Monday 16 July 2007

What I Did On My Holidays

I was asked to write about the above, and, ever the class swot, I of course complied. So what did we do? Nothing different, probably, to millions of other families in the summer months. We stood in long, weary lines at airport security, no-one daring to moan (except littlest, natch) and all grimly aware of why the extra precautions are necessary. I forgot to take my nail scissors out of my make-up bag AGAIN, and lost yet another pair, and we drank too much coffee and got hot and headachy in the weird micro-climate of Stansted. We sat on the plane for an interminable 2 1/2 hours before we were cleared by air traffic control, and quelled those reminders that we should have driven that popped into our heads – we were seduced by the cheap tickets, as ever. The children ate too much chocolate and felt sick; we all got fractious and cross waiting for the air-con to kick in in the hire car, and got lost on the ring road of a strange southern French city. We spent the odd morning driving around aimlessly, having taken the wrong road to some out-of- the- way destination, spent too long stocking up in the Intermarche and keeping the children from their swim. We blew a tyre on a track that forded a stream and while my husband did the manly thing, the children and I counted fishes in the water and watched a heron. We listened to the crickets and drank too much cheap and robust local wine (the adults) and ate too many pain au chocolat (all of us). We swam in rivers that came straight down from the mountains and should have been ice-cold, but were deliciously warmed by the sun and felt like a tepid bath. The children played under a baby waterfall and made dams and spotted lizards. We sat out in restaurant courtyards lit by fairy lights until far too late, and were awakened by warm sun in the morning. We lay in hammocks and read, we took a steam train into the mountains and wandered round markets in fortified renaissance villages. We sat out under the stars, opened another bottle of wine and talked about the property we’d seen in the local estate agents. We watched with pride as J said ‘bonjour’ and ‘merci’ to everyone and even asked for an ice cream with the most perfect accent, and cringed when K announced, with her usual loud 3 year old assurance, that the French were very silly for not speaking English.

One memory won’t leave my head, however, and wasn’t anything that we captured on camera. On the way back from a trip one day, we took a detour down a dusty track, interested to see what the monument was that was signposted from the road. We parked the car in the hamlet and walked off down a path, surrounded by stone garden walls with hollyhocks peeping over. The day was hot and still, though with lengthening shadows, orioles sang in the oak forest around us, inky-blue dragonflies and sulphur-yellow butterflies darted above our heads. We came out into a meadow, fringed by oaks and horse chestnuts, neighboured by olive groves, overlooked by a few ancient stone houses which felt private and watchful. The small monument was in the far corner, with a brass plaque telling us how in 1944, with an SS division quartered in one of the old Mas in the hamlet, a resistance group had tried, and failed, to launch an attack. As a reprisal, the Nazis had taken everyone in the hamlet that day, some 25 people in all, including the children and the old people, and shot them, in the meadow. You couldn’t hear the click of the guns being loaded now, of course, though I’m sure that somewhere, preserved for eternity, the horror of that day is played out over and over. We could only hear the drone of the bees and the sound of my children swishing through the long grass, not really understanding the actions of years ago, intent on the present. The war seemed boring to me as a child, a long way back in the past, the preserve of grainy black and white footage and endless repeats of The Great Escape and Bridge on the River Kwai (which I adore now, of course). Yet now, sixty three years ago seems less than a heartbeat in time.

39 comments:

Maggie Christie said...

Lovely blog. The holiday sounded bliss and I loved K's comment! Three year olds are a verbal accident looking where to happen. As for the story of the memorial - 'the click of the guns' sent a shiver down my spine. You write so beautifully. xxxPM
PS: First to comment! It looks like I was lying in wait for this one (I was!)

Sally Townsend said...

Beautifully written, loved the account of the journey and the poignant moment remembering the bravery and courage of the resistance movement.

Cait O'Connor said...

Long-awaited and lovely as ever.

Caitx
Whereby in France were you?
(That's Welsh-speak!)

Rob Clack said...

That is an exceptional post. As I read your description of your holiday I was getting ready to post a rather predictable comment about how lovely it sounded.

Then I got to the memorial bit.

Don't really feel competent to say anything now.

Unknown said...

Wonderfully written and perfectly described. Do you know if the monument you saw was in Orador sur Glane (not sure of spelling) as my parents live near there and it's a small village which has been left exactly as it was when the nazis took all the residents away to be shot. It's a heartbreaking and eerie place to look around - especially when you see the old, rusted pushchair inside the church.
I have some photos of the village and may blog about it one day as I believe it's an important part of European history.
Glad you had such a lovely holiday.

Anonymous said...

A holiday I'm sure you will remember for a long time to come.

Crystal xx

bradan said...

We have also come upon such memorials whilst in France. It sent a shiver down my spine to read this and as you say, sixty three years ago does not seem so long.
The rest of your holiday sounds idyllic though.

countrymousie said...

Great blog as usual.
The memories of war in Europe pull you up sharp dont they.
Dad was in the battle for Monte Cassino, Italy where tens of thousands were killed - too many to bury he said as you marched on. Some they had to stop and shoot to put them out of their misery.A massacre basically. How do you ever get over that I often ask myself. He was 19 at the time!

DevonLife said...

Gosh you've caputed the holiday of my dreams here. Obv the fun filled bits, not so much the poignant ones, it does take your breath away the fact that these things happened so recently. And as my more globally aware friend L says, someone in the world they are happening right now, but we will never hear about it. Lord, sorry to have taken a blue bent.

Blossomcottage said...

Wonderful blog and you sound as if you really enjoyed yourself. I hate the thought of war, but I am still very interested in how and what happened in the two World Wars, my husband is very knowlegeable and I am learing to appreciate more and more what our fathers and grandfather, mothers and grandmothers did for us all. Well written as usual.
Blossom

bodran... said...

A lovely blog,apart from the airport bit, never been in one and don't want to, one day i'll drive over and see these sites.xx

CAMILLA said...

Lovely blog SM, and beautifully written.

Camilla.x

Bluestocking Mum said...

Ahh... good to have you back SM.

Beautifully written, as always, sounds like you had a great time.
warm wishes
xx

Un Peu Loufoque said...

We have village upon village here where the same thing happenned, it makes the heart freeze.

Eden said...

What a wonderful blog, so atmospheric and thoughtful and poignant.It makes me eager for two things 1) to get on to the ferry to France on Friday 2)to read more of your blogs when I get home!
Need to get packing.

Norma Murray said...

How moving and how recent. yes, the war was ages ago when I was a child and only yesterday now.

@themill said...

Wonderful blog and beautifully written as always.

Ska, not a good mother but working on it said...

Welcome back!
We are off to France next week (so long as Rosie is well enough which she may not be I fear).

For two years running we have taken the kids to the Canadian Memorial just outside Caen on one of the five landing beaches (Omaha?). And each time have been amazed at their reactions to it. They are fascinated and each have a different reaction - the vastness of the war, the privations of the children, going so far away from home to be evacuated plus the interest from the boy in the guns and numbers killed.
And on each occasion we have had to drag them away so that we don't miss the ferry home. I would recommend taking children to one of these (the American cemetery outside Cambridge is similar in may ways). I always have to fight back the tears, thinking each time how each name is someone's son, or husband or nephew etc. My nephew is in Iraq now....

Tattieweasle said...

It is one of the highlights of my web life to read your blogs you put so much emotive colour in them; such shading of the emotions - it's whats I love about them so much.
I love the balance of this one... welcome back!

Tattieweasle said...

God! My English is awful!!!!!!!! and phraseology crap this evening - my English teacher Mrs Punter would blanche!
Perhaps this sounds better: Your writing is inspiring!

Elsie Button said...

your holiday sounded absolutely wonderful. lovely descriptions - i felt quite envious! your description of the monument really made me think... i wonder what the war will mean to our children... to us it seems quite long ago (yet only 63 yrs) but to them...

Exmoorjane said...

Oh SM, that sounds just idyllic.... It sounds like you have the knack of holidaying, which we are yet to master..... yours sounds like the holiday we always aspire to - and never quite achieve.
The memorial though - shivers down spine indeed. I have just been writing a bit in M's memoir about an experience her mother had in Italy during the war when the men from the village were all lined up and shot....horrible.
You are a very talented and atmospheric writer. jxx

Exmoorjane said...

PS forgot to say I love the idea of a house dreaming.....it makes perfect sense to me....

Faith said...

Well written as always, SM. The bit about the memorial reminded me of when we were at Culloden - i could sense the atmosphere and bloodshed from years gone by.

Kathleen said...

Blue dragonflies and yellow butterflies, oaks, olive groves, baby waterfalls...it sounds like the stuff magic is made of! Thanks for writing this!

muddyboots said...

really, really, good blog, fascinating from start to finish. oh the joys of air travel...the wonders of cheap red plonk... and france of course

Elizabeth Musgrave said...

what a wonderful blog. i have not read you for a bit and was so pleased to catch up. we have had holidays so like this i kept nodding my head, including the memorial which we visited when the kids were early teenagers. thanks for bringing it all back so strongly.

Kitty said...

Absolutely beautiful - worth waiting for.

Pig in the Kitchen said...

Your holiday sounds lovely, and it's always very comforting to hear that other people have trouble getting up to speed with holiday fun...the intermarche scene sounded very familiar.

The meadow...how awful. There are war monuments in almost every village in France, I often stop the car and gaze with the children and intone about the war. But the monuments don't stop it happening do they? If ever we're allowed to drive through Iraq in peacetime (what a ridiculous thought), how many monuments will we see?

Jan said...

Not blogged much lately but read yours and as ever, appreciated the great writing...

Posie said...

Sounds like you had a lovely holiday, apart from the initial delay on the plane. I hate planes these days.
The monument sounds as if it is a very peaceful place, evoking memories of a horrific time, and yet reminding everyone of their bravery.

annakarenin said...

Mmm yes we have decided to opt for car travel atleast until youngest two can carry their own luggage and hopefully not get lost or stuck in an escalator( as did no 2 when we flew to Spain many years ago).

The holiday sounded idylic and not what I wanted to hear at this moment surrounded by the weather from hell and no hope of a holiday to France until we go ski-ing after Christmas.

But oh so sad the end.

Fennie said...

Oh how this brings back memories of when the children were small - though we didn't fly - just took off in a vast old Mercedes into which everything was stowed. But you capture the feelings so well and the pride when your children say things in French.

Yet it's horrible isn't it when the idyll is defiled by some past outrage. Where we have often been in western France there's a monument to the Lancastria, a troopship sunk by bombing in 1940.
5000 soldiers died - an event hushed up at the time.

LITTLE BROWN DOG said...

What a wonderful holiday diary - a bit of everything there: geography, history, nature - even perhaps a bit of science with the wheel-changing (? perhaps not).
Such poignant monuments really bring back the horrors of a war that is still within living memory.

Martin said...

It definitely shows that you like writing! Thanks for the posts!

@themill said...

Have nominated you for a RGB award

Grouse said...

Evocative description that brings home the helplessness of the victims of war...as one person said, this is happening today, the world over. Hard to believe, isnt it?

I thought your comment on my emotions blog was so apt, we should put it up for discussion...I feel very strongly that children should be taught courage but agree with you that when and how is something mothers feel their way through.....but some (like mine) dont think it is important. Might put it on a forum. Lovely to have you back, SM.

Chris Stovell said...

Another post from you that was a sheer joy to read; the myriad moments of a family holiday and the stillness of a memorial to the past perfectly conveyed.

snailbeachshepherdess said...

have spent two holidays in Normandy just looking and feeling the aftermath of war when youngest son studied it all for history. A lovely piece of writing ....with a sting in the tail.