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  • Author: May Story
  • Date: 1919
  • Place: Bingfield, Co Cavan.
  • Comment:
  • People: Sallie ( her sister )
  • Description: Letter
  • Keywords:
  • Original: AA016

                        Bingfield
    1.9.19              Crosdoney
    19.10.19                 Co Cavan.

    My dearest Sallie
    You see by the first date on this that I 
    intended to write it a month ago but somehow
    it never came off. In the "holiday" season in 
    summer I am kept on the go. This was a great 
    fruit year, we got a good supply of jam sugar 
    so I made all I could in case things worsen 
    again next year. I believe there will be a jam
    famine before next summer, the Govt controller
    had been going on in such a foolish way with 
    regard to supplies for the manufacturers and 
    only allowing them to sell at a price that 
    means loss. Really things are in a bad state 
    over here and England seems as bad as Ireland,
    only in a different way. The railway strike 
    did not take place here, but for want of coal 
    train services had to be reduced to almost 
    nothing. We are lucky in 
    having our own homegrown food, so that we 
    could stick out any strike with nothing worse 
    than getting no tea, coffee, sugar etc. It 
    would be a bit awkward to be without soap or 
    salt or soda to make soap. Even then we could 
    burn wood and get potash out of the ashes. As 
    for the Sinn Fein business in this country, we
    are used to it now, only swear at the Govt 
    when some new outrage occurs. Being in Ulster 
    things are not so bad, we can only guess at 
    what the people in the south and west have to 
    endure, for they dare not even complain. The 
    Home Rule Bill soon comes into operation, 
    unless it is meantime altered or repealed, but
    we think that really Ulster will be excluded 
    in the end but there may be a fight first in 
    which case we may be in an awkward place, so 
    close to the borders of Ulster. The Ulster men
    are determined not under any circumstances to
    give into Home Rule, so it is interesting to 
    see what happens. They are all organized 
    again, just as before the war, only little is 
    said about it. You can see by Sir Edward 
    Carson's face the sort of man he is and he is 
    the Knight of Ulster, his word is law.
    

I am just rather glad that my boys are out of this country. As for ourselves we have no fear and life is so unpleasant for people of our class now, that to part with to part with it does not seem a matter of great regret. There seems to be no peace anywhere in the world and the older one grows, the harder one has to work. I should not be in despair if we had to leave Bingfield, for it is such a hopeless house to work with limited help and help gets more and more scarce as time goes by. I should like to go to N.Z. and build a convenient house to be easily near by the family. Have you a nice bay you could sell me for the purpose ? I should want enough ground for a good garden and a field to keep a couple of cows and a horse or two, and perhaps a small crop of something for winter feeding. Then it must have a water supply, if possible a small stream which would supply the house by gravity. If you have such a bay for sale, please keep it for me, I will hope some day to take it over. If all goes well I can afford it, in any case I want to go on a visit to N.Z. in a few years time. This is quite serious about the bay. Let me know the price per acre and I will save up.

I know Pat intended to go and see you, so I expect he did. You will have found him grown. He is very fond of all of you and devoted to your children. Children always like him also, only Laila gets a bit put out because he does not always flatter her. She is an awful chatterbox, Mrs Gunn used to keep her supplied with sweets to keep her tongue quiet. People in uniform can always get luxuries like sweets more easily than others.

Basil and Vera got back to school just before the railway strike. Lilly Moore, our bishop's daughter, had to come back, after having got as far as Kingstown and sleeping on the mail boat. Basil leaves school at Xmas and will, suppose remain here until he goes to N.Z. perhaps next autumn. Teddy is having a month's leave at ????. He was there for a couple of weeks sometime ago and had a fine time, a dance every night. But he is greatly annoyed because he is not allowed a chance of active service. Ralph is still in France on the dumps, but I think his job will soon finish. He has two pips now, so gets more pay, some of which he saves. He has just been to Cologne for his Indian Civil Service exam, but it is a case of many are called but few are chosen. I am trying to get Bessie and Sheila to come over. I have to go to Dublin next month with Laila to see the dentist etc. Travelling is a bore these days. I hate leaving my groove, it is so hard to get into again. A pity Waireka could not be sold now, whilst land is dear. There is a great demand here for land, but not such great prices. Taxes and wages are so high.

Hope Arthur is well. Much love to you all. From loving May


Letters from May Story (nee Jollie)

Letters to her sister Sally


Date1919
Linked toMary Jollie

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