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Conger Reynolds newspaper clippings, 1916-1919

Clipping: ""Desired Burial At Sea Without Dismal Trappings"" Page 2

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MRS. MALONE AND THE CENSOR. (By Edgar Guest.) When Mrs. Malone got a letter from Pat, She started to read it aloud in her flat. "Dear Mary," it started, "I can't tell you much. I'm somewhere in France, and I'm fightin' the Dutch. I'm chokin' wid news thot I'd like to relate, But it's little a soldier's permitted t' state. Do ye mind Red McPhee-well, he fell in a ditch An' busted an arrm, but I can't tell ye which. "An' Paddy O'Hara was caught in a flame An' rescued by-Faith, I can't tell ye his name. Last night i woke up wid a terrible pain. I thought for awhile it would drive me insane. Oh, the suff'rin I had was most dreadful t' bear! I'm sorry, my dear, but i can't tell ye where. l The doctor he gave me a pill, but I find It's conthrary to rules t' disclose here the kind. "I've been t' the dintist an' had a tooth out, I'm sorry t' leave you so shrouded in doubt, But the best I can say it that one tooth is gone. The censor won't let me inform ye which one. I met a young fellow who knows ye right well, An' ye know him too, but his name I can't tell. He's Irish, red headed, an' there with th' blarney, His folks once knew your folks back home in Killarney." "By gorry," said Mrs. Malone in her flat. "It's hard t' make sinse out av writin' like that. But I'll give him as good as he sends, that I will." So she went right to work with her ink well and quill, An' she wrote, "I suppose ye're dead eager for news, You know when ye left we were buyin; the shoes; Well. the baby has come, an' we're both doin' well. It's a -. Oh, but that's somethin' they won't let me tell." (Copyright, 1918, in America by Edgar A. Guest.)
 
World War I Diaries and Letters