Valentine's day is past. The only love story I could write belongs to my maternal grandparents,
I' m not even sure how much I know . It derives from snippets from my mother and the eleven years I lived in their home.
Bringing it together would be a mammoth undertaking. The personal blog would be best place .
But I do have a story of love.
Christmas is a time for reminiscing. I opened the door a crack to memory when I re-called a younger sisiter of my father who died in childbirth with her first child.
The ice storm, the winds and the power outage nearly blew the door off its hinges.
The first person tumbling through was Aunt Peggy.
Peggy was married to Uncle Hughie,my mother's younger brother.
They lived in the tenement building next door . All rental accommodation in Scotiish towns and cities were tenement buildings. until the late twenties.
Peggy had one room .It was larger than either of our two rooms and full of light. It had a huge window, where ours was small . It faced out over the backyards, where ours faced buildings opposite. The coal range was in the centre of a wall instead of in the corner of the room like ours.
Harry was Peggy's first child. He was a bit younger tham myself. We were close companions from earliest memory. The only snap-shot I have of my childhood is of Harry and myself seated on a kitchen chair in front of a scented white rose bush with a trumpet vine twisting through its thorny branches.
It didn't belong to anyone. It just grew there in the yard with unkempt grass all around.
Harry is snuggled beside me on the chair my arm on his shoulder holding him close.
Twins Hugh and Maureen were born after Harry. Three more sons after that.
I shared much of their lives. There was a birtday cake when Harry was three. Candles lit behind a curtain and cake brought out as a surprise for a much-loved child.
When corn flakes were introduced to the market, Peggy got them for her children .
We had porridge with never enough milk.
In summer she trundled the old pram to the shore and sat on the rocks at the bottom of the stairs down , surrounded by her children playing at her feet along with myself and my sister.
On cold wet winter days , she brought a large can of hot soup to school at lunch time and sat in the
open shed with her children for the hour.
The first Christmas Eve we were not in our own home, my sister and I stood with noses pressed against the window of a newsagent and tobacconist shop. .We were short a penny-halfpenny for
Grampa's gift.
Peggy stopped and asked . We were able to buy the gift.
She would be in her mid-twenties then. Life had not been easy .
Her mother died and as often happened in those days, she was raised in someone else's home.
After she started work , she made a home again for a while with her father until she married my Uncle Hughie.
Times were difficult. Work hard to come by. Especially for Catholics.
Hughie knew of berry patches where he could pick all day and sell a bucket of raspberries or brambles.
Rugs were hand-made with rags cut into strips. Hughie had a huge frame that he hooked on for hours and sold the finished product for whatever he could get.
I was there when Harry brought home the first shilling he earned caddying at Gailes Golf Course.
Golf bags were huge and heavy as were gold clubs. A round of golf would take several hours.
A boy would compete with men and be paid less
Harry might have been eleven or twelve years old then.
The argument was about which parent should have the shilling. There was never a question
that Harry had a right to keep his earnings.
Peggy's children were exceptionally beautiful.
The youngest ,Campbell, most beautiful of all.
His eyelashes must have been an inch long. They lay heavily on his round rosy cheeks curling up
at the edges while he slept. His eyes were dark violet blue. His hair was golden and curled softly on his head.
He was ten months old when Peggy died after months of illness.
In a little metal cot in the fireplace corner of the room, where all of her children were born and lived their lives to-gether.
After leaving school, Harry went to work helping the green-keeper at Gailes Golf Course. He won a Junior golf championship soon after. I heard about it in London.
He did his national service in the Royal Scots Fusiliers.
He came home and through the years went on to manage Belisle Golf Club in Ayr.
Later , he was invited to design golf courses in places as far apart as Europe, Gibraltar and California.
He died in his seventies .
The Harry Diamond Golf Tournament is an annual event held in Ayr in his honor.
The last time I saw him. he re-called his mother telling him ,while she lay dying .how proud she was of her first born son and how much that had meant to him throughout his life.
Bringing it together would be a mammoth undertaking. The personal blog would be best place .
But I do have a story of love.
Christmas is a time for reminiscing. I opened the door a crack to memory when I re-called a younger sisiter of my father who died in childbirth with her first child.
The ice storm, the winds and the power outage nearly blew the door off its hinges.
The first person tumbling through was Aunt Peggy.
Peggy was married to Uncle Hughie,my mother's younger brother.
They lived in the tenement building next door . All rental accommodation in Scotiish towns and cities were tenement buildings. until the late twenties.
Peggy had one room .It was larger than either of our two rooms and full of light. It had a huge window, where ours was small . It faced out over the backyards, where ours faced buildings opposite. The coal range was in the centre of a wall instead of in the corner of the room like ours.
Harry was Peggy's first child. He was a bit younger tham myself. We were close companions from earliest memory. The only snap-shot I have of my childhood is of Harry and myself seated on a kitchen chair in front of a scented white rose bush with a trumpet vine twisting through its thorny branches.
It didn't belong to anyone. It just grew there in the yard with unkempt grass all around.
Harry is snuggled beside me on the chair my arm on his shoulder holding him close.
Twins Hugh and Maureen were born after Harry. Three more sons after that.
I shared much of their lives. There was a birtday cake when Harry was three. Candles lit behind a curtain and cake brought out as a surprise for a much-loved child.
When corn flakes were introduced to the market, Peggy got them for her children .
We had porridge with never enough milk.
In summer she trundled the old pram to the shore and sat on the rocks at the bottom of the stairs down , surrounded by her children playing at her feet along with myself and my sister.
On cold wet winter days , she brought a large can of hot soup to school at lunch time and sat in the
open shed with her children for the hour.
The first Christmas Eve we were not in our own home, my sister and I stood with noses pressed against the window of a newsagent and tobacconist shop. .We were short a penny-halfpenny for
Grampa's gift.
Peggy stopped and asked . We were able to buy the gift.
She would be in her mid-twenties then. Life had not been easy .
Her mother died and as often happened in those days, she was raised in someone else's home.
After she started work , she made a home again for a while with her father until she married my Uncle Hughie.
Times were difficult. Work hard to come by. Especially for Catholics.
Hughie knew of berry patches where he could pick all day and sell a bucket of raspberries or brambles.
Rugs were hand-made with rags cut into strips. Hughie had a huge frame that he hooked on for hours and sold the finished product for whatever he could get.
I was there when Harry brought home the first shilling he earned caddying at Gailes Golf Course.
Golf bags were huge and heavy as were gold clubs. A round of golf would take several hours.
A boy would compete with men and be paid less
Harry might have been eleven or twelve years old then.
The argument was about which parent should have the shilling. There was never a question
that Harry had a right to keep his earnings.
Peggy's children were exceptionally beautiful.
The youngest ,Campbell, most beautiful of all.
His eyelashes must have been an inch long. They lay heavily on his round rosy cheeks curling up
at the edges while he slept. His eyes were dark violet blue. His hair was golden and curled softly on his head.
He was ten months old when Peggy died after months of illness.
In a little metal cot in the fireplace corner of the room, where all of her children were born and lived their lives to-gether.
After leaving school, Harry went to work helping the green-keeper at Gailes Golf Course. He won a Junior golf championship soon after. I heard about it in London.
He did his national service in the Royal Scots Fusiliers.
He came home and through the years went on to manage Belisle Golf Club in Ayr.
Later , he was invited to design golf courses in places as far apart as Europe, Gibraltar and California.
He died in his seventies .
The Harry Diamond Golf Tournament is an annual event held in Ayr in his honor.
The last time I saw him. he re-called his mother telling him ,while she lay dying .how proud she was of her first born son and how much that had meant to him throughout his life.
6 comments:
Dear Evelyn:
That is a beautiful story. Thank you.
Thank you so much.
Next time Evelyn...put small disclaimer before you post one of these beautiful stories. Something like... "warning...need tissue before reading". Thank you for the lovely story.
Take care.
you missed your calling ,many a polished writer would be envious , You are a special individual for sure
Well Done!
sniffle, sniffle, thanx
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