"Look at this," I whispered, guiltily. By speaking, I was already breaking the rules.
Fresh bread lay on a board, a slice appearing to have just been cut. Crumbs still lingered on the wood, as if someone had grabbed a snack and run off. The food in the cellar kitchen of this museum was real, and I wanted my spouse to see what I saw.
Only I wasn't allowed to talk, and she dutifully "Shhh"ed me.
Chief among a number of rules for touring Dennis Severs' House in London is a vow of silence.
On this short jaunt to London, I visited the Tate Modern and took in a couple of West End shows. But I wanted to experience something a little more unusual, a little less touristy. What I found was a time capsule preserving a look into London's history as well as into the mind of an eccentric collector who left his mark on his corner of the city.
An American-born Anglophile, Dennis Severs moved to London in the 1960s and led horse-drawn carriage tours for a living. In 1979, he purchased a rundown Georgian townhouse on Folgate Street in Spitalfields, an old weaving district that had been Jack the Ripper's stamping ground. It was the perfect canvas for the fruits of Severs' most passionate hobby.
Severs would scour markets for Georgian and Victorian memorabilia and antiques, and quickly pieced together an astounding collection of furniture, fixtures, clothing and artwork.
As he settled into his new home, he would sleep in each of the house's 10 rooms, "so that I might arouse my intuition in the quest for each room's soul," he said, according to his obituary in the Guardian. (Severs died in 2000 at age 51.)