For many of us, childhood memories are especially intense.
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Time seems to stretch, to last for ever.
This seems to be the case for writer Judith Wallace.
Some of the most intense and lyrical pieces in her memoir Memories of a Country Child-hood relate to her early childhood growing up on Ilparran, a large station to the west of Glen Innes.
Ilparran is only 18 miles (29k) from Glen Innes. Today one would pop into the car without thinking. But even in the 1930s when Judith was a child, visits to town were rare.
The old stations were self-contained worlds, villages. There was the inside (life in the big house or homestead) and then the outside (life on the property outside the big house). Beyond that was the rest of the world.
Up to World War II, most stations retained domestic staff - cooks, maids, nannies - who looked after the inside. This was a more formal world with marked class distinctions.
The first part of Judith’s book records this life from the viewpoint of the child. Initially the focus is on life in the house and immediate surrounds, but progressively widens as the growing child is able to explore the property around the house.
A turning point comes when she and her sister are given ponies. Now they can explore still more widely.
World War II brings major changes as staff are drawn away by the conflict.
Outside staff are partially replaced by Italian POWs, inside staff by the family.
Judith’s English mother takes over the cooking, using skills originally learned at Finishing School.
Meals acquire a distinct French flavour as plain mutton and vegetables are replaced by food encrusted in rich cream based sauces.
The young Judith takes responsibility for the necessary milking, rising at 5.30am to tramp across the sometimes black-frost ground to gather the Jersey cows.
The girl enjoyed it, resting her head against the warm side of the patient cows for protection from the cold.
Then, milking done, she carries the pails back to the warm kitchen where bacon is cooking.