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Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan
Small Things Like These by Claire  Keegan




Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan

She asks him to see if the nuns will find her baby. On a second visit to the convent, Furlong discovers a girl named Sarah Redmond locked in the coal shed. Wilson had not intervened, Eileen insists that it is nothing to do with them and they must not meddle in the nuns’ business. When he reports this to Eileen, stating that his own mother might have ended up there if Mrs. However, when Furlong arrives, he sees that the girls, some of whom are young mothers, are living in a state of punishment and squalor. The Good Shepherd nuns who own the convent also run a so-called “training school for girls” (26), as well as a laundry service that all the town’s wealthy residents patronize. One day, Furlong is making a fuel delivery to the convent that is separated from his daughters’ school by only a wall. Furlong feels that he was granted a lucky break, although not knowing his real father’s identity plagues him.

Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan

Wilson-Furlong was able to go to technical school, run his own business, and support a family.

Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan

Thus, with the encouragement of his makeshift family unit-his mother Mrs. Wilson, his mother’s Protestant employer, who allowed his mother, Sarah, to continue working there and encouraged Furlong in his education, even giving him a copy of The Christmas Carol. However, he was given good opportunities, thanks to the generosity of Mrs. This is, in part, because he feels like an outsider, as he was born to an unmarried domestic servant in conservative, small-town Ireland, where the Catholic Church runs all public institutions. He gives money to the needy and employs the new Russian and Eastern European immigrants whom others find suspicious.

Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan

Margaret’s, the only good school for girls in town, which is run by an order of nuns.įurlong is of a more compassionate, egalitarian bent than most New Ross residents, who are content to keep their heads down and “stay on the right side of people” (13) in positions of power, such as the wealthy and the Church. Although the Furlongs often struggle to make ends meet, he is hopeful about his intelligent daughters’ future and sends them to St. The protagonist, Bill Furlong, is a coal seller who is married to Eileen, and they have five daughters. It is December 1985 in the town of New Ross, County Wexford. Content Warning: The source text contains depictions of physical and emotional abuse.






Small Things Like These by Claire  Keegan