Here are two of my great aunts, both of them Jersey women. They lived with us in the early 1960s.
Marie-Louise (left) we knew as Auntie Marsie. She was born in 1882. Her sister Clementine-Louise (Auntie Ti-Ti) was born in 1874.
The only unusual aspect of the shot is the apparent absence of Marsie's cigarette.
There were times when it was a challenge to see across the room through the nicotine haze.
This has to be early afternoon, the traditional time for a rest after a busy morning of domestic chores.
Both were avid readers, fans of long-gone popular magazines such as Tit Bits, Reveille and John Bull.
They relished a racy read and, no surprise, my brothers and I devoured the mags as soon as the aunts were out of the room.
Loads of celebrity gossip. I remember reading a spicy series on the rise and rise of Soho strip-club supremo Paul Raymond. I would have been about ten.
Marsie, in particular, appreciated the occasional saucy frisson. According to family legend she once snapped her library book shut, muttering: 'This is disgusting!'
'Whatever's the matter?' queried my mother.
Marsie reopened the volume and whispered the offending passage in her best pas devant tones: 'The Chinese shopkeeper stood at the counter, his abacus before him. Idly, he fingered its little balls.'

Titi stands behind her little sister. But which one is Marie Louise? I think she's the youngest here. But the sister on the right has her gaze exactly as I recall it when she was an old lady.
The short hair would have been unusual in England at that time - but was the style for girls in French-influenced Jersey - so my mother told me.
There's a strong possibility that the third little girl is my grandmother, Gladys Marguerite (Daisy) who died in 1936 - so, sadly, I never knew her.
2 comments:
I can see Marsie's handbag with her knitting in it beside her chair. In my imagination (with the stress on imagination) I see her smoking, knitting and reading at the same time! Curiously now the smell of cigarette smoke does not transport me back to childhood, whereas the sight of a bodice-ripper romantic novel takes me straight back to that sitting room with Aunties Marsie & Ti-ti!
Thank you!
Can you spot pic of you on mantlepiece?
Ti-ti is reading the Express. I can just make out the Cummings cartoon!
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