'Poverty is a very exacting teacher and I had been taught well' The
post-war urban jungle of the Glasgow tenements was the setting for Molly
Weir's childhood. From sharing a pull-out bed in her mother's tiny
kitchen to running in terror from the fever van, it was an upbringing
that was cemented in hardship. Hunger, cold and sickness was an everyday
reality and complaining was not an option. Despite the crippling
poverty, there was a vivacity to the tenements that kept spirits high.
Whether Molly was brushing the hair of her wizened neighbour Mrs MacKay,
running to Jimmy's chip shop for a ha'penny of crimps or dancing at the
annual fair, there wasn't a moment to spare for self-pity. Molly never
let it get her down as she and the other urchins knew how to make do
with nothing. And at the centre of her world was her fearsome but loving
Grannie, whose tough, independent spirit taught Molly to rise above her
pitiful surroundings and achieve her dreams.