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'Four Poplars' is about Clifford Davies' childhood when he was
brought up in the village of Wroxham in the Norfolk Broads in the
early years of the last century, the youngest child of the village
schoolmaster. He enjoyed a childhood of extraordinary happiness and
security. There was boating and swimming in the River Bure, which
still ran crystal clear (the Broads had not yet become a holiday
mecca). There were summer picnics on the river, messing about in
(and with) boats and games of pirates and explorers. At home there
was a great deal of music, singing and amateur dramatics. But life
was not easy. For two years during the First World War,
eight-year-old Clifford and his older brother had to work seven
days a week looking after the cattle on a farm because the labourer
had been called up. There was tragedy too; Clifford could never
forget the day in 1917 when his mother received a letter to say
that the eldest boy, away fighting in France, had been killed in
the trenches. In later years the Church beckoned, and Clifford went
on to a career as a Naval chaplain where he served both at home and
abroad, in ships and shore bases, from 1936 until 1962. He was
awarded the OBE (Military) in 1942 for his efforts to boost and
maintain morale on board HMS Despatch, sailing in the Pacific,
isolated and out of touch with UK. In 1959 he was appointed
Honorary Chaplain to HM the Queen. But memories of those first
golden years always drew him back to his childhood. In 1971 he
wrote the 'Four Poplars' as a memoir of those times and a tribute
to the village where he had known such happiness. The trees of the
title, which stood by the spot where Clifford and his chums used to
bathe, were a landmark which stayed with him throughout his life.
Forty years on and 31 years after his death in 1980 at the age of
74, Clifford Davies' family have resurrected his manuscript and
entrusted it to Memoirs Books to edit and publish. It is an
enchanting story of an England which has long gone.
All humans have an innate need and ability to communicate with
others, and this book presents successful approaches to nurturing
communicative abilities in people who have some type of
communication impairment. The contributors look at a wide range of
approaches, including intensive interaction, co-creative
communication, sensory integration and music therapy, for a variety
of impairments, including autism, profound learning disabilities,
deafblindness, severe early neglect and dementia. This wide
perspective provides insight into what it feels like to struggle
with a communicative impairment, and how those who work with and
care about such individuals can and should think more creatively
about how to make contact with them. Covering both the theory and
practical implementation of different interventions, this book will
be invaluable for health and social work professionals,
psychologists, psychotherapists, counsellors, speech and language
therapists, as well as researchers, teachers and students in these
fields.
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