Saturday, August 9, 2008

In Praise of Aunties and Uncles

These long summer days and my ever lengthening years have put me in a somewhat melancholy and introspective mood. I miss my aunties! I suddenly realized I only have one aunt and uncle left and they are becoming increasingly frail and also lives thousands of miles away in England. Once upon a time I not only had several aunts, uncles too of course, but also Great Aunts and Uncles, the siblings of my grandmother. I miss the weekly visits from them at first my grandmothers house (she raised me), then later mine and turn about when we visited them. There was always tea and scones of course and lots of gossip. As a wee girl, I’d sit quietly on the floor, playing with my toys while they chatted with my gran, gleaning nuggets of family history and sometimes, gasp, a scandal or two! They always brought a supply of cream cakes with them and of course, sweeties for me and when they left, they always gave me some “pocket money” to spend. As I grew up, I was allowed to join in with the adults and later when my daughter arrived, she in turn loved their visits with the candy and cash being for her this time.

From time to time we would all go through to Stirling to visit an old friend of my grandmothers, who was an honorary aunt! Granny, two aunts, my daughter and I would board a train for the 40 minute trip to Stirling where we would be met by a nephew of my “aunt” and whisked off for an afternoon of blethering with a lovely “tea” spread out for us. When I was a girl, I loved to visit there because there was another girl, a relative of theirs who I could team up with and we would go off exploring the countryside. When my daughter’s turn came, she loved the visits too because of the delicious home baked treats laid out for tea and because behind my aunt’s house there was a field of cows and she would go out feed them over the fence.

Aunties and uncles are important members of a family; I only wish I had many more of them and that they were still with us. I’m an aunt myself but alas don’t have the same close contact with my nephews that I enjoyed. I wrote the following story as a writing exercise a while ago but it recalls a happy childhood memory of a different era. I hope you enjoy it.

My Secret Garden

I was raised by my grandmother in Scotland in the early 1950’s and have fond memories of visiting her sister Bell and my great-uncle Frank Bunn at their little home in a village just outside of Edinburgh called Loanhead.

Theirs was an old terraced house with a long, narrow garden which backed onto a railway cutting. Every time we visited in the summer, Uncle Frank would say the magic words “want to go down to the garden Maxine?” This eight year old had no hesitation, and off we would go my young hand tucked in his old gnarled, gardeners’ one.

We would walk slowly down the long gravel path, stopping to admire the neat rows of vegetables; carrots, beets, turnip, lettuce and peas with me listening politely while he extolled the virtues of this variety or that. Then we would come to what we both knew was the real goal of this sedate stroll…..the strawberry patch! Uncle Frank would say with a twinkle in his eye, “well Maxine, and let’s see if there are any ripe berries today”. I needed no second bidding! And of course, there were always berries, large, luscious, sweet strawberries, ripe and warm from the sun. I would just brush off the soft, brown soil and pop them in my mouth, savouring their sweet juices. Uncle Frank and I would just grin at each other as he helped me eat my fill. Then with a satisfied sigh, we would move on to the raspberry canes, my next favourite stop!

When we reached the end of the garden, there was another source of satisfaction and not a little morbid curiosity on my part for I knew that under the beautiful rock garden there, lay the remains of their beloved pet dog “Tippy”, who had died many years ago. Uncle Frank would always stop for a few minutes here and pick out a tiny weed or two that had the temerity to take root.

Just over the rough stone dyke was the railway line. Uncle Frank had a bench here and I would stand on this and peek over the wall while he puffed away on his old pipe. There were steam engines then, great black puffing noisy monsters chugging by, what a thrill for a child! I would wait patiently for one to come by, belching out clouds of black smoke and would wave wildly to the engineers and passengers as they passed, they always waved back. Later, my pockets stuffed with peapods and my face stained with berry juice, we would return contentedly to the house and join my aunt and granny for tea and scones with strawberry jam of course!

The house, the people and the steam trains are long gone now but not my happy memories.

7 comments:

Karol said...

Oh, wow, beautiful story! So glad you put it down for us to enjoy! Karol

A Little Slice of Heaven said...

I just stumbled on your blog and it brought back so many memories. I was also born in Scotland about 14 miles from Edinburgh near Linlithgow in 1953.

I emigrated to South Africa in 1982and then returned to Scotland in 1999. But the pull of SA was to much as my grandchildren are here and so returned to SA in 2005.

Oh the memories of aunts and uncles, trips out in our old Ford car seeing what felt like far away places but which in fact were much closer or at least they seem so now. Please keep blogging and sharing those memories

slippingthroughtheworld said...

i've had a lovely visit in your blog and will definitely be back. i loved the garden and fruit stuff, brought back memories of brambles and strawberries of my own. you might enjoy a trip over to my biography blog - i've got music, film and cartoon clips and lots of early 50s memories.

http://ireneintheworld.wordpress.com

irene x

soubriquet said...

I read this story and smiled, suddenly transported back into the nineteen fifties, me a little boy, my soft toddler's hand in my grandfather's gnarly palm, as we set off on an adventure, exploring, each time as if it was the first time, the depths of his long garden, picking ripe loganberries, raspberries, he wiping the soil off freshly uprooted carrots and radishes, me eating them happily. It was truly the best of times. He would pick off flowers that were faded, uproot naughty weeds, we'd sit, watch the ponies in the field beyond, he'd smoke a cigarette, and eventually would pull the gold watch-chain that looped into his waistcoat pocket, and hand the warm, ticking pocket-watch to me, for me to open the shiny engraved cover, and tell him the time, or try to do that... It was ALWAYS time for tea!
And in the old farmhouse's kitchen, my grandmother would be dusting sugar over a cake, boiling plums, draping a damp linen cloth over a pan of bread-dough, which she'd set near the fire for the yeast to start its work, and the rise begin.
Thank you for sparking that little trip into forgotten corners of my memory...

Anonymous said...

Crunchy Granny... do you have anymore stories to share? I love reading your stories :D

limpingalong said...

Oh, yes, how I miss the Aunties!
First of all, the "Old Aunts" all died. They were from my Grandmother's generation and kept the family updated on the news from all of us. Sometimes my Mom would get one of the "round-Robin letters" and would read it to me over the phone. We knew all the details from the cousins. After they all died there really wasn't anyone to take their places. My Mom did write some and would occasionally get a letter but by then hand written letters were becoming a thing of the past.
Now my Mom is the only one left from her family and since my Dad died his brother-in-law is the only one left in his family. It seems like we only get together for funerals.

My favorite Aunt died about 4 years ago -- I miss her terribly! There are no aunts left and I am afraid my generation is not following in the footsteps of the past.

HopScotch said...

I'm so sorry its been so long since I have posted anything. I am going to try to write something on a more regular basis. I really appreciate all your kind comments on my stories. I only have one Uncle left now, and his wife my aunt is in failing health. Maybe we can be the aunts and uncles that our nieces and nephews might one day write kindly about?