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            <title type="main">Letter from Douglas Campbell (later Major General Sir Douglas Campbell) to his sister Catherine Agnes Meta Campbell (later Wetherall), 28 October 1917</title>
            <title type="sub">Letters 1916-1923</title>
            <author>Douglas Campbell</author>
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             R.E. Mess.<lb/>Brompton Barracks,<lb/>Chatham.   28.10.17.transcription-editor    Dear old Twin,   How's the world treating you in Ireland?<lb/>Do write &amp; tell me all about everything. I don't know your<lb/>address so I'm sending this home to be forwarded on.<lb/>It's most frightfully cold here, even a new pair of fur lined gloves don't 
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             <lb/>keep the cold out. What it's like in the trenches, Lord only knows.<lb/>Poor old Roy will be having an awful time. Imagine existing for days<lb/>in a semi frozen porridge of Flanders mud, &amp; then being expected to feel<lb/>really cheery, &amp; fit for a real good bit of Hun bombardment.  And the advances too, I see they have to go through water up to their necks,<lb/>— cheery job for this weather, isn't it? 
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             You should have seen us this morning, I had to take a Company of about 70 <lb/>or 100 men to Church. There was a whole battalion of us, about eight Coys.. <lb/>And we marched off to Church, you can imagine me strutt<hi rend="superscript">ing</hi> along on my <lb/>own —- three paces ahead of the Company feeling an impossible blood. Of course <lb/>the band played us all the way there, &amp; when I'd got my men in, I wandered up
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             <lb/>to the Colonel, gave him a crashing salute &amp; said ''E Company all correct ,Sir''.<lb/>Then we went in, &amp; the R.E. violin (string) band played us through the service<lb/>starting with the ripping Intermezzo Ave Maria, out of <seg type="foreign">Cavaliera Rusticana,</seg><lb/>&amp; ending up with the Marseillaise. I got one or two real good bellows on in<lb/>the hymns. Then we marched back saluting the General on the way, &amp; also<lb/>the guard, &amp; formed up in a hollow square, I actually found my way all right,<lb/>&amp; about 7 or 8 medals were presented by the General followed by a real Irish 
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             <lb/>'' Handshake ''. Then we broke off. That's what happens every Sunday<lb/>morning, except for the medals, only of course I'm not always on parade.<lb/>Often I go to the Hagues for the weekend, at least not frightfully often,<lb/>but just often <seg type="del">deleted text</seg> enough not to tire them out. Nice girls, both of them,<lb/>have you ever met them? Of course you knew May in Killybegs years<lb/>ago, but doubtless you've forgotten her.  I heard from Dad this morning, very fit &amp; awfully happy building huts<lb/>by starting on the roof &amp; putting in the foundations afterwards. 
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             Dug ( First World War)  <lb/>Delightfully original, &amp; apparently successful.  Poor old Italy is getting it in the neck, they are clever devils those Germans,<lb/>I daresay you noticed about 10 days ago a mysterious retirement on the<lb/>Russian front, quickly followed by the deuce of a push against<lb/>poor old Cadoma. Obvious they've shifted practically every man<lb/>across, but think of the staff work; a push like that worked out &amp;<lb/>prepared in 10 days. It really is marvellous, but the poor Engineers, it gave<lb/>them absolutely no time to do their bit. 
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             Here's a dirty piece of paper but you won't mind. As you've gathered I'm <lb/>merely writing this as I've nothing to do, as I thought you might as well <lb/>be bored too. Tear it up when you're tired.   Brother Hun's got the wind right up this time, the moon's full on Tuesday, <lb/>&amp; only one raid, in which he came off distinctly second best. <lb/>Swan &amp; Edgar's are pretty well done in in Piccadilly.
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             It's quite a common thing to all motor cars &amp; buses &amp; I believe motor cycles<lb/>drifting about the place with semi-inflated gas bags on top. Petrol is<lb/>impossible to get, so they're using gas-engines. I mean people don't<lb/>even stare at them now they're so used to them. And it was only a<lb/>few weeks ago that one of the pages in Punch was devoted to the new<lb/>methods of car driving, &amp; gasbags were put as the principal ways, &amp;<lb/>certainly the most amusing. Have come to an end of paper, so you're released.  Dug. 
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            <noteGrp><note target="item__0537.xml" type="mentions">Letter from George A. Lyons to the Honorary Secretary of Sinn Féin, 5 April 1916</note><note target="item__0538.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Seán Mac Diarmada to Tom Clake, 5 April 1916</note><note target="item__0633.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Michael O'Riordan to Bishop E. T. O'Dwyer, 12 May 1916</note><note target="item__0634.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Eoin McNeill to Bishop E. T. O'Dwyer, 18 April 1916</note><note target="item__0637.xml" type="mentions">Letter from R. Barry O'Brien to Bishop Edward Thomas O'Dwyer, 12 February 1916</note><note target="item__0928.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Mairín Ní Ribhógh to James Ryan, 2 August 1916</note><note target="item__2429.xml" type="mentions">Letter from ‘One of the Hard Pressed’ to Mr. Samuel, 28 July 1916</note><note target="item__2636.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Emma Duffin to her aunts, 9 January 1916, </note><note target="item__2667.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Arthur to Bishop E. T. O'Dwyer, 14 January 1916</note><note target="item__2668.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Fr. C. F. Maher to Bishop E. T. O'Dwyer, 16 April 1916</note><note target="item__2676.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Michael O'Riordan to Bishop E. T. O'Dwyer, 23 October 1916</note><note target="item__2678.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Michael O'Riordan to the Right Rev. Monsignor Denis Hallinan, 23 October 1916</note><note target="item__3161.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Peter Mooney to his sister Katie Mooney, 4 February 1916.</note><note target="item__3872.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Father Willie Doyle S.J. to Fr Provincial Thomas V. Nolan, 25 January 1916</note><note target="item__3873.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Father Willie Doyle S.J. to Fr Provincial Thomas V. Nolan, 25 February 1916</note><note target="item__3881.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Father Willie Doyle S.J. to Fr Provincial Thomas V. Nolan, 31 December 1915</note><note target="item__3885.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Father Willie Doyle S.J. to Mai, 22 January 1916</note><note target="item__3889.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Father Willie Doyle S.J. to Mai, 11 February 1916</note><note target="item__4337.xml" type="mentions">Letter from MW O'Reilly to 'A Cara', 1 June 1916</note><note target="item__4477.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Francis M. Shaw to Fr Provincial Thomas V. Nolan, 1 March 1916</note><note target="item__4479.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Francis M. Shaw to Fr Provincial Thomas V. Nolan, 10 March 1916</note><note target="item__5368.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Nora Ring to Susan Daly, March 1923</note><note target="item__5396.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Douglas Campbell (later Major General Sir Douglas Campbell) to his sister Catherine Agnes Meta Campbell (later Wetherall), 28 October 1917</note><note target="item__6494.xml" type="mentions">Letter from William Upton Tyrrell to Victoria Mary Tyrrell, 19 November 1919</note><note target="item__6611.xml" type="mentions">Letter from Mary McDonagh to her daughter-in-law Annie McDonagh, early 1920</note></noteGrp></place>
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