In ma
younger days, A warkit in the shipyairds, baith in ship design an in
management. Howanever, ther cam a day at the back end o the 1960s whan it
leukit like ma shipyaird wis on its wey oot an micht be gaun tae shut doon. The
ootcome o this wis me an ma faimly sailin oot tae Sydney, NSW, tae tak up a new
job as Senior Drafting Officer wi the Australian Shipbuildin Board. Oo wurnae
lang in settlin doon an endit up bidin in Campbelltown, an oor an a hauf fae
Sydney bi electric train.
Ma youngest
dauchter wis juist five year auld whan oo first got thare an gaed strecht intae
the primary scuil whaur she suin got tae be guid pals wi twa sisters. The
youngest yin o thaim wis in her cless. In nae time at aw she wis speakin braid
Strine, whit ye micht cry Australian Standart English. A didnae hae ony bother
unnerstaundin Strine masel an cuid aye mak masel unnerstuid excep whan oo war
in the shops on a Seturday an A hid tae spell ma name oot. The assistants aye
got the spellin wrang an A aye hid tae get ma dauchter tae spell it oot tae
thaim.
Aboot a year
efter oo arrived in Campbelltown, ma wife an masel wis doon the street yae
Seturday mornin an oo bumped intae the mither an faither o ma dauchter's twa
pals. Oo war haein a guid blether an the lassies' mither telt us aboot the time
they cam hame aw excitit aboot a new lassie in the cless an she cam fae
Scotland. They hid telt thaim that she cuid speak guid English but her Mum an
Dad cuidnae.
No lang
efter oo hid sattelt in Campbelltown, A hid been speirt tae tak up a pairt time
job lecturin tae sea gaun marine engineers aboot Ship Construction at Sydney
Technical College. This wis for ilka Wednesday nicht fae 6pm tae 9pm. The only
kinch wi this wis that the electric trains tae Campbelltown stopped rinnin at
7pm sae it meant A wad hiv tae get yin o the diesel "country" trains
leavin fae the Central Station at 9.15pm. It wis a guid job the Central wisnae
aw that faur fae Sydney Tech but it wis still a bit o a rush, parteeclar on the
first nicht. Whan A got thare, A seen aboot five pletforms sae A gaed strecht tae
the first yin an speirt the ticket lassie whit wis the pletform for the
Campbelltown train.
The ticket
lassie wis in her twenties an bonnie wi it an, efter A speirt her, she gied me
a smile as braid as Sydney herbour an said, "Noo hou wid A ken a thing
like that Jock?" Efter she seen ma mooth drap, she eikit, "If A wis
you A'd try number fower." A juist smiled back an said, "Thanks
hen!" Sae, thare wis me. A'd juist gien a lectur on "Ship Construction
For Marine Engineers" in whit A thocht wis ma best Strine an yon Scottish
lassie hid fund me oot nae bother at aw.
It wisnae
lang efter thon that yae denner time A wis haein a keek throu yin o the Sydney
buik shops an cam ower a buik cried "Let's Talk Strine!"
"That
yin wad dae juist the dab." A thocht.
A got torn
intae thon buik tae see if it wad mak me soond mair Strine in ma lecturs.
Whuther it did or no, A nivver fund oot but A ken that A nivver hid ony o ma students
girnin aboot no bein able tae unnerstaund me. Onywey, A fund thon buik gey
interestin an A mind yin bit whaur the author wis tellin the story aboot an
English author that wis ower in Sydney tae sign copies o his new buik. He wis
sat at a desk in the shop an thare wis a lang queue o customers waitin tae hae
thair buiks signed.
This wee
auld wifie got tae the tap o the queue an pit her buik doon on the desk. Athoot
leukin up, the author speirt, "Name please?"
"Emma chizzit?"
the auld wifie reponed.
Sae, the
author stertit tae screive, "To my good friend, Emma Chizzit."
"Naow!
naow!" said the wifie, "Emma chizz e beuk?"
"Jings!"
A thocht, "Even A kent that yin!"
Oo hid
sailed oot tae Australia fae wast tae east an, efter three year, oo decidit tae
sail fae wast tae east an see the ither hauf o the yird on oor wey hame tae
Scotland. Whan oo arrived back at the Waverley station, ma brither an some o
the faimly hid arrived wi the fishin boat's mini-bus tae tak us an oor luggage
hame.
Ma youngest
dauchter wis aicht year auld bi noo an wis hingin on tae ma haund as oo war aw
sclimmin up the Waverley steps haein a guid auld crack. She stertit pouin at ma
haund an speirt in braid Ausie Strine, "Dad! Dad! What does 'Ah dinnae
ken' mean?"