Posts tagged "18th-century"





On the Eve of Our Independence

Tomorrow is the 233rd anniversary of our independence here in the U.S. I find it a great irony that I am writing about it here, since, after all, our furniture is English. Every now and then, we get a piece from around the time of the American Revolution, and I can't help but wonder what the original owner must have thought about the events on our side of the pond.

18th Century Oak Coffer Bach

How would the owner of this 18th century coffer bach have felt about our independence?


I suppose these kinds of thoughts are part of what make antiques so charming to us. After all, owning a piece of furniture from the late 18th century does have a certain appeal for some of us Yankees; the idea of it exerts a nameless pull over the psyche, as if we have opened a back door somewhere to let the other side in. History that has passed long ago allows us to think this kind of thing without any of the animosity that now seems alien and unimaginable to us, absurd even, given our close ties to Great Britain. Still, having a piece of the past in the same room with you has a way of reviving history, of bringing it closer to you in a way that enriches meaning.

And so we arrive in the present. What would yesterday's ghosts think of our world? Or tomorrow's? I sometimes fear that the disposable nature of our furniture and other belongings will render our zeitgeist so ephemeral and abstract that all we will leave behind is some sort of vague, cyberspatial imprint that will seem irrelevant to the worldview of the future. Either way, barring some disaster of extraordinary scale, antiques that were there to see the first Independence Day will still be around, like visitors from the past, waving perpetually.

0 comments.