Dear reader,
After I got divorced I went to live in Oxford and tried to find a job. My secretarial skills were minimal. I could just manage 120 words of shorthand and my typing was abysmal. So I enrolled at the College of Further Education and for several months I tried to improve. In fact my shorthand was very poor and needed prompt attention. It never got any better.
Anyway, I finally applied for a job in an Oxford College as a secretary. I sort of imagined that working in an Oxford College would be just the ticket, with wonderful interesting academics and lovely buildings to admire. As so often with imaginations of this nature it was not the case.
I managed to get a job as the Fellows' secretary in a well known college. The job was in a cupboard with hardly room to stand up in and the typewriter had seen better days. The dons themselves were a weird bunch, some very nice and some not so. There was a Greek who always wanted to be first in the queue for his correspondence to be typed, I was not in a position to argue so he always was first.
It was an enormous relief when I left after a year and probably the dons were relieved too. I wasn't cut out to be a secretary, I would rather wash up in a hotel, which I also did. Ah well...
*
From Francis Kilvert May 18th 1874 in Wiltshire
'Went with Dora at 3 o'clock to a picnic in the Marsh....... we played hide-and-seek in the wood and danced Sir Roger de Coverley under the oaks in the green glade near the keeper's lodge. Agnes and Edith made a pretty picture once for a moment as they stood together on the mound at the foot of one of the oaks, dressed alike sisterly in bright magenta skirts.
The sheets of bluebells were still in all their splendour and the pink rhododendrons were just beginning to show their blossoms.
*
Misconception
The woman thought when she left
the office building would explode,
blood from her willing heart
would drip from the ceiling,
pieces of her goodwill,
her ready smile,
possibly her arms and legs,
would drop into waste bins,
flow out of filing cabinets,
strew the carpet with bits of herself.
The atmosphere would be dank
with tears for the loss of her.
She knew her worth.
In the spring, Sandra met her.
Karen, from Accounts,
now has her job, she said.
She is brilliant, everyone loves her.
The woman walked away,
mantled in her goodness,
surprised at what poor judgements
people make.
*
With very best wishes, Patricia



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