One of My Favorite Stories

Sugar-bowl 

Photos and text by Corey Amaro

This was the sugar bowl that shattered on the red tile floor when it fell from Mademoiselle Elise's hand back in 1916.

 

Locket man with beret 

 

This was Mademoiselle Hoped-to-be-Husband, Pierre-Louis. Often she told her children how handsome their father looked the day she placed her necklace around his neck and whispered in his ear, "Come back to me, Come back to me…" as he left wearing his beret that day long ago.

 

Medal

 

 

This was Mademoiselle Elise's medal the one Pierre-Louis had on the day a bullet came aiming towards his heart.

 

Medal-with-a-bullet-hole 

 

 

Pierre-Louis liked to tell his grandchildren that it wasn't the medal that saved his life, it was their grandmother's Elise's words whispered in his ear that day so long ago.

 

Repaired-cermanic

 

 

 

As time went on Elise had the sugar bowl repaired by the man who walked along the streets playing a flute. The flute's music was a signal to housekeepers that the porcelain repair man was in town.

At the table in the kitchen the porcelain repair man sat, gently drilling holes to wire the sugar bowl back together. He asked, "How did the sugar bowl break?"

 

 

Repaired-sugar-bowl 

 

"I was drying it when I received news that Pierre-Louis, my fiancé, had been shot. I didn't know then whether he was dead or alive. Months later, I found out that a medal I gave him had saved his life.

The sugar bowl you are working on… he gave it to me the day he left for the war, he told me it was to hold my sweet thoughts until he returned."

 

Painted-sugar-bowl 

As he worked he couldn't help notice how her eyes glistened. Happiness is not easy to come by, he knew that by listening to the stories as he repaired their broken hearts objects.

The shattered sugar bowl was restored, it had scars but they were no longer desperate wounds.

 

Sweet-thoughts

 

Seventeen months later Pierre-Louis returned.

Elise gave him the sugar bowl… 

 

 

Stories-in-the-sugar-bowl

 

Pierre-Louis saw the cracks, he traced them with his finger, with hidden anticipation he opened the sugar bowl, and saw that it was empty.

"Where are your sweet thoughts, I was hoping to read them when I returned." He didn't understand.

Elise told him, "Instead of sweet thoughts I prayed, I hoped, I cried, I longed, I waited… Instead I kept my fear inside the sugar bowl. Knowing if ever you came back to me my fear would leave and we could fill it with a life together."

 

Stories-in-the-sugar-bowl 

 

 

A few weeks later the medal slept in the sugar bowl.

 

 

Sweet-sugar 

 

 

Years later the grandchildren would open the sugar bowl lid, and unroll the notes of a life well lived.

 

 

Medal-with-bullet-hole 

Note:

Last Sunday I found this medal at the brocante. When I asked the dealer about the hole she told me it was from a bullet during WWI. On the same stand I found a sugar bowl, the dealer told me how a man use to go around villages repairing broken china…"Often they sang or played a musical instrument to let people know they were in town."

With those two tidbits a story came to mind.

 

 



Comments

39 responses to “One of My Favorite Stories”

  1. your imagination knows no boundaries and this wonderful tale brought tears and smiles. merci, corey

  2. I wish I could steal this story for my writing assignment on “fear”! It will inspire me to imagine my own.

  3. dancing kitchen

    Gorgeous story!

  4. Corey, I would buy any book you ever write. I would watch, countless times, any movie whose screenplay you ever write. I would listen to any song whose lyrics you ever write. You truly have a God given gift and you share it so freely through this blog. Thank you.

  5. Alan from Chicago

    Very nice story Corey

  6. Wonderful! Jamie V in MT

  7. denisesolsrud@hotmail.com

    love the story. i also have a piece that i bought years ago. it is like a vanity tray at 2 1/2″ x 4″ beautiful yellow roses. it is a french piece. it also has two of those repair clips. i cherish this piece as i know that someone thought enough of the piece to have it repaired. interesting that there was also someone that went around doing these repairs. Bestest,Denise

  8. A Canadian singer song writer, Sarah McLachlan sings:
    “Your love
    Is better than ice cream.
    Better than anything else that I’ve tried (…)
    Your love
    Is better than chocolate
    Better than anything else that I’ve tried…”
    so no sugar was needed in the sugar bowl.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpaKL0b4hAI&feature=related

  9. That is a beautiful story!

  10. Lovely story! You really need to be writing a book you know!

  11. do you plan to sell the teapot and metal on your site, by any chance? can you let me know, if you do. xoxo

  12. Corey, this is such a beautiful story…it stole my heart. Thank you for all your wonderful writing and sharing. You are truly gifted!

  13. how is it that one woman has received so many gifts from God? your talent is boundless. that was a very moving story.

  14. Forgive my ignorance, but are porcelain pieces still repaired nowadays? Does anyone here know of someone who does it? It might make for an interesting Saturday piece for your blog, Corey.

  15. Nice story, I liked how you wove two such different things into one solid story. I love the sugar bowl.

  16. Thank you for the generous comment!
    C

  17. Hi Lana
    I sold the teapot. And the medal I often wear.
    C

  18. xx Thanks Alan!
    C

  19. Donna you made me blush!
    C

  20. And I do love them!

  21. I’m enchanted by the story and the objects themselves.

  22. You weave the best tales!

  23. Goodness, Corey! Add storyteller to your long list of gifts!

  24. Cheryl Buttner

    A beautiful story, tender words, an eloquent reminder of time past and lives spent.
    I enjoyed the words threaded around the beautiful images.
    Thank you

  25. Your heart is so lovely. We can see it in your beautiful photographs and wonderfully woven words.
    Loved the story, you had me the whole time. 🙂

  26. What a touching story, and what a horrible war. In this age of ‘throw away objects’ I have never seen a mended piece of china. That in itself is tender and dear.
    Happy Mother’s Day, Corey.
    Best, Lisa

  27. Love your beautiful story! It is amazing to hold an object like your medal in your hands, feel its energy, and imagine the lives connected to it. Thanks for sharing!

  28. You are a master storyteller, Corey. Whether you’re spinning a web that draws us in about life in France and what you see there or one that came from the bits and pieces you find and connect them in a fanciful and often tender way into a well-crafted story. I am all ears and wait eagerly for the next one. Thanks for being a daydreamer.

  29. I love this story! The sugar bowl is very beautiful and the work of a repair man is amazing.

  30. Brenda L. from TN.

    You REALLY do have a marvelous talent for writing, Corey.This is a beautiful story! A little sad but so sweet in the end….and a beautiful sugar bowl.
    I have seen many repairs like this on some of my Grandmothers 1912 wedding china. She took hers to a jewelry store for repair in the 1920’s and I still have them all.

  31. Chris M

    …beautiful story…

  32. aaaaa….. 🙂 My kind of story…. beautiful!

  33. Now there’s an idea, a story book with brocante images!

  34. Hope you are alright!
    Greetings from Austria’s Wonderful Wild West,
    Merisi

  35. elena.maclachlan@gmail.com

    I love this! I often like to imagine the stories behind items that I find in the antique fairs here in California. You are truly gifted and I thank you for bringing that beautiful sugar bowl and the medal to life.

  36. Violet Cadburry

    A lovely story.

  37. Gail marie

    Perfect

  38. oh,Corey…I agree with Everton….your heart is so lovely. thank you
    missy from the bayou

  39. Hi Corey! I haven’t been by in ages! What a beautiful story and gorgeus photos of course!!

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