Item 01: Ralph Ingram Moore letters, 10 February 1907-15 March 1918 - Page 27
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[Page 27]
4.
Quarters staff are on this boat.
The meals are grand after the ones we had been getting in camp. It is a pleasure to take a mouthful of food without feeling a lot of sand gritting between your teeth. The food is also better cooked & of better quality. We get butter and pickles every day, also porridge for breakfast. The way we are being fed, we should be as fat as pigs at the end of the voyage.
We don't look like soldiers now, more like firemen or engineers for the majority are in dungarees.
I will close this letter now hoping it will go ashore at Melbourne. Once we get away I don't suppose we will be allowed to as say much beyond how we are, but I will drop you a line whenever I get a chance. But you must not worry when you don't hear from me for considerable stretches. Remember no news is good news.
Love to all
Your affect. Son,
Ralph.