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            <title type="main">Letter from Terence Duffin to Edmund Duffin, 3 December 1915</title>
            <title type="sub">Letters 1916-1923</title>
            <author>Terrence Duffin</author>
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            <p>This work was originally published by Maynooth University in Ireland in <date>2017</date>. In 2026 this data, stored in a relational database was extracted and converted into this TEI/XML document.</p>
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            <publisher>Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities</publisher>
            <pubPlace>Vienna, AT</pubPlace>
            <date>2026</date>
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               <p>A letter from Terence Duffin (b. 1886) to his brother Edmund from the Front in France. This is an honest, chatty letter in which he describes the terrible weather conditions as well as day to day events and people he is serving with. He also enquires after friends and family members, before signing off as 'Terry'.This letter is part of a rich correspondence between various members of the Duffin family, a large prosperous family living in Strandtown, Belfast. Several family members served in the war, including Major Terence Duffin, who served as a staff officer with 107 Brigade, and later with Royal Irish Rifles; Major Charles G Duffin MC, Royal Field Artillery; and their sisters Emma, Celia and Dorothy who served as Voluntary Aid Detachments (VADS) in Egypt and France, and with the YMCA.</p>
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              <date>1915-12-03</date>
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               <item n="topic">World War I (1914-1918)</item>
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                3/12/15     Hd. Ors, 107 Bde, B.D.F    My dear Edmund   We have just finished with <lb/> the cold spell, and the snow which <lb/> was quite heavy has disappeared, <lb/> also the frost â it has now been <lb/> raining steadily for two days &amp; <lb/> the result is better imagined than <lb/> described as far as the trenches are <lb/> concerned â you are either up over <lb/> your thighs in water or up to your <lb/> knees in thick mud â fearfully <lb/> hard to walk through even let alone <lb/> live in â I often wonder how the <lb/> men can stand it â However the <lb/><seg type="unclear">'Baset'</seg> must be as badly if not <lb/> worse off in this part of <seg type="unclear"> their lives </seg>, which <lb/> is all, we have to comfort ourselves <lb/> with! Even I through out here <lb/>  
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              <lb/> approve sent out I now can have <lb/>music in the evenings!   Our <seg type="unclear">General</seg> is very cheery <lb/> and a splendid man all round <lb/> who <seg type="unclear">inspires</seg> you with absolute <lb/> confidence â you know that he <lb/> has little to learn as a <seg type="unclear">Brigadier</seg><lb/> â he has been extraordinary lucky <lb/> to have come <seg type="unclear">right</seg> through the war <lb/> without a scratch especially as <lb/> he has been through almost every <lb/> fight of importance you could <lb/> mention.   Capt. Day our new Brigade <seg type="unclear">Major</seg><lb/> is a good fellow too â an Irishman <lb/> from Clones, who was previously <lb/> the General's adjutant &amp; <lb/> has been with him from the <lb/> start â With two such experienced <lb/> men we should be all right!   I hear of big changes in <lb/> â the 15 <hi rend="superscript">th</hi> Battn. The Colonel has <lb/> gone home - Gordon is now in  
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              command and the adjutant <lb/> has reverted to our master.   You never know whether <lb/> your next step will be up or <lb/> down! Possible my next step <lb/> will be down â I wonder I have <lb/> held my <seg type="unclear">present</seg> for even as long <lb/> as I have!   The General goes on leave next <lb/> week and Day shortly after <lb/> him â I qualify about Jan <lb/> 1 <hi rend="superscript">st</hi> but it does not follow that <lb/> I get it.   I had rather a sad <lb/> letter from poor old Gen. Coachman <lb/> yesterday â He is at home with <lb/> nothing to do and apparently <lb/> feels it deeply â It was rather <lb/> unpaid letting him keep command <lb/> even out here and near ordering <lb/> him back.   I have had no letter <lb/>  
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              for some days but we have <lb/> been told that mails both ways <lb/> will be uncertain till after Xmas.   I got my <seg type="unclear">mailer</seg> channels <lb/> safely and was glad to have them.   I could do with a decent <lb/> pipe as I broke one and the other <lb/> is somewhat far through â You <lb/> might post me out one.   Glad to hear Olive will be <lb/> home for Xmas â I had a line <lb/> from her and also from Emma.  <seg type="closer"> Best love for all <lb/> Ever your loving   <hi rend="underline">Terry</hi> </seg> 
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               <persName>Terrence Duffin</persName>
            <noteGrp><note target="item__0622.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Terence Duffin to his father Adam, 29 January 1916</note><note target="item__0627.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Major Terence Duffin to Auntie B.</note><note target="item__0630.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Terrence Duffin to Ruth Duffin, 10 December 1915.</note><note target="item__0631.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Terence Duffin to Edmund Duffin, 3 December 1915</note><note target="item__0641.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Terence Duffin to Maria Duffin, March 1916</note></noteGrp></person>
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