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This is not you that lies before us, beloved Aunt, for you live on in our hearts, our souls, our minds as the with racquet and a ready smile, as the doting older sister with eyes shining like a proud spotlight on two little girls on a crowded stage, singled out and made special by your love. You do not lie here cold and lifeless, beloved Aunt, for you live on in the warmth of your laughter and your bright shining lively dancing eyes and your girlish peaches-and-cream complexion and in the memories of two small nephews in the endless summer of childhood conquering the diving tower at Jellicoe Baths or frolicking at Mission Bay and you capturing all our shared and happy memories with your trusty Box Brownie.
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Feb 26, 2015
Feb 26, 2015 at 4:00 PM UTC
BOX BROWNIE MEMORIES (for my Aunt Gladys)
This is not you that lies before us, beloved Aunt, for you live on in our hearts, our souls, our minds as the with racquet and a ready smile, as the doting older sister with eyes shining like a proud spotlight on two little girls on a crowded stage, singled out and made special by your love. You do not lie here cold and lifeless, beloved Aunt, for you live on in the warmth of your laughter and your bright shining lively dancing eyes and your girlish peaches-and-cream complexion and in the memories of two small nephews in the endless summer of childhood conquering the diving tower at Jellicoe Baths or frolicking at Mission Bay and you capturing all our shared and happy memories with your trusty Box Brownie.
Copyright Andrew M. Bell. I wrote this poem as my eulogy to be read at the funeral of my Aunt Gladys who died on Christmas Eve, 1997, aged 90. My mother's two older sisters never married and lived in their original home built from kauri in Epsom, Auckland with my grandmother until, one by one, they died. Gladys was the eldest of four children and was aged 16 when my mother was born. The other sister, Gwendolene, was only two years my mother's senior. My Mum was the baby of the family. Gwen was working when we would visit Grandma's as children, but Glad had retired and she would give Mum a break by taking us on all sorts of outings. My parents never owned a camera when we were growing up, but, thanks to Glad, many of our growing moments were captured in black and white on her trusty Kodak Box Brownie. My brothers and I loved our Aunty Glad with all our hearts and she loved us very much too.
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Feb 26, 2015
Feb 26, 2015 at 4:00 PM UTC
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