Yet there are no voices echoing except those of the tourists and employees; the only people on the staircases are distracted school children. Any carriage tracks are long since erased in the gravel. I stood on the Petworth House lawn and looked up at the windows with a vague hope that I might catch a glimpse of a former inhabitant, still lurking on earth. But the ghosts aren't there.
There is no feeling of being watched, no raised hairs on the back of my neck. And, strangely, I find this unsettling. These manors and castles feel uninhabited, abandoned, empty. Despite the painstaking restoration, preservation, re-creation, they present a facade of the past but cannot produce the past itself.
Of course that is the case, but I keep hoping--for what, exactly, I don't know. For Mr. Darcy to come striding around the corner? Not likely. I suppose I'm hoping to feel some kind of connection or realization or understanding of what life really was like. I'll keep hoping, hoping and pursuing. And it is this dogged pursuit of the past that is making me fall more and more in love with this country. Because I'm sure at some point I'll find it.
Petworth House |
Playing in Petworth House |
Adorable Penny! |
3 comments:
It really boggles my mind that real people actually lived their lives in places like this. It is real and so were they, no a movie set with actors. Quite different from our pioneer heritage of the western United States.
I can't even imagine trying to manage a household like this. They must have had hundreds of servants and grounds keepers. It certainly was a different kind of life.
love that picture of Penny- and her cute vintage-looking hat!
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