew open.
There, nestled in a bed of crumpled newspaper, was Daisy’s longed for Shelley Queen Anne tea set : six settings of pure white cups, saucers and plates, milk jug, sugar pot and sandwich tray. Each piece was gently unwrapped and placed
on the draining board. Carefully she proceeded to wash and dry the gleaming, translucent china.
“Thank heavens the delivery got through in spite of the floods in Sydney,” she thought. “How dreadful if I had had to use my everyday china for afternoon tea tomorrow. What would Mrs Fallick and the others have thought of me?”
Colin and Shirley, tired of playing in the box of newspaper scraps drifted outside. Daisy then checked her best linen serviettes and matching supper cloth. Tomorrow she needed to impress all of the invited ladies but especially Mrs Howe, the bank manager’s wife. Cec was relying on her to pave the way for his appointment with Mr Howe next Monday. The future of the furniture shop, and indeed their whole livelihood, depended on how that meeting would go.
I wonder what my dear Grandma would say if she saw me today, using the same tea set to impress my prospective in-laws.
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... easing into semi-retirement, having lots of creative adventures and enjoying being a (relatively) new Granny.
Showing posts with label Writing Family History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing Family History. Show all posts
Tuesday, 2 February 2016
Monday, 1 February 2016
Starting School 1935 - week 5
When I was eight and Kevin turned five I was so excited to be finally going to the bush school six miles away rather than staying at home with Mother and the babies. Father had decided that I was old enough to drive us in the horse and sulky.
After breakfast we had to catch Milly our horse and hitch her to the sulky. During the school day, she roamed loose in the small horse paddock. After school we had to catch her again for the journey home.
When our sister Joy started school the next year she needed help to climb into the sulky so Kevin and I would boost her up while she held the reins. We would jump up and squeeze onto the narrow wooden seat either side of her.
One especially hot day we sped home through the shimmering heat and dust, feeling every bump on the winding dirt track, eager for a swim in the dam before tea time. Suddenly Milly picked up speed, going faster and faster down the driveway towards our home, frantically shaking her head as a wasp buzzed in her ear.
The sulky swayed precariously, Kevin and I jumped clear as Milly slowed on a corner but Joy still clung to the seat screaming wildly. Nearing the stable and recognizing her home Milly then stopped dead.
We scurried to help Joy down from the sulky as Mother appeared.
“Alick ! What were you thinking leaving your sister in that sulky? Who knows what could have happened to her!”.......................
Sunday, 31 January 2016
There's No Place Like Home
Week 4 started on 11 January but I have been so busy since the New Year that I have only now made time to post my latest stories. This was my story for week 4...
The old house with a peeling red roof stood atop a slight rise in the otherwise flat land overlooking flat paddocks, dry and yellowed after the relentless summer heat, so different to the relative green and deceptive coolness of her far away city home. Shirley blinked away her momentary homesickness, determined to look for positives in the property Alick was so proudly showing her, knowing that soon this would be her home.
Across the front of the house the veranda was barely standing and as they drew closer she saw several broken windows. Tools and other building equipment scattered near
the back door showed that some work had already begun on the interior.
Alick opened the door and ushered her in and the smell hit her: nesting mice had left their distinctive aroma in the wall cavities and the moth eaten carpet in the lounge room added its own perfume to the dry, dusty, old house smell.
He guided her through the house, room by room, asking her
opinion on the progress made so far; but Shirley was already imagining walls repaired and freshly painted in Milky Cream, wooden floor boards polished and gleaming, and their new lounge suite set up in the lounge room. A new fuel stove was already installed in the kitchen, but the empty bathroom with a chip heater was obviously waiting for a new bath and basin.
“My uncle Harold can get us a bathroom setting from McDowells in Sydney. I’ll ask Mum to chase him up when I
get home”, she told Alick, as she thought to herself, “I think I can cope with anything knowing I can have a lovely warm bath every couple of days.”
The old house with a peeling red roof stood atop a slight rise in the otherwise flat land overlooking flat paddocks, dry and yellowed after the relentless summer heat, so different to the relative green and deceptive coolness of her far away city home. Shirley blinked away her momentary homesickness, determined to look for positives in the property Alick was so proudly showing her, knowing that soon this would be her home.
Across the front of the house the veranda was barely standing and as they drew closer she saw several broken windows. Tools and other building equipment scattered near
the back door showed that some work had already begun on the interior.
Alick opened the door and ushered her in and the smell hit her: nesting mice had left their distinctive aroma in the wall cavities and the moth eaten carpet in the lounge room added its own perfume to the dry, dusty, old house smell.
He guided her through the house, room by room, asking her
opinion on the progress made so far; but Shirley was already imagining walls repaired and freshly painted in Milky Cream, wooden floor boards polished and gleaming, and their new lounge suite set up in the lounge room. A new fuel stove was already installed in the kitchen, but the empty bathroom with a chip heater was obviously waiting for a new bath and basin.
“My uncle Harold can get us a bathroom setting from McDowells in Sydney. I’ll ask Mum to chase him up when I
get home”, she told Alick, as she thought to herself, “I think I can cope with anything knowing I can have a lovely warm bath every couple of days.”
Friday, 11 December 2015
Writing Family History Week 3
Walking in their shoes - Downward Spiral
Fred Ross and I were excited to be flying our second op. with
Bomber Command Pathfinder Force. It was now the evening of 19 August 1943. The
following wave of lumbering Lancaster bombers depended on our light weight Mosquito
to drop target indicator flares over German industrial areas.
Our first op. two nights before had been, as Fred said in
his letter home “a short flight to Berlin, take in the sights and home in bed
by midnight.” We were cockily confident again tonight.
Suddenly, without warning, a heavy ack-ack shell hit and the
tail of the Mosquito disappeared; I was thrown to the floor. Momentarily
deafened by the terrific explosion, I called forward to Fred, “we’re hit”, but no
response came.
I looked back to see the gun turret blown out by a burst of tracer
from above; I had been seated there moments before. The noise was deafening as
flak burst all around us, shrapnel drummed on the wings and searchlights
followed our every move.
The plane was out of control, racing dizzyingly downwards as
I forced my way through the gun turret debris. I fought forward against the pull of gravity knowing I had to get to the controls.
I forced my way through the gun turret debris. I fought forward against the pull of gravity knowing I had to get to the controls.
My worst fears were realized when I saw Fred slumped over the
column.
The incessant racket continued as I tried desperately to move my friend
aside.
“Damn, I'm only 21! …will I make it home to Faye? …what about Mum and
Dad?”
The sickening race to the ground continued…
Sunday, 6 December 2015
Writing Family History - week 2
This is my eTivity for week 2 of the Writing Family History course through the University of Tasmania. This was posted to "Hooking the reader".
The Christmas Parcel
On Christmas Eve a large parcel arrived from overseas. It reinforced
the finality of Colin’s death and at first she could not even look briefly at
its contents.
Christmas was bleak for the whole family, but after a week Daisy
finally began to go through some of Colin’s mementoes.
She found the photos he
always kept with him wherever he travelled: a framed photo of his sister
Shirley and the small photo of his parents always in his wallet with another of
Faye.
There was also a bundle of letters creased from continual rereading, and another, still sealed, addressed
to her. Daisy contemplated the envelope’s familiar handwriting for several more
days until at last she steeled herself to lift
the flap. Then she began to read the words her
son had written four days before he disappeared…
“Dear Mum,
First of all excuse the pencil but I am just in a slight rush so
naturally can write faster…Once again I am at a new station and once again
trying to settle down. At last the training for ops. has finished and I have
already done my first one… I am safe and sound… we work 7 days a week but have
6 days leave every 6 weeks all being lucky! Our 6 weeks isn’t up till near the
end of Sept....
…2 am.
Well Mum I’ll break this off now till later and pick it up when I have
some more to tell you.
Your boy – Colin xxx…”
Friday, 4 December 2015
Writing Family History
I have just started an online course called Writing Family History with the University of Tasmania. The course runs for a total of 6 weeks over the summer vacation and will give me a statement of attainment at the end.
Each week we have to submit an eTivity (a piece of flash writing of no more than 250 words) and a final piece of 750-1000 words. So I plan to post each week's piece here to have a record of what I've done and to keep me on task with regular posting.
This was Week One's piece...
The warm hall was welcoming after the chill wind outside. The dance floor gleamed after its last application of sawdust. Trestle tables around the edges of the hall groaned with an abundance of food while large teapots were already being filled.
Shirley sat out three dances while pondering whether coming here was a good idea. This was her first night out since Colin had disappeared over Germany and she still felt guilty about leaving her elderly parents.
A group of RAAF boys approached; one of them shyly asked Shirley to dance. He seemed so ill at ease that she took pity on him and agreed. Fortunately the dance floor was crowded so she heard only a few of his two left feet excuses.
When the bracket finished Shirley thankfully sat and enjoyed just talking. Alick confided his continual homesickness, how he missed farm life but also how he longed to travel overseas with the RAAF.
She responded by telling him about her only brother who went to England as an RAF navigator; about the devastating telegram last August which changed her life forever; about how her family now lived in a house weighed down with grief.
Over supper the young couple continued to chat. Shirley wanted to get to know him better while Alick was quietly surprised that this sophisticated city girl was interested in him.
The evening ended quickly. They parted with promises to meet again next week. Along with the other girls Shirley piled on to the 10.30 bus as the young airmen set off on their frosty walk back to Fairbairn RAAF Base.
Each week we have to submit an eTivity (a piece of flash writing of no more than 250 words) and a final piece of 750-1000 words. So I plan to post each week's piece here to have a record of what I've done and to keep me on task with regular posting.
1944
The warm hall was welcoming after the chill wind outside. The dance floor gleamed after its last application of sawdust. Trestle tables around the edges of the hall groaned with an abundance of food while large teapots were already being filled.
Shirley sat out three dances while pondering whether coming here was a good idea. This was her first night out since Colin had disappeared over Germany and she still felt guilty about leaving her elderly parents.
A group of RAAF boys approached; one of them shyly asked Shirley to dance. He seemed so ill at ease that she took pity on him and agreed. Fortunately the dance floor was crowded so she heard only a few of his two left feet excuses.
When the bracket finished Shirley thankfully sat and enjoyed just talking. Alick confided his continual homesickness, how he missed farm life but also how he longed to travel overseas with the RAAF.
She responded by telling him about her only brother who went to England as an RAF navigator; about the devastating telegram last August which changed her life forever; about how her family now lived in a house weighed down with grief.
Over supper the young couple continued to chat. Shirley wanted to get to know him better while Alick was quietly surprised that this sophisticated city girl was interested in him.
The evening ended quickly. They parted with promises to meet again next week. Along with the other girls Shirley piled on to the 10.30 bus as the young airmen set off on their frosty walk back to Fairbairn RAAF Base.
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