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Everyone supports Fanny Williams as little Renny becomes part of the Aberbryncraig story and causes a problem or two on his way, showing considerable ingenuity and originality. Mrs Mopalot sorts it all out again with the help of those who have caused all the difficulties, her husband, cocoa in bed, and above all, most of the population of Aberbryncraig in one way or another. The Summer Party is rather unusual this year.
In the year 1879, William and Jane Burns from Durham, England, migrated to Newcastle, Australia, in the hope of finding a better life for themselves and their two children, Joseph, aged three, and Elizabeth, aged one. Stormy seas, interspersed with weeks of boredom, made their three-month-long voyage on the sailing ship, William Stonehouse, anything but pleasant. William, like his father, was a coal miner and found work easily in a Newcastle colliery. During this time, he befriended a German immigrant, Wilhelm Zschachner, and learned that a new coal discovery had been made in the state of Tasmania. The thought of moving to Tasmania was challenging to the Burns family now that they had two additional children. Nevertheless, they repacked their furniture and treasures brought out with them from England and moved to remote Bruny Island, off Tasmania's southeast coast. Here, they were true pioneers. Between working the new coal mine, William and his still-increasing family cleared a parcel of land on Coal Point and built themselves a cosy home from axe-split palings. Sadly, William died young after a rock fall at the mine, forcing Jane to become a midwife in order to keep the family together until they reached adulthood and married. Joyce - the 'Bruny Island Girl' - was born in 1899 to Louisa, one of Jane's daughters, and this book tells the story of her remarkable life on the island before marrying Cecil Cutcliffe. Max Cutcliffe is one of their sons and the author of this book.
Imagine a bull and a sheep harnessed together at the same yoke. What would happen? The most likely thing would be utter chaos as they struggle to separate and go off in their own directions. The plough would slice dangerously about behind them, no furrow would be straight and in the end, the weaker animal would be trampled. This is the scenario evoked by Anselm on the day he was, controversially, made Archbishop of Canterbury. ""You are trying to harness together at the plough under one yoke an untamed bull and an old and feeble sheep. What will come of it?"" Anselm's question is the beginning of a remarkable story. What 'came of it', that is to say, what happened between the bull, William II, King of England; and the sheep, Archbishop Anselm, in the closing years of the 11th century, is one of the great untold sagas of the medieval period.
Everyone supports Fanny Williams as little Renny becomes part of the Aberbryncraig story and causes a problem or two on his way, showing considerable ingenuity and originality. Mrs Mopalot sorts it all out again with the help of those who have caused all the difficulties, her husband, cocoa in bed, and above all, most of the population of Aberbryncraig in one way or another. The Summer Party is rather unusual this year.