Rye Things to do With Grace

Batemans

‘That’s She! The Only She! Make an honest woman of her – quick!’ was how Rudyard Kipling and his wife, Carrie, felt the first time they saw Bateman’s.

Surrounded by the wooded landscape of the Sussex Weald, this 17th-century house, with its mullioned windows and oak beams, provided a much needed sanctuary to this world-famous writer and inspired his work.

The rooms, described by him as ‘untouched and unfaked’, remain much as he left them, with oak furniture, Persian rugs and artefacts reflecting his strong association with India. Kipling wrote Puck of Pook’s Hill and Rewards and Fairies at Bateman’s, which includes the poem ‘If’. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1907.

Bateman’s is very much a family home that feels as though the Kiplings have just gone out for the day.