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Written by John Haugh
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Friday, 07 July 2006 |
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Grandad’s
chair stood by the fireside: it was a high-backed armchair with sugan seat and
cushion. When Grandad was in bed – often
enough later, when he was unwell – Mother sat in it sewing or reading.

I
had my own little sugan chair specially made for me soon after Mother and Mick
brought me to Shanahea. The other
chairs stood around the table and under the window. The table had an oilcloth cover and the
freshly-baked bread gave forth its wholesome aroma when placed upon it.
Tucked
in behind the door stood the dresser. Its smoke-darkened wood vividly contrasted with the gleam of colourful
delphs, saucers and plates. Against the
opposite wall stood the settle bed which served as a seat by day and a bed by
night. It served its country well too
during the Black and Tan days when it gave a few short hours rest to some of
the “Boys” in the Flying Columns.
A
clothes press was set into the wall near the fireplace, over which the small,
red-globed lamp illuminated the picture of the Sacred Heart – vying in
importance with the glow from the Heart.
The
dark brown thatched roof was low, the rafters and cross-beams contrasting sharply against the upper shadows. Two or three sides of home-cured bacon
usually hung from the cross-beams where the salt and smoke added greatly to the
flavour of many a bacon and cabbage dinner. The floor was flagged and grey, contrasting with the light brown of the
chairs and table and the ochre of the walls.
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