« Reply #25 on: Saturday 10 February 07 01:43 GMT (UK) »
I must be the softest of all of you. I read through the local obituaries every week and have done so for years. I read the poems and verses and if someone has lots of entries I find myself crying for the family. Many a time my husband has come in from work and said in an exasperated way 'Well did you know them?' and when I say 'no', he asks why I am getting so upset about it. I don't know why maybe it is because I feel for those who have lost a loved one. My daughter has now started doing the same thing. She will ring up and say 'Ah! mum did you read that in the obits about the little baby' then we have a little chuckle at ourselves for being so sensitive.
Seems so silly really, but I like to think we are in contact with human feelings and not getting cynical and just accepting the deaths of unknown people. In the 1800's so many people died tragically that I think it became a way of life for some and they became hardened to the reality, like doctors do. In my family tree there were so many children that died it makes you wonder how their mums carried on and went on to have more children that died too. It is so sad.
Pennine
Bell, Brodsworth, Felkirk, Wath-Upon-Dearne, Yorkshire<br />Bright, Eyre, Jessop, Wilkinson, Sheffield, Yorkshire<br />Fielding, Lound Retford, Lincolnshire and Sheffield, Yorkshire<br />Law, Felkirk, Wath-Upon-Dearne, Yorkshire<br />Lister, Flockton, Wath-Upon-Dearne, Yorkshire<br />Mitchell, Langsett, Nr. Penistone Yorkshire.<br />Walton, Cudworth, Barnsley Yorkshire.<br />Stanger, Lincolnshire, Northamptonshire, Yorkshire.<br />Gratwick, London and Kent<br />Fahy, Limerick, Southern Ireland