View Poll Results: Please vote for your favourite entry

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  • Ladkyis post #2

    1 3.23%
  • jeeb post #3

    1 3.23%
  • Colin Rowledge post #4

    2 6.45%
  • deeree post #5

    2 6.45%
  • deeree post #6

    2 6.45%
  • stepives post #7

    0 0%
  • Mutley post #8

    0 0%
  • Jane Elderfield post #9

    0 0%
  • Thomasin post #10

    0 0%
  • Thomasin post #11

    1 3.23%
  • busyglen post #12

    0 0%
  • helachau post #13

    7 22.58%
  • Colin Rowledge post #14

    0 0%
  • pennydog post #15

    2 6.45%
  • Coromandel post #16

    0 0%
  • Elwyn Soutter post #17

    0 0%
  • AnnB post #18

    1 3.23%
  • Sue Mackay post #19

    0 0%
  • Mutley post #20

    7 22.58%
  • Colin Rowledge post #21

    0 0%
  • DaveinInskip post #22

    1 3.23%
  • pennydog post #23

    0 0%
  • Thomasin post #24

    1 3.23%
  • Mutley post #25

    1 3.23%
  • Sue Mackay post #26

    1 3.23%
  • Sue Mackay post #27

    0 0%
  • lesleys post #28

    1 3.23%
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  1. #11
    Beloved Friend RIP Thomasin's Avatar
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    Here's one which should be read with a Lancashire accent to make it rhyme:

    Joseph son of Joseph and Sarah
    Lees of Middleton Mill who
    departed this life September
    2nd 1810 aged 5 months.

    I was to my Parents as a Rose,
    Tender sweet and good,
    But soon you see Death call'd for me,
    And nip'd me in the Bud.
    Sadly, our dear friend Dorothy (alias Thomasin) passed away on Sunday, 17th. February, 2013.
    Footprints on the sands of time

  2. #12
    Always willing to share my ignorance... busyglen's Avatar
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    I found this one several years ago, and I think it is posted here somewhere.

    A Grave Mistake

    "After 8 years of searching the Parish Registers for a name to match the initials H.W.P on a stone slab in his church, the Rev. Phillip Randall of Eye near Petersborough, has solved the mystery.

    The initials stand for `Hot Water Pipe' "

    Glenys

  3. #13
    A fountain of knowledge
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    The following epitaph appears on a gravestone in Hughenden churchyard -

    "Here lies John Guy beneath the sod,
    Who loved his friends and feared his God;
    Also Mary, his wife"

  4. #14
    Settled in very nicely!
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    Oakville, Ontario, Canada
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    Thanked 135 Times in 102 Posts

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    One from my travels in the Wild West

    In Arizona was this one:

    Here lies Abner B Goode
    In his life he did no good.
    With his death, there ain'it much loss
    His wife can now carry on with his boss

    R.I.P Abner.

  5. #15
    Famous for offering help & advice
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    Thanked 305 Times in 296 Posts

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    How about a topical one?

    To the Memory of Everett Edward Elliott of the Heroic Crew SS "Titanic" Died on Duty April 15th 1912, Aged 24 years

    Each Man Stood at his Post while all the Weaker Ones went By,
    And Showed Once More to all the World how Englishmen should Die.
    If a picture paints a thousand words, a memory paints a thousand pictures.

  6. #16
    Coromandel
    Guest

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    Here's an unusual memorial in the form of a puzzle:

    http://www.
    flickr.com/photos/33514866@N00/401204813

    I can't take any credit for discovering this one (I read about it in a family history society journal some years ago) so don't think it should count as a competition entry!

    P.S. I have deliberately given a link to a site that doesn't show the solution. If you want to cheat you can find the answer elsewhere.

  7. #17
    Valued member of Brit-Gen
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    John Dryden (1631-1700) on his wife:

    Here lies my wife: here let her lie!
    Now she's at rest, and so am I.
    ELWYN

  8. #18
    A Delightful Devonshire Dumpling. AnnB's Avatar
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    My Mum told me this one many years ago, but I don't know where it came from - or even if it is 'real'

    Where'er you be,
    Let your wind go free.
    For holding it in,
    Was the death of me.

    Best wishes
    Ann

  9. #19
    Super Moderator Sue Mackay's Avatar
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    I can't claim credit for finding this one, as it was on the Internet, but there is apparently an MI at Dorchester Abbey in Oxfordshire which reads

    Here lies one who for medicine would not give
    A little gold; and so his life he lost;
    I fancy that he'd wish again to live
    Did he but know how much his funeral cost.
    Sue Mackay
    Insanity is hereditary - you get it from your kids

  10. #20
    Mutley
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    Here lies my Wife, in Earthy Mold
    Who when she Died did naught but Scold,
    Good Friends go softly, in your walking,
    Lest she should Wake and Rise up Talking

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