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Fred The Reds Dottir (The Great Brummie Russian Novel)

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Amazon Music Stream millions of songs. Walked back and went to tea with Mrs Duffins who was most amusing. It is a modern house, quite new in fact. I think they are only just getting into it. It was furnished in the most original and artistic way and quite regardless of expense I should say. The dining room was a harmony in grey and orange with black net curtains. I walked back to the station and travelled very, very sadly alone. Altogether I had 7 changes between Bordon and Lutterworth, so it cannot be called a good journey. Went down to Lutterworth and spent the morning messing about at the new hospital with Mother and various other people as we are expecting to receive wounded on Friday.

It really is a perfectly splendid place. There is one ward with room for 12 beds and a very nice smaller one and a room where men can sit, a small room over towards the small kitchen. Went back to a rather late lunch and unpacked afterwards. Fred came home on sick leave, very lame poor dear. Raid by British Naval airmen on Hoboken near Antwerp. Chilean protest against violation of her territorial waters by the British at the battle of Juan Fernandez.

Went down to the hospital again and washed heaps of china. Mabel Young came over to see Fred. Bicycled into Lutterworth and went to see sisters in the hospital. Mrs Entwistle and Flossie Ramsley came over in the afternoon.

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It was a horrible day and snow at intervals. Jim turned up late at night having driven out from Rugby. She seems to be a person of considerable influence at the War Office. Horribly cold and snowing at intervals. We started to bicycle to Bitteswell, but it snowed so hard we came back.

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Father and Mother went to lunch at Coton. Still horribly cold and freezing hard at night. Jim went back to London to continue his hunt for a commission. Jim came home and told us he had got a commission in the Flying Corps. He is to be employed on wireless work only and is to be on probation for a month. Went into Leicester with Jim and Father.

Did some shopping at Johnsons where I bought a pair of shoes suitable for cycling with great difficulty. Came out and met Jim in the street, he having just been to the dentist. I had a foul shock on the way there as we nearly overtook Capt and Mrs C. Rolph and I lost my nerve completely and hastily crossed over to the other side of the street and passed by them I hope unobserved.

She really did look a typical Leicester lady in the latest thing in plaid skirts and small hats. C was limping a bit and did not look well. I felt rather a brute but a meeting would have been most embarrassing for both of us, with all the foul things I have said about her in the past. Got home in time for a late lunch. Aunts came to tea. Esther came from Heighington. Severe fighting in the Carpathians. Home Secretary appointed a Committee of enquiry into the recruiting of men from retail trades. Rained most of the day. Fred played golf with Mr Loveday in the morning and beat him after not having played for months.

Heard a good many rumours. French progress south of St. Mihiel Meuse and in the Woevre district. Mother and Esther were going to Leicester about 1. There was a tremendous stream of them which seemed as if it would never stop and lots of baggage wagons one after the other. Rowley and I went into the road for him to take a photograph and Mother and E drove in the penny cart as far as the gate when they were stopped.

Eve Marriott WW1 Diary - Cotesbach Educational Trust

He thought he could get past so he began leading her across the road between two hitch wagons. R and I were looking on. It was hopeless and of course the tail of the nearest wagon caught the cart and the whole thing toppled over, throwing Mother and Esther out in the middle of the road. A nice officer came up and apologised to Mother who truly said it was not his fault at all. She had to lie on the sofa for the rest of the day. Went down to Lutterworth, which is one seething mass of soldiers. Hundreds of the men went through during the morning until the greater part of the 11th Division must have passed through.

They looked very smart and had all their equipment. They are supposed to be going out in about a fortnight. Saw Grace who talked a great deal. Got up very early and was down at the hospital at 8 together with several more to help nurse two ill soldiers who had been left behind, the young corporal who had a bad attack of influenza and another.

They both had bad colds and were absolutely thoroughly tired out and dead to the world and did not seem to want to talk at all. Washed corporal in bed with assistance of new district nurse and took their temperatures etc. Also saw a woman called Mrs Davis having a horrid wound dressed.

I did more real nursing than I had ever attempted before. Got back about lunch time rather tired and went down again for tea, but did not stop long. Charles Gilliatt came in for tea, very fussed about Kate who he thinks is ill. French completed the capture of Les Eparges. Indecisive fighting on the Meuse. Went down to the hospital again. Both the soldiers are better and the corporal is another man altogether to what he was yesterday, quite cheerful and inclined to talk. The boy is still feeling rather weak I think, but is much more cheerful and seems decidedly better, so I did not think he really was going to be seriously ill, though the doctor says he has had a narrow escape of a very bad illness.

I broke the thermometer which was a pretty stupid thing to do, but did not do anything very bad otherwise. Saw Mrs Davis having her horrid wound dressed and a girl having her back dressed which was rather nasty. Talked quite a lot to the corporal, who is a most versatile person. Went down to the hospital, but did not stay very long. The corporal was in great form, full of conversation, and showed me a portrait of his young lady who really is one of the plainest people I think I have seen for some time. He also talked a great deal about aeroplanes and told me he had often flown.


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Got back quite soon as there was really very little to do, as there are only 3 men and one girl in the hospital. Went to Church in the afternoon. Mr Cavey came to tea and afterwards he and father and Rowley and Michael and I walked part of the way across the fields with Digby, then father and Cavey went back and the rest of us went on and saw Digby off at the station. Went to the hospital. The men are much better, especially the Corporal.

He is a dear, but I do not believe all he says quite. In the afternoon we went down to Lutterworth again and made beds at the Wycliffe hospital, as the new one is now called. It looked very nice when they were all done. Went down to the hospital. Did not stop very long. Came back for lunch and afterwards bicycled down to Lutterworth. Went to the Wycliffe Hospital to see if I had anything there.

Found sister and nurse and both the two soldiers there making themselves very useful, one cleaning out the bath. Ellie and Esther came down to look at it. Bicycled on to Ullesthorpe and had tea with the Boughton Leighs. Mrs Charles was there.

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Did not go down to the hospital as the patients are so well. Two little guests came to tea and talked a great deal. Ostend bombed by 15 Allied aeroplanes. French airship bombed Freiburg. Severe fighting off Ostend. Went down to the hospital and did a few jobs there. It is quite finished now and looks most awfully nice with all the beds made and everything ready.

Said goodbye, almost with tears, to my nice solders who are nearly well, but who are not going back just yet. Had a wire from Kitty asking me to go over tomorrow. As there were no boys coming in and not much to do, I decided to go. French airships bombed Strasbourg and other German towns. Zeppelin raid on East Anglia: Packed most of the morning and had an early lunch.

Had a dull journey. After dinner Capt Maynes arrived who I used to know when he was at Colchester; he looks much older now and his hair is quite grey, but he is, as ever, really a perfect darling. He was through all the earlier part of the war and was wounded about the middle of September, shot through the bottom of the lung, I think. He was ill for a long time afterwards and is now training recruits at Felixstowe. We all walked to church and on the way Captain Maynes began talking about his job at Felixstowe. Played very nicely on the piano and after a bit I went for a walk with Capt M and took the opportunity to find out a little about what Bill is doing now.

But they parted good friends. Ardyn Paterson came to tea. She took Paterson back to the station afterwards in her little car which she drives pretty well. K and Captain M and I went over to the Pattisons. A funny little man with a long nose showed us over, and a boy with very long hair. We saw the garden arrangement for a few minutes before we began. Came back after a rather late lunch and basked in the sun in the garden afterwards, while Maynes babbled on about all sorts of people we had never heard of and told us some thrilling tales about the war, which he always speaks of as if it was best fun in the world.

I discovered that the man that fat subaltern often speaks of at Felixtowe is H. German retirement in Alsace. Continued fighting for Hill Sir John French denied that the British had made use of poison gas. Afterwards came home about tea time. Maynes left just before dinner; it was a sad moment parting from him and knowing we should likely never meet again when he is probably going out in about a month. He is a little darling. Germans bombarded Reims and Ypres.

Asquith, speaking at Newcastle, denied that military operations had been hampered by lack of munitions. Went into Norwich with H and Margery and bought some flowers for her. Spent most of the day messing about in the garden. Mrs Stephen Clark and a very tall old lady and a very nice boy called Lionel turned up in a car. Second Battle of Ypres began: German advance checked by Canadians after French retreat before poisonous gas attacks. Second Battle of Ypres: German attack east and west of St.

Julien repulsed by Canadians. Germans took several hamlets. Went into Norwich with Kitty and saw her off at the station with many instructions. Julien, French and Belgians recovered Lizerne. Fighting round Kilimanjaro German East Africa. They sang well on the whole, but I thought the boy who sang solo had a cold coming on. Had a very tense evening as they rang up from Bournemouth to say Miss Charles was ill and of course Kate supposed that one of the boys was killed, as she always does if any bell rings anywhere or any telegram comes, and then she decided to come there tomorrow quite early and had to look out trains etc.

Germans retook Lizerne, British repulsed at St. Anglo-French forces landed on both shores of the Straits. Mrs Musgrave and the little boy went to see the sights of Norwich, Kate having left at about 9. Margery and I were left to play about alone. She is a really most attractive girl and I like her fully. British airmen bombed Courtrai and various neighbouring places.

Hill stormed and V Beach secured. When we got home we were astonished to find Jack there, having arrived quite suddenly over one night. It really was bad luck. I found a telegram saying that wounded were coming on Thursday and I was to return tomorrow. I resolved to take it calmly as I shall not believe any wounded ones until I see them. We made Jack tell Kitty when she arrived after dinner that we had both been sent for by telegram, me to nurse and M by Jim.

Meanwhile we hid in the back of the drawing room and heard all she had said. It was almost too successful as she talked rather too much about me and not much about M. Allied attack north of Ypres checked by use of gas. Allies established themselves across the Gallipoli Peninsula. Kitty and Margery came into Norwich with me and saw May off at Thorpe. Had a hot journey with two changes.

Met by Richardson and the crowd at Welford. Heard that ten slightly wounded ones are expected tomorrow. German offensive definitely stopped. Germans bombed Dunkirk, Pervyse and Nancy: Went down to Lutterworth in the afternoon with the other nurses and waited until about four when the soldiers were expected to arrive. They arrived very late, nine men and a Red Cross orderly with them and we gave them tea and supper later, but did not do much else as they were all dreadfully well.

Only one man was very lame. The orderly went away after tea. Miss Sarson and a man came on for the night. There was one most attractive Scotsman in a kilt who is in the Seaforths and has been through nearly the whole thing and another Scotsman not in a kilt who is very young and silent. They are all much too well and I foresee a great problem in keeping them all contained and amused in such a small place. Germans bombarded Reims and Dunkirk. Continued German advance in Galicia. Turks retreated from neighbourhood of the Suez Canal.

Was down at the hospital at 8. Miss Sarson said they had had a good night and had slept well. Mrs Martin came on later and did the dressings with the doctor. Nash, a fine old Yorkshireman, has a large hole in his leg where a bullet has been through and Adcock who is a rather a nice man in the Warwickshires whom I like to think might give us some trouble later has got a very nasty wound in his arm which has been giving him trouble ever since October. Sorrel, in the Leicesters, has got his feet bad through standing over 12 hours in a wet ditch in Neuve Chapelle when he was stuck there and could not move without getting in deeper.

They seem to be the worst cases; most of the others are very light. In the afternoon some of them went out in the cars lent by various people and I took the Adcock and Bollington over to the Rectory garden and played clock golf with them all the afternoon, which they all took an interest in. Bollington was really good, having got over bouts of pain from the shrapnel wounds in his arm. He is a nice boy who was a butcher before the War and looks like one.

Zeppelin raid on East Anglia. German Embassy warning in more than 50 U. Was down at the hospital again at 8. Mrs Martin came later. Mrs Sarson told me when I got there that Watts had had a temperature the night before, so I firmly sent him back to bed till the doctor came which was a good thing as it turned out, as he was kept there for the rest of the day. In the afternoon I took Sorrel across to the Cottage Hospital to have his leg treated with an electric therapy machine.

Jeffery, a nice quiet-looking boy wheeled him across in a bath chair. Found Sister Britton there who has just come back; she came across at tea time. Found Fred when I got home. He had come for what is probably his last weekend. Repulse of German attack on Hill 60, British ordered to withdraw to new line. First United States ship attacked by German submarine. Went down at 8. Of course, I think it is a pity not to let the men go where they like so long as they behave themselves.

Some of them went to Church, but not many as the doctor came very late. Went back for lunch. Went down to the Cottage Hospital for a change and spent a very busy morning as there was an operation on a little girl at 8. Afterwards went to the VAD hospital and saw Mother and Sister Britton and heard that they had had a truly awful morning as there had been a fearful row the night before owing to Jock having gone out after the place was supposed to be shut up and he wandered down the Bitteswell Road until he met an attractive damsel whom he asked to come for a walk with him and told her how he had got out of the hospital.

This morning seems mainly to have been spent in low spirits for all the men and especially poor Jock who has got to go which is really too sad. Went home and in the afternoon four of the men Adcock, Bollington, Pears and Jeffrey came up here and spent the afternoon with the little boys who played bowls and clock golf with them. Advertisement in American papers stated that ships flying the British flag were liable to destruction in the war zone.

Went down to the hospital at 7. Unearthly hour, never again. After that there was nothing to do for some time and afterwards saying a sad farewell to Jock who left us under a cloud to the great distress of everyone, I think. I stopped for some time talking to Watts who really has had the most thrilling experiences.

Mr Taylor was there too and we both listened enthralled for ages while he went on in his gentle way in broad Norfolk. Once he was 15 days cut off from all the others surrounded by Germans with a small group of men, but they fought on and were eventually found by our own people, who had quite given them up. Went back for lunch and had a thoroughly lazy afternoon in the garden. Had a nice peaceful day at home which I thoroughly enjoyed. Esther and boys played tennis. It was very hot. Had another day off.

Mother and I drove over to Brownsover and saw Solties B. She took us round the garden which really is lovely now. There was a very pretty girl there who is I think one of Harts. She comes from South Africa and had never been in England before this, or not since she was a child. A tremendous thunderstorm came while we were there and it simply poured with rain for ages. Got home to find we had had hardly any at all which was annoying.

Went on duty at the hospital in the afternoon. Dorothy Goodacre was there and she came in after a bit. Had a great breakthrough with Watts. As we got there Mrs Derwent who was just going off said he was very bad and in great pain and had done nothing and was altogether in a very bad way, so we were rather alarmed, very. I took him his medicine at 2. Northumberland Fusiliers commemorated on Menin Gate, Ypres.

A nice day but much colder. Esther and I walked over to Bitteswell and had tea with the Youngs. Met several of the soldiers on the way back who told us that two doctors had come over from Leicester to inspect the hospital this afternoon. By some miracle all the men except Bollington he was supposed to be indoors were to be found, so it seems to have come off quite well. Regiment commemorated on Ploegsteert Memorial, Belgium. Regiment buried at Merville, France. Messed about at home in the morning and went down to the hospital at 1. It was a nasty wet day. They were washing the wards which made it most uncomfortable.

Watts played the piano for a time while Bollington performed on the harmonium at the same time so we had a nice cheerful noise and they really were very funny. Watts had a small air gun which he was shooting with and I had two shots and hit the ball the first time, and then he squeezed up the paper into a little bunch and I hit it again. He is a frightfully good shot himself and wins cups and things apparently. I found a telegraph post absolutely riddled with shot having been used as a target.

A perfectly beastly day and raining hard. I drove down to the hospital for lunch and stayed there for the afternoon. Goodacre was on duty too. She is rather a fool in some ways but means well. Watts put my thimble on a screen and smashed it to smithereens — a pretty good effort as it was a tiny target. He was not the least penitent about it.

Stopped at home and did nothing particular.


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After tea we went down to the hospital meaning Uncle P eter to sing to the soldiers and none of them were to be found, although they were supposed to have been told by Adcock, so we came back. We also heard that they had refused to go to Mrs Watsons at the last minute after saying that they would originally. They are the limit really. Limited supply the cause: Went down to the Cottage hospital and washed a little girl and dressed Bollington who is going on alright but cannot use his arm at all of course. Did many other odd jobs and got back in time for lunch. Uncle Peter left at 1.

Mother returned about then. They had a rather worrying morning at the other hospital which ended in a bad headache. It now appears that Watts is deeply offended at something Dorothy said to him and refuses to do anything and she is to go back to Leicester! What foul babies they are. Esther heard from Muriel this morning that Geoffrey is missing.

It really is almost too foul to be true. Also Reggie Legard is wounded and Townsend Powell killed. What a life we lead. Digby came home looking very well but no Fred. We had hoped he might turn up, but I am afraid this must mean he has gone or just going. In the evening Fred suddenly turned up, having driven out in a car from Leicester.

He arrived about 3 and left again with Digby at 8. Mother went down to the hospital. Found a whole lot of new men had arrived yesterday so that we are now quite full up at the Wycliffe as there are She said they seemed a nice quiet lot and looked as if they would be giving us no trouble. News reached Gallipoli that a German submarine had successfully passed through the Straits of Gibraltar into the Mediterranean. Heard the garden is perfectly lovely with heaps of rock plants.

She told us that R. Hughes had got a man in the recreation department. Rather a good thing I should think. On the way back we saw Gass and I said goodbye to him as I thought he was going tomorrow. As a matter of fact none of them went at all on Saturday. Lord Kitchener in the House of Lords insisted on the importance of an adequate supply of munitions.

I heard from Todd who said that Reggie was shot in the head and died about an hour later without recovering consciousness so he did not suffer at all. Heard from Aunt A who has gone to Heighington. I am afraid her letter does not sound as if there was much chance of Geoff being on leave as apparently he was wounded pretty badly.

Still, one never knows. Went down to the hospital in the afternoon for the first time since the new 6 came. Rather alarming seeing so many new faces, but the old friends were a great support to me. Miss Alderson was the other nurse. Helped her to put a fomentation on a badly wounded hand belonging to a man called Hannan in the Somersetshire L. A splendid looking man who had been through the whole thing till a week ago about. He knew Lieutenant Watts and even the Pretyman boys. He looked a picture of health and seemed in the best of spirits so I suppose being a warrior suits his constitution.

Watts and Bollington and two new men called Beverley and Leigh were all in the little ward. Most of them more or less asleep most of the evening. Yolande came in and I showed her round and introduced her to Bollington and she talked to him and Leigh. The others were asleep. Grace Topham looked in now and then. Jim turned up unexpectedly, of course, in a taxi from Rugby. He looks very well and brown and smart in his new Flying Corps uniform, though he agrees with me that it would look better with a pair of wings embroidered on it!

He seems to be getting on with it splendidly there and says they all think him quite an expert on all sorts of subjects he knows nothing about. He shot rooks in the afternoon and we played tennis after tea. Those killed were mainly soldiers. Jim went off directly after lunch.

I sat in the garden and read a book. He was full of remorse, of course.

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Went down to the hospital at 1. Almost all the men were about the place. She seemed a nice girl, but very plain. Mrs Pryce Taylor was on duty and was quite nice. Miss Fosberry hindered us both very much by coming in early at about 4. A quiet afternoon as so many of them were out. He is very shy about going anywhere although he is so easy to talk to. Went down to the hospital at 8. A lovely day, very hot. I settled to ask 4 of them to tea with us, so invited Watts and Nash, never thinking they would come as they never go anywhere if they can help it, but to my great surprise they both said they would and Watts asked if Bollington who is a great friend of his could come too.

I meant to ask Sorrel, but he had gone away to see his wife and had not returned. Who is going to look after them and show them the ways of the place if we all go out? Of course everyone said he was the last person who ought to be left to teach them all manner of wickedness! Had a day off at the hospital. Esther went down in the morning. Mrs Arnold Watson came so I talked to her about our solicitors and told her a story that quite amazed her. Winston Churchill resigned his post as First Lord of the Admiralty, having been largely blamed for British failures during the Dardanelles Campaign.

Got down to the hospital and 8. Was rather delayed by meeting a lot of the Leicester Yeomanry and various other regiments coming from the memorial service, but got to the hospital about 4 and was allowed in after waving my telegram at several people. There were five men but they took a lot of finding as they were scattered about all over the place in different wards, but at last I managed to see them all, but got no information out of any of them, except that they had been in a battle on Monday in which all the companies of the Regiment seem to have been killed or wounded except their own.

I only talked to one other man, a nice little Welsh man, who gave me a French bullet. Miss Evans was on duty as well as me and we had a nice peaceful afternoon. Washed bandages and had a most interesting conversation with MacWilliams who is in bed still in the long ward with a swollen face which rather spoils his beauty, but he told me heaps of exciting stories, most of which I managed to understand, I think.

He is a little dear. All but one were in to tea so we had a lot to do to get it ready. I had a little tea up in the small ward and gave tea to Les, the Canadian boy, Batty Bollington. The two latter have been getting on really very well. Heard from Aunt Alice that they have heard officially that Geoffrey is killed, which is really too foul. The Belgians came in after tea. Vi turned up at about 6. Vi took mother to a sale at Bitteswell in the Argyll.

I went down to the hospital at 1. She is of Russian Jewish and Hungarian Jewish descent. Eating in a local restaurant, She got her big break at acting in when she won the role of Laurie Strode in Halloween After that, she became famous for roles in movies like Trading Her maternal grandfather was Welsh. Her father died when Naomi was seven and Jim Carrey, Canadian-born and a U. Kirsten Caroline Dunst is an American actress, who also holds German citizenship.

She has a younger brother named Christian Dunst , One of our most exciting and versatile actresses, Selma Blair first gained attention for her performance in Cruel Intentions , a youthful retelling of the classic novel "Les Liaisons Dangereuses". Precocious, outspoken child-teen starlet of the s, Christina Ricci was born in in Santa Monica, California, the youngest of four children of Sarah Murdoch , a realtor, and Ralph Ricci, a lawyer and therapist.

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Actress The House Bunny. She was raised in Edmonds, Washington.