One of my Favorite Brocante Finds, and a story to bring it to Life

Sugar-bowl

 

 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 handed 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 hidden inside of a life well lived.

 

 

Medal-with-bullet-hole 

 

Note:

A few years ago 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."

My friend Allison is staying with us, she saw my collection of rosaries and medals and asked about this one… I told her I would repost this story to explain the hole in the medal.

 

 



Comments

10 responses to “One of my Favorite Brocante Finds, and a story to bring it to Life”

  1. You tell stories that touch the heart.

  2. I like this story… I am sure there are many untold stories of life and love during the world wars.
    About forty years ago, we moved to Florida. While taking a walk, I met a dear lady in the next block. She was
    in her 70s and quite regal looking. When I got to know her, I learned her story. Her name was Marie Louise and she had grown up in France… maybe it was the Burgandy region… I am not sure. She had always wanted to come to America. During WW I, she met an American soldier in her area. He had immigrated from Greece to America, and soon after found himself as a soldier in the war. I don’t know their love story, only that they were married and he took her to New York City to live. She left her parents and her only sister, and only got back to France one more time in her lifetime. Her husband worked for the post office, and she had been trained to make corsets while a teen ager in France. So that is what she did in New York City. She ended up working for high end stores there. And one time she was asked to make a corset for the Duchess who married the King who abdicated the throne in England. She personally measured and made it for her, and commented that she did not care for the woman. Marie Louise never had any children, but did have a miscarriage. When they retired, they moved to Florida and enjoyed life together. Her husband planted orange trees and an avocado tree. He died before I met her. I would visit her often, and take her to her doctor appointments. She gave me some lovely orchid plants that she had for some years and did not want to care for anymore, and I still have them and they still bloom, and are more than fifty years old. I still think of her from time to time, and I wonder if she ever regretted leaving her home in France. I was so happy to have known her and become her friend.
    I know this is long… feel free to delete it if you want… I just wanted to share this story with you.
    Jann

  3. Just shed my second tear today…. This is so beautifully crafted; I know of both, the “shot-through” medaillons and the repaired china and your story conveys so much warmth and emotion. (The first tear way for joy over being able to cele brate Hero Husband’s birtday today. I’m so lucky to be with the Love of my Life).
    Also thanking you for the news of Jean-Louis. I still think of your friends who have become our friends in thoughts as well and prayers go up still also for him as well as Annie and Thierry (? I just have maybe lost his name?).
    Wishing you a day as beautiful as mine is going to be – my 2015 motto “SMILE” is working a treat so far… 🙂

  4. Jann, why would anybody want to delete this beautiful tale??? Certainly not Corey….. Thank you for sharing this treasure.

  5. Thank you for sharing your story, I would never ever delete a comment unless it was hurtful towards someone.
    xxxxx

  6. I knew there was a reason I was saving my late mother-in-law’s sugar bowl (that looks so much like the one in this blog). My daughter will now receive her beloved grandmother’s sugar bowl with this post and a note about ‘Grandma Ruth’.
    Thank you so much for the inspiration, Corey!

  7. Jann, love this story!

  8. Such a nice surprise to see “‘my” sugar bowl. I am the lucky owner of this beautiful sugar bowl and creamer purchasing it from Corey’s shop. A copy of this story lives inside the little pitcher which gets read by others when they ask why there is “paper” in my pitcher when they start to fill it. I like to imagine others reading your story and treasuring these long after I am gone.

  9. REALLY touching this story…………..thanks for re-posting!

  10. Corey, I was confused by this post… After reading it to the end, I thought it was a lovely story that you made up — “what may have been” — and assembled treasures to illustrate the story. But after seeing the picture with the rolled up notes, the story was in the notes. Were the picture and medallion the actual ones from the story in the sugar bowl?
    Utterly beautiful, in any case.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *