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[Page 534]

Parliament N.S.Wales

Cranbrook Cottage
Edgecliff Sydney
23rd August 1918.

My dear Geoffrey

The news of poor Bryan's glorious end has knocked everything else out of our minds for the moment. Mother & I are so desperately sorry for Auntie Mary & his sisters and brothers. After all the dear boy had gone through it seemed hard that he should have been sent to the Front again. Wounded & disabled again & again, he went back & back & back, simply because of the accursed undermining work that has been going on for the past few years in Ireland & Australia alike, & has resulted in a slackening of recruits, so that wounded men have to go back to the Front because there are none to take their places. I have written to Auntie Mary but I didn't know what to say in the face of such a sorrow. We remember how idle words seemed to be when we were overwhelmed by the loss of your own dear brother, & how the only real consolation lay in the knowledge that he had died gloriously for his God & his country & that he was happy for ever. So it is with Bryan, who – as we read in the cablegram that came yesterday – fell at the head of his men, & died instantaneously of shell shock, & won his reward. He like you and

 

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