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French World War One bedroom of soldier who never returned | French World War One bedroom of soldier who never returned |
(1 day later) | |
The bedroom of a World War One soldier, killed on the battlefield almost a century ago, has been kept virtually untouched by successive owners of the house up to the present day. | The bedroom of a World War One soldier, killed on the battlefield almost a century ago, has been kept virtually untouched by successive owners of the house up to the present day. |
The first thing that strikes you is the bed: too small for an adult, its old-fashioned crochet coverlet is something a mother would tuck in around her child. | The first thing that strikes you is the bed: too small for an adult, its old-fashioned crochet coverlet is something a mother would tuck in around her child. |
Next to it, a bookshelf holds dozens of school textbooks - among them French literary classics and a schoolboy's book of grammar. | Next to it, a bookshelf holds dozens of school textbooks - among them French literary classics and a schoolboy's book of grammar. |
This small, sunny room, at the end of a sloping wood corridor, captures the moment in a young man's life just before he died; still surrounded by the memorabilia of childhood, yet already fighting - and dying - in a war. | This small, sunny room, at the end of a sloping wood corridor, captures the moment in a young man's life just before he died; still surrounded by the memorabilia of childhood, yet already fighting - and dying - in a war. |
Hubert Rochereau was 21 when he died on the battlefields of Flanders, an officer with the 15th Dragoons Regiment, killed in one of the last battles of World War One. | Hubert Rochereau was 21 when he died on the battlefields of Flanders, an officer with the 15th Dragoons Regiment, killed in one of the last battles of World War One. |
Propped on his pillow, memorial photo-cards show the young faces of him and his fallen comrades - one of them just 19 years old. | Propped on his pillow, memorial photo-cards show the young faces of him and his fallen comrades - one of them just 19 years old. |
His parents, grieving for their only son, kept his room almost exactly as he had left it. Their only addition was a small bottle of soil from the Belgian field where he died. | His parents, grieving for their only son, kept his room almost exactly as he had left it. Their only addition was a small bottle of soil from the Belgian field where he died. |
Successive custodians of this intimate museum have kept the tradition and, almost a century after Hubert was killed, his personal possessions are still laid out on his desk: two guns, two knives, and an opium pipe. | Successive custodians of this intimate museum have kept the tradition and, almost a century after Hubert was killed, his personal possessions are still laid out on his desk: two guns, two knives, and an opium pipe. |
A metal tub of English cigarettes sits among them, the slim white cylinders still smelling vaguely of tobacco. | A metal tub of English cigarettes sits among them, the slim white cylinders still smelling vaguely of tobacco. |
"I tried to smoke one," the current owner of the house, Daniel Fabre, tells me. "It wasn't very nice." | "I tried to smoke one," the current owner of the house, Daniel Fabre, tells me. "It wasn't very nice." |
Mr Fabre has kept the room exactly as it was when he took it over, but says he has little idea about the man whose memory he's preserving. | Mr Fabre has kept the room exactly as it was when he took it over, but says he has little idea about the man whose memory he's preserving. |
"I like to say I live in his house, but not with him," he told me. "I don't feel any kinship with him. He was young, a military officer, and I imagine him to be quite provincial, perhaps even narrow-minded. But it's part of the history of the house, so I keep it." | "I like to say I live in his house, but not with him," he told me. "I don't feel any kinship with him. He was young, a military officer, and I imagine him to be quite provincial, perhaps even narrow-minded. But it's part of the history of the house, so I keep it." |
The creaking piles of books reflect the life of a young man just embarking on the world: pot-boiler novels with lurid covers are stacked alongside German language books, and a slim pamphlet, covered in brown paper, preaching the evils of alcohol. | The creaking piles of books reflect the life of a young man just embarking on the world: pot-boiler novels with lurid covers are stacked alongside German language books, and a slim pamphlet, covered in brown paper, preaching the evils of alcohol. |
After almost a century, Hubert's blue uniform jacket, propped on a clothes-stand by the window, is falling apart. the sleeves almost totally eaten away. Black and white photographs pepper his desk, but no one at the house now remembers their faces. | After almost a century, Hubert's blue uniform jacket, propped on a clothes-stand by the window, is falling apart. the sleeves almost totally eaten away. Black and white photographs pepper his desk, but no one at the house now remembers their faces. |
A contract was written into the deeds of this old French manor house, stipulating that its future owners keep Hubert's room as it is for 500 years. | A contract was written into the deeds of this old French manor house, stipulating that its future owners keep Hubert's room as it is for 500 years. |
The contract is not legally binding, and Mr Fabre says he's not sure whether the room will survive another 400 years, but his little grand-daughter, giggling over an ashtray fashioned out of a horse's hoof, tells us she for one would never change it. |
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